Faith-based funds shine in 2017

Tech stocks work wonders for some religious mutual funds
DEC 22, 2017

It's been a ho-ho-holy year for investors in some faith-based funds. Morningstar lists dozens of funds that base their investments not only on what their managers think will fare well, but where their faith leads them. The three top-performing religious funds are from GuideStone Financial Resources, a Christian company whose funds do not invest in any company that is publicly recognized as being in the liquor, tobacco, gambling, pornography or abortion industries. The three top performrs are GuideStone Growth Equity (GGEYX), up 33.1% this year through Thursday, GuideStone Emerging Markets Growth (GEMYX), up 32.8%, and GuideStone International Equity (GIEYX), up 29.2%. GuideStone Growth Equity also is the top-performing faith-based stock fund for the past five years, gaining an average 15.7% a year. Close behind the three GuideStone funds is Praxis Growth Index (MMDEX), up 27.5% through Thursday. The fund screens out companies that don't align with Mennonite values: abortion, adult entertainment, alcohol, firearms, gambling, nuclear power, predatory lending, tobacco, and weapons production and support systems. It also scores companies on environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria and commits 1% of its assets to community development investing. Those strictures haven't ruled out companies like Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN) or Facebook (FB). (More:ESG funds boosted by women and millennial investors) Ave Maria Growth (AVEGX), which is up 27.3% through Thursday, is a fund with no formal endorsement by the Catholic Church, though a Catholic Advisory Board meets regularly with the management team at Schwartz Investment Counsel, Inc., to review the fund's religious standards and criteria. The board includes economist Larry Kudlow, former Domino's Pizza CEO Thomas Monaghan, former baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, as well as Cardinal Adam Maida. The fund's performance has not been a one-time Christmas miracle: It has been in the top 18% of all mid-cap growth funds the past decade, relying on a fundamental, growth-at-a-reasonable-price. While it has no strictures against alcohol or tobacco, it avoids companies involved in abortion, stem cell research and pornography. Not all faith-based funds are Christian. Morningstar lists 11 funds that are compliant with Sharia law, the religious law forming the Islamic tradition. Amana Growth (AMIGX) is the top performer of that list, up 29.8% this year. The fund doesn't receive interest and avoids stocks of companies whose primary business activities include the manufacture or marketing of alcohol, gambling or gaming activities, conventional interest-based financial services, pork and pork products, and pornography.

Latest News

Raymond James, Osaic laud new bank partnerships
Raymond James, Osaic laud new bank partnerships

A Texas-based bank selects Raymond James for a $605 million program, while an OSJ with Osaic lures a storied institution in Ohio from LPL.

Bessent backpedals after blowback on 'privatizing Social Security' comments
Bessent backpedals after blowback on 'privatizing Social Security' comments

The Treasury Secretary's suggestion that Trump Savings Accounts could be used as a "backdoor" drew sharp criticisms from AARP and Democratic lawmakers.

Alternative investment winners and losers in wake of OBBBA
Alternative investment winners and losers in wake of OBBBA

Changes in legislation or additional laws historically have created opportunities for the alternative investment marketplace to expand.

Financial advisors often see clients seeking to retire early; Here's what they tell them
Financial advisors often see clients seeking to retire early; Here's what they tell them

Wealth managers highlight strategies for clients trying to retire before 65 without running out of money.

Robinhood beats Q2 profit estimates as business goes beyond YOLO trading
Robinhood beats Q2 profit estimates as business goes beyond YOLO trading

Shares of the online brokerage jumped as it reported a surge in trading, counting crypto transactions, though analysts remained largely unmoved.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.