Search Results | Showing 61 - 68 of 68 results for "alcohol" |
| | ... issues, but there are very few if any combine a strict fossil fuel screen with an equally strict screen with ESG issues like alcohol, tobacco and gaming." The resulting indices are comprised of the 50 leading medium to large sustainable ASX-listed companies ... |
| | | ... weapons and bribery and corruption "garner strong support", according to the survey, while exclusion criteria, such as alcohol or tobacco, are rarely considered. LGT Capital Partners and Mercer also surveyed respondents on stakeholder concerns. Overall ... |
| | | ... excludes companies that have more than a 10% exposure to tobacco, nuclear power, including uranium, armaments, gambling, alcohol and pornography. This range stands alone, but AMP Capital also integrates ESG issues more broadly. "AMP Capital funds have ... |
| | | ... exposures to arms manufacturers," Finlayson said. "Increasingly, around SRI and private equity, it tends to be thing around alcohol and tobacco, tends to be one where if companies are acting in the public interest - if you're a healthcare provider, and ... |
| | | ... types of tenants that take up leases in their buildings as well as the question of "pariah tenants" - tenants that work in alcohol, tobacco, pornography, gambling, armaments and nuclear energy. The equity research team spoke with the REITs about their ... |
| | | ... and now, crossing off my last to-do of the year, here is a view. It's too light a treatment on many issues, not least alcohol and farmer relationships, but there is still much to see. The key issues Woolworths is far from the evil empire that some believe ... |
| | | Woolworths launched a Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) to advance opportunities of Indigenous Australians and reported a 30% decrease in its lost time injury frequency rate (LTIFR), against a backdrop of a 5.1% increase in net profit to AU$2.124bn for ... |
| | | ... research allows investors to identify all global publicly-traded companies involved in activities such as the production of alcohol or tobacco products, or those that violate religious screening mandates. It also allows investors to divest from companies ... |
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