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What Fossil-Fuel Divestment Would Cost

By  Mark Kritzman
March 18, 2013

A lot of discussion lately has centered on the notion that universities and other asset owners should divest their holdings in fossil-fuel companies as a way to counter climate change. I am an advocate of dealing with environmental challenges, but I believe we should do so responsibly. Recent public discourse, unfortunately, seems to ignore the inarguable truth that divestment would be costly.

A few years ago, my colleague Tim Adler and I conducted a series of mathematical simulations to quantify the expected cost of divestment. Each simulation included 10,000 iterations, to avoid dependence on a single path through history. The analysis showed that the financial cost of excluding investments based on criteria other than expected performance can be substantial, potentially amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars.

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A lot of discussion lately has centered on the notion that universities and other asset owners should divest their holdings in fossil-fuel companies as a way to counter climate change. I am an advocate of dealing with environmental challenges, but I believe we should do so responsibly. Recent public discourse, unfortunately, seems to ignore the inarguable truth that divestment would be costly.

A few years ago, my colleague Tim Adler and I conducted a series of mathematical simulations to quantify the expected cost of divestment. Each simulation included 10,000 iterations, to avoid dependence on a single path through history. The analysis showed that the financial cost of excluding investments based on criteria other than expected performance can be substantial, potentially amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Consider, for example, an investor who chooses 250 securities from a representative sampling of world stocks and who is correct 52 percent of the time. If that investor were to exclude 20 percent of available securities, he would sacrifice about $270-million over 20 years, assuming an initial portfolio value of $1-billion and an average market return of 8 percent, the long-term expected return for many asset owners these days.

That estimate arises solely from the fact that restricted investment universes offer fewer opportunities to skillful investors. And it does not include the substantial transaction costs that one would incur by divesting part of a portfolio.

One could legitimately argue that the cost is worth incurring, given the urgency of a trend such as climate change. But that view demands some understanding of the potential efficacy of divestment. Through what channels and to what extent would divestment of holdings in fossil-fuel companies lead consumers and producers of fossil-fuel products to engage in more-responsible behavior? The answers to those questions should then be weighed against the financial impact of divestment.

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Incurring a cost of $270-million, for example, equals more than 5,000 years of college education, assuming annual tuition of $50,000, or almost 2,000 years of a faculty member’s pay, based on an annual salary of $150,000.

Even if they conclude that countering climate change would warrant such a sacrifice, proponents of divestment should offer some evidence or reasoning that it is the best course of action. One could well argue, for example, that it is more effective to collect the incremental return from unrestricted investing and deploy it directly toward the discovery of new clean-energy alternatives, or toward policies designed to curb the consumption of fossil fuels, or even toward shareholder activism to influence company behavior.

Socially responsible investing demands that universities and their constituents carefully consider those vital issues, so that they deploy their resources wisely, and with the greatest impact, in pursuit of a healthier environment.

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
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