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June 21, 2010 /

Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation

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Leslie Christian’s Essay Series:

Originally published in Reimagine Money -

» Social Finance from an Investor’s Perspective

» Getting Serious about Long Term Investing

» Allocate your Risk Response

So many of us in sustainable finance talk about the need to “finance differently”. However, not many are underwriting or, more importantly here, understanding the green finance problem any differently than before.

As Scott Muldavin points out in his recent work, your intended decision drives the content of and the manner in which you underwrite green real estate investments.  Underwriting green does not have to be done in any “special” way. Your common, hardworking DCF analysis will do the job just fine.

Many governments and NGO’s understand the green finance “problem” as one of raising awareness and delivery logistics. Make consumers aware that a new behavior (like turning off the lights) will save them money and then pay them a few bucks (as an incentive or rebate) to adopt the desired behavior.

For investors perceive the “problem” as one of risk versus reward. They want to earn an appropriate risk-adjusted return for the sustainable property they are purchasing (or lending on). You get the picture.

We’re all in favor of green real estate, just as long as we don’t have to do (too much of) anything differently.

But does any of this address the real problem, or is it all just surface noise?

“It’s the global economy, stupid…”

I imagine that’s what James Carville might say if he read Leslie Christian’s recent essay series that been published in the Reimagining Money blog, over the past few months.

Instead of providing her take on the next couple of short term moves, Christian introduces the idea that we’re all playing the wrong game entirely.

She asks us to consider whether current day approaches are driven by basically faulty assumptions. Her point: limits on ecological resources mean that there are limits to economic growth. Ignoring the role that ecological limits play within our global economy opens us up to other risks (negative and positive) the financial community has never thought about. Risks that are already playing out every day throughout our markets and the world.

Rather than trying to measure the riskiness of a particular asset within the framework of a growth economy that looks a lot like the past century but with more players, perhaps we need to consider the riskiness of the global growth economy itself.

In her first essay, she lays out why “global growth thinking,” as reflected by Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) and pretty much all of modern finance, is no longer a workable framework (if it ever was). The unquestioned expectation of perpetual growth leads many to analyze a particular asset or risk within a perpetually growing global economy. But they never question if the global growth economy itself is a problem.

Christian does — challenging MPT, then proposing a new risk framework for the 21st century, which positions social investing as a risk mitigant. And all that happens in just the first act.

In the two subsequent essays, she takes it to the next level. By the third essay, she calls you out, naming ostriches and other non-responsive market participants in denial.

The issues she raises are getting attention in financial circles. Pacesetter Vince Siciliano, CEO of New Resource Bank, commented on the second essay:

I welcome the discussion on limits to growth and the very real impact it should have on our lifestyle and investing decisions today. When we define the word “sustainability” we express a concern about future generations without acknowledging the inherent paradox of everyone around the world trying to live an lifestyle. The blunt question is whether we are willing to freeze (or shrink) our current standard of living to make room for others both now and in the future.

On the other hand, Leslie states that we crossed the tipping point on global resource use in the mid-1960s; I wonder how we prove that fact? The use of cradle to cradle thinking and sustainable technologies will enable us collectively to live much better on a global basis and that needs to be figured into the overall calculus.

Are we protecting ourselves with an umbrella in a hurricane?

Vince points out the need for more proof on the connection between ecological and economic limits. Actually, while I think the need for proof is prudent, it is quite plausible that Christian is at least half right. And that spells big trouble because modern finance can’t even address a part of the risks that she point to. So even if she’s partly wrong, there’s still a need for sustainable finance to redefine “financing and underwriting differently”.

So if you thought that any of Christian’s writing could be true, what would you do differently?

If you even partly accept the notion of ecological limits to growth that make the entire global economy riskier than we know:

  • how much have you reduced your ‘risk’ by financing and investing in green real estate?
  • what is the cost of waiting to implement your strategy?
  • how much benefit will you gain by focusing only on “low hanging fruit” during your energy efficiency retrofit?
  • are energy efficiency finance programs, such as PACE, really effective or are they too little too late?

Or do you think, as Vince Siciliano comments, that some of today’s new sustainability thinking — like cradle to cradle — can play such a significant role that you’ll be able to to avert the horrible future Christian suggests is waiting not only for the status quo but current day green investing, too?

Take a look at Leslie Christian’s essays, risk framework and recommendations.

Think about some of the markets where you currently seek investments.  Think about your underwriting.  Your network and clients. See any signs of ecological limits taking shape?

We do.

If you work with institutional investors, send the essays along and ask them what they think.

Then, share your experience and their reactions with the rest of us. We’d love to know if and how these ideas cause your conversations and more importantly, your investing, to differ.

Access all three of the essays here:

» Social Finance from an Investor’s Perspective

» Getting Serious about Long Term Investing

» Allocate your Risk Response

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One Response to “Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation”

  1. Twitter Trackbacks for Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation | Galley Eco Capital [galleyecocapital.com] on Topsy.com on June 21st, 2010 5:29 pm

    [...] Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation | Galley Eco Capital galleyecocapital.com/2010/06/leslie-christians-sharp-focus-on-risk-and-flawed-asset-allocation/ – view page – cached Leslie Christian’s Essay Series: Originally published in Reimagine Money - » Social Finance from an Investor’s Perspective » Getting Serious about Long Tweets about this link Topsy.Data.Twitter.User['cliffgmj'] = {”photo”:”http://a3.twimg.com/profile_images/421132829/cliff6_2_jennifer_es_7B0945_normal.jpg”,”url”:”http://twitter.com/cliffgmj”,”nick”:”cliffgmj”}; cliffgmj: “RT @green_ROI: Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation http://goo.gl/fb/lZPJY #capitalmarkets ” 22 minutes ago retweet Topsy.Data.Twitter.User['green_roi'] = {”photo”:”http://a1.twimg.com/profile_images/235577794/LMG-Photo1_normal.JPG”,”url”:”http://twitter.com/green_roi”,”nick”:”green_roi”}; green_roi: “Leslie Christian’s Sharp Focus on Risk and Flawed Asset Allocation http://goo.gl/fb/lZPJY #capitalmarkets ” 52 minutes ago retweet Filter tweets [...]

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