Harry and Meghan Get into Finance
Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, E.S.G. investors.Credit…Andrew Kelly/Reuters
Exclusive: Harry and Meghan want to make sustainable investing mainstream
Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, are getting into the investment business. They are joining Ethic, a fintech asset manager in the fast-growing environmental, social and governance space, as “impact partners” and investors. Ethic has $1.3 billion under management and creates separately managed accounts to invest in social responsibility themes.
The couple could attract more attention to sustainable investing. Harry and Meghan can make E.S.G. investing part of pop culture in a way that, say, BlackRock’s Larry Fink can’t. “From the world I come from, you don’t talk about investing, right?” Meghan told DealBook in a joint interview with Harry. “You don’t have the luxury to invest. That sounds so fancy.”
“My husband has been saying for years, ‘Gosh, don’t you wish there was a place where if your values were aligned like this, you could put your money to that same sort of thing?’” Meghan said. They were introduced to Ethic by friends, she said.
Harry and Meghan said they hoped that their involvement would help democratize investing, making people — especially younger people — more deliberate in their choices and conscious of investing in sustainable companies. “You already have the younger generation voting with their dollars and their pounds, you know, all over the world when it comes to brands they select and choose from,” Harry said, suggesting it was a natural extension to do the same with investments.
Ethic was founded in 2015 and has tripled assets under management in the past year, Doug Scott, a founder of the company, told DealBook. Ethic runs screens on companies and sectors based on social responsibility criteria, including racial justice, climate and labor issues. Its user interface has more in common with the likes of Robinhood than traditional financial sites, and it has developed a new platform, “Sustainability for Everyone,” which scores a person’s portfolio along different dimensions.
The move is the couple’s latest corporate partnership since relocating to the U.S. Harry and Meghan moved to Los Angeles last year and later gave up official royal family duties. Seeking financial independence, they have signed production deals with Netflix and Spotify. Harry also recently produced a documentary series about mental health for Apple TV+ in connection with Oprah Winfrey and is writing a memoir.
HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING
Texas bans Covid vaccine mandates. An executive order issued by Gov. Greg Abbott yesterday bars virtually any vaccine mandate in the state, including those by private employers. The order will most likely be challenged in court.
Oil prices jump. U.S. crude prices have risen above $80 per barrel for the first time in seven years. Some analysts fear that supply shortages will keep oil prices relatively high.
The I.M.F. clears Kristalina Georgieva to remain in her post. The fund’s managing director found her position in doubt after an investigation last month concluded that she had manipulated data to placate China when she was at the World Bank. After a series of crisis meetings, the I.M.F.’s executive board yesterday expressed “full confidence” in Georgieva.
The Facebook whistle-blower will meet the company’s oversight board. Frances Haugen, the former Facebook product manager who testified before Congress last week and called for stricter regulation of the social media giant, will meet with the panel of experts that reviews the company’s content decisions.
HBO removes the “true crime” description from a docuseries that included an episode on WeWork. Lawyers for Adam Neumann, WeWork’s founder and former C.E.O., took a victory lap on the altered text in the show, “Generation Hustle.” WeWork is expected to go public at a $9 billion valuation through a merger with a SPAC this month.
The stock market’s profit engine may be slowing
The Delta variant of the coronavirus has hurt hiring and made policymakers’ lives more difficult. But investors are taking it in stride, because it appears to have had little effect on corporate profits.
Executives, having closed the books on the third quarter, may not be as buoyant as they were earlier in the year, with growing worries about supply chain issues and inflation slowing future profit growth.
Companies start reporting their third quarter profits this week, beginning with JPMorgan Chase and Delta Air Lines tomorrow.
Bottom lines are expected to have risen substantially. Analysts predict that earnings for companies in the S&P 500 rose nearly 28 percent in the third quarter, compared with a year ago, which would be the third-highest increase since 2010. But that’s not necessarily a positive sign for the overall economy.
The sectors showing the biggest jumps in earnings are the few that benefit the most from inflation. Companies in the energy and materials sectors — like Exxon and Dow — are expected to report huge jumps in profits for the third quarter. By contrast, companies that are reluctant to pass higher costs onto consumers, like Amazon and General Motors, are expected to have a disappointing quarter. Banks are in the middle, with trading businesses expected to fall short of last year’s windfall but consumer divisions picking up as the economy reopens.
Shortages and supply-chain issues loom large. On the most recent earnings calls at S&P 500 companies, some 70 percent warned that supply-chain issues would be a negative factor for sales and profits. “If we had the capacity to meet all of the demand,” Sean Connolly of the packaged food group Conagra told investors last week, “our numbers would likely have been even more impressive.” Expect to hear more of this on third-quarter calls, perhaps unseating inflation as the topic du jour. (Vaccine mandates are also likely to come up.)
