'Green' funds flush with
new cash, challenges as Trump era dawns
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[March 06, 2017]
By David Randall
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Environmentally conscious investors are using their
pocketbooks to protest President Donald Trump's plans to slash
environmental regulations, fueling a rally in funds that only invest in
companies that meet progressive criteria for sustainability.
From the start of November to the end of January, investors poured $1.8
billion into actively managed equities funds in the "socially
responsible" category, according to Lipper data. In the same period,
there was a net outflow of $133 billion from funds that do not have
environmental or social mandates.
Trump was elected president on Nov. 8.
Investors worried that Trump's policies may imperil causes they believe
in are hoping an influx of flows will help keep companies alive.
"If clients see the federal government withdrawing from a space they
think is important, they may actually be more active in wanting to
enforce their views through the dollars allocated," said Vincent
Reinhart, chief economist at Standish Mellon Asset Management.
The inflows are a boon for fund managers but also a challenge, requiring
them to find companies whose share prices have a chance to climb despite
less favorable federal policies.
For instance, shares of solar energy companies took a beating after the
election, sliding 11 percent by year end on concerns the future of U.S.
tax credits under a Trump administration, though they have recovered
somewhat since then.
Still, cautious fund managers from Fidelity, New Alternatives, Calvert
Investments and others are scrutinizing water technology and wind power
shares, which should benefit from new federal infrastructure spending
and a push by states such as California toward more renewable power
generation.
Managers say water technology stocks should see an uptick from Trump’s
campaign promise to spend $1 trillion on repairing and improving the
country’s infrastructure. Wind stocks are attractive as that energy
source is proving more cost-effective in growing areas of the country
like California, which plans to get half its energy from renewable
sources by 2030.
“If you look at where the policy is changing the fastest, it's at the
state level, and we see places like California continuing on that trend
regardless of what is happening on the federal level,” said Kevin
Walenta, who manages the Fidelity Select Environment and Alternative
Energy portfolio. He has been adding to his positions in Spanish wind
energy company Iberdrola SA and US-based water and plumbing company
Comfort Systems USA Inc.
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Solar installers place solar panels on the roof of a residential
home in Scripps Ranch, San Diego, California, U.S. October 14, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
BETTING ON STATE POLICIES
Trump has not yet called for ending tax credits for solar and other renewable
energy, though he has expressed doubt about the role of solar energy, bemoaned
the loss of coal-mining jobs and blamed wind turbines for ruining picturesque
landscapes.
Ahead of the election, power companies had already started to pivot away from
solar and invest more in wind, with companies including Southern Co, NextEra
Energy Inc and Xcel Energy Inc announcing plans to expand wind-generating
capabilities at a time when technology has helped lower its cost. [L1N1FZ1GR].
Wind
power costs average between $32 and $62 per megawatt hour before subsidies,
compared with an average between $49 and $61 per megawatt hour for utility-scale
solar arrays without subsidies, according to a December 2016 report from Lazard.
Coal power, which Trump has pledged to revive, costs between $60 and $143 per
megawatt hour, the report notes.
With that cost structure, along with the potential increase in jobs from
building and maintaining wind turbines, even solidly Republican states should
continue to invest in renewables, said Murray Rosenblith, co-portfolio manager
of the New Alternatives Fund.
Rosenblith has been adding to his positions in wind companies Vestas Wind
Systems and Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica SA, both of whose shares are up 10
percent or more since the start of the year.
"These are growing industries in states that are bringing back jobs," he said.
"Even if Trump wants to pull tax credits back as a political gesture he's not
going to find a lot of support in the party at large."
(Reporting by David Randall, Ross Kerber and Nichola Groom; Editing by Jennifer
Ablan and David Gregorio)
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