Entrepreneur

Does Social Responsibility Hurt a Company's Bottom Line?

For better returns, should you invest in businesses engaged in social responsibility, or those on the opposite end of the spectrum?
Living on sin: Gerry Sullivan of Vice Fund.

On Dec. 14, 2012, when Gerry Sullivan learned that a deranged killer had gunned down 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, he looked into positioning his mutual fund in Smith & Wesson stock.

Shares of the gunmaker would plunge in the wake of the massacre, he reasoned. Then they'd slowly rebound as Congress ignored calls for stricter gun controls.

Using a Bloomberg terminal at his office in Summit, N.J., Sullivan watched the stock plunge from $9.54 on Dec. 13 to $7.74 on Dec. 18. That's when he pounced, initiating a position in Smith & Wesson in the $316.9 million Vice Fund (VICEX) he has managed since 2011.

At press time, Smith & Wesson shares were selling at nearly $14.

Cold-blooded? Unfeeling? Exploitive? In a way, that's Sullivan's stock in trade. The Vice Fund is one of the few remaining "sin" funds that advertise their investment in alcohol, tobacco, gaming and defense stocks. Proponents are generally indifferent to social issues, reasoning that any profitable company deserves a place in a good investment portfolio.

So-called sin funds, or what's left of them, occupy the opposite end of the spectrum from "socially responsible investing" funds, whose proponents emphasize investments that tend to benefit society. Sullivan mostly scoffs at what he sees as the flawed motivation of such do-gooders. "I couldn't say no to the Smith & Wesson trade," he says. "I think you should align your investing philosophy in a way that preserves your capital and gives you income and appreciation over time. My only bias is: Does the stock fit in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur3 min read
The One Change Auto Services Giant Monro Made to Save Time and Gain Insight into Procurement
In today’s fast-paced retail landscape, having a great product is essential, of course. But smart business owners know at least two other things are crucial for success as well: efficient inventory management and streamlined distribution processes. W
Entrepreneur2 min read
What Resiliency Really Is
When I began my career in marketing, a mentor told me this: Resilience is key. I nodded at the time, thinking I understood what he meant—that nothing is easy, that the strongwilled survive, and so on. I struggled with confidence during my early caree
Entrepreneur12 min read
There’s A Better Way To Sell And Grow Franchises
I love franchising. This industry helps people achieve their dreams of business ownership. It helps founders scale their brands into national or international successes. It can be a pathway to personal satisfaction and financial freedom. To achieve a

Related Books & Audiobooks