Optimism is also in shorter supply. FactSet reports that 56 companies in the S&P 500 have issued third-quarter guidance above what analysts expected, which is higher than average but down from 67 in the previous quarter. The number of companies issuing negative guidance rose to 47 from 37 the quarter before. Is this a problem? Analysts expect the S&P 500 index to rise by 15 percent over the coming year.
“The human brain is a much scarier black box than any machine-learning algorithm.”
— Sabrina Howell of N.Y.U.’s Stern School of Business, on her new research that showed Black business owners were more likely to get Paycheck Protection Program loans from online lenders than from banks.
Acorns hires a chief investment officer
Acorns, the investment app for managing users’ “small change,” has hired its first chief investment officer: Seth Wunder. The appointment, which DealBook is the first to report, comes as the fintech company prepares to go public in a $2 billion SPAC merger.
Acorns, which emphasizes index funds and passive investing, will let users dabble in individual stocks and cryptocurrencies. Wunder, who is joining from black-and-white Capital, will help the company introduce these “more sophisticated investment opportunities,” Acorns said. The service will be offered for “higher subscription tiers,” said the company’s C.E.O., Noah Kerner. Acorns has a $3-per-month entry tier and last year introduced a $5-per-month family account. The company will limit how much of a customer’s diversified portfolio can be allocated to crypto and individual stocks.
Its investing approach is still more conservative than rivals like Robinhood, whose business model depends more on frequent trading. “One of the things that’s poorly understood in the market today is that when you’re abundantly active in your portfolio, there’s often a lot of unwarranted risk that people really don’t understand or realize that they’re taking,” Wunder said. “Our approach is to offer people the opportunity to invest in lots of different instruments over time, but doing it proportional to what’s a reasonable risk to take.”
China’s property problem, by the numbers
Evergrande isn’t the only Chinese property developer with huge debts it may be unable to pay. Fearing the fallout from policies aimed at cooling China’s costly and dangerously debt-ridden housing market, many are putting off buying homes altogether. With nearly three-quarters of household wealth tied to property, a loss of confidence in the market could drag down the overall economy, The Times’s Alexandra Stevenson and Joy Dong report. Here are three numbers that explain the scope of the problem:
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36 percent: The decline in sales by China’s 100 biggest real estate companies in September from a year ago.
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1.6 million: How many home buyers are still waiting for Evergrande to build their apartments. Many projects have halted because builders said they had not been paid.
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$28 billion+: Payments due in 2022 on dollar bonds issued by Chinese real estate companies. International creditors are increasingly nervous about the prospects for repayment.
Do you want to live forever?
The question brings up all sorts of issues, from the philosophical to the practical. Extending human life has also attracted billions in investment, which raises its own concerns.
“Death has never made any sense to me,” Oracle’s Larry Ellison once said. (He has poured millions into longevity research.) Jeff Bezos and Peter Thiel are investors in Unity Biotechnology, which focuses on ways to “slow, halt or reverse diseases of aging.” Google started Calico in 2013, a company that today describes itself as “asking difficult questions about how we age.”
Some of those questions include:
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Will the billions spent on prolonging life benefit the elite few?
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What are the realities of altering the aging process?
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What are the implications of longer lives for society and the environment?
What do you think? Today, at 1 p.m. Eastern, join us for a DealBook Dialogue call on “The Business of Longevity” with David Sinclair, a Harvard researcher and biotech founder. You can submit questions live or when you R.S.V.P. Register here.
THE SPEED READ
Deals
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KPMG predicts that global M.&A. could reach a record $6 trillion by the end of the year. (CNBC)
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The French retail giants Carrefour and Auchan have called off talks on a $19.4 billion merger. (Reuters)
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GitLab, the software development company, raised the price range for its I.P.O., targeting a valuation of nearly $10 billion. (Reuters)
Policy
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Airbnb’s C.E.O. says the world is “rooting against” Big Tech. (Axios)
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The president of the World Bank said a “tragic reversal” in development during the pandemic has pushed debt in low-income countries to record levels. (Guardian)
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France’s finance minister said it was up to the U.S. to restore the allies’ fraying relationship. (NYT)
Best of the rest
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The billionaire hedge fund manager Marc Lasry’s journey through “politics, a gambling scandal, the highs of business and the lows of a corporate car crash.” (FT)
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“This Is How We Survive Climate Change” (Fast Company)
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Seattle is becoming a popular base for tech companies. (NYT)
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“I personally think that Bitcoin is worthless,” JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon said at an event yesterday, among other things that provoked the ire of crypto supporters. (CNBC, Twitter)
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The Biden administration wants banks to report more customer information to the I.R.S. Account holders aren’t happy. (NYT)
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