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						At Harvard B-School, lessons for impact investors
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		 [October 03, 2019]  By 
		Beth Pinsker 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Harvard Business 
		School is known for guiding the next generation of financial leaders 
		through compelling case studies in management, innovation and global 
		intelligence. Now the curriculum includes impact investing, which 
		incorporates positive environmental, social and governance values into 
		investment decisions.
 
 Vikram Gandhi, a senior lecturer, developed the course "Investing in the 
		21st Century: Return, Risk and Impact" based on years of experience 
		working at Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse, as well as founding his own 
		company, Asha Impact.
 
 Reuters spoke with Gandhi, a Harvard Business School graduate himself, 
		about teaching the next generation.
 
 Q: Why do emerging business leaders need to learn about impact 
		investing?
 
 A: There has to be a way to do good at the same time as investing. This 
		is not about creating less wealth or making poor investments. You can 
		you make a difference and also bring in returns. Financial return is 
		critical, but social and societal returns are equally important.
 
 Q: Is it hard to teach?
 
 A: It's an evolving field. There's no defined framework on how to bring 
		it in and measure it. How do you compare impact across investment like 
		you compare returns? A lot of our teaching is not about imparting 
		conclusions, but it's putting out alternatives and case studies and 
		having a debate on that.
 
 Q: You break down one particular exchange-traded fund in a case study, 
		the SPDR SSGA Gender Diversity Index ETF, otherwise known as SHE, which 
		holds stocks of companies that have gender diversity in their senior 
		leadership. How does that work?
 
		
		 
		  
		
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A: The students may have had some exposure to ETFs. In this case, we go into a 
deep-dive into how ETFs are created - who are the players, how is stock 
aggregated? Then we also go into constructing the ETF, what is the data 
required. 
Q: How do you measure an ETF that has a specific focus?
 A: You can ask: Is investing in the ETF going to make a difference? Will it 
change behavior?
 
 Like with most cases, there's no correct answer. Financial monitoring happens – 
it will be relative to some index. The goal is that companies which are not in 
the ETF will say, "Let's push to have more female representation in leadership 
in order to be included." If large pools of capital get behind it, it can change 
behavior.
 
 
Q: What do you expect your students to do with the knowledge gained from your 
course?
 A: It's two-fold. Some people want to go into impact investing as a professional 
career. The other category will not go into it per se, but into investing 
generally. But they are keen to know about impact investing, because over the 
next 10 years, impact will be integrated into the investment process. Learning 
about that upfront is important.
 
 Some students will go into development – government or non-profit – where 
measuring impact and making every dollar spent more effective is important.
 
 (Reporting by Beth Pinsker; Editing by Richard Chang; Follow us @ReutersMoney or 
at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance. Editing by Lauren Young)
 
				 
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