HSBC is tweaking its small- and mid-cap growth mutual fund to give it an ESG spin, bringing on women-led firm RadiantESG as the new subadviser.
The HSBC Opportunity Fund has been renamed as the HSBC RadiantESG US Smaller Companies Fund, with RadiantESG replacing the incumbent subadvisor Westfield Capital Management Co.
RadiantESG, which is backed by HSBC, launched its first strategy in December, a small- and mid-cap portfolio that became available through separately managed accounts and commingled funds earlier this year. The new HSBC fund mandate represents the first mutual fund that the company subadvises.
The revamped fund’s principal investment strategy uses proprietary models to evaluate companies by fundamentals and ESG criteria, with the goal of having stronger long-term risk-adjusted returns. The fund screens out stocks with excessive tail risk and fills out the portfolio with competitive fundamental and ESG scores, according to the prospectus.
The benchmark used by the fund, the Russell 2500 Growth Index, is not changing, the companies said in an announcement.
The fund, which was launched in 1996, represented more than $81 million in assets as of the end of March. However, the fund now has about $28.9 million, data from Morningstar show.
The change is attributed to a large investor recently selling its shares. The fund returned 34.3% in 2019, 33.4% in 2020, 16.2% in 2021 and has seen year-to-date returns of -29.2%, according to Morningstar data for I shares of the product.
Management fees for the fund are 60 basis points, with a total net fee of 145 basis points for A shares, according to the prospectus.
RadiantESG currently has about $30 million in assets under management, company co-founder Kathryn McDonald said in an email.
In addition to the two existing strategies, RadiantESG is in discussions with prospects about others that would fit with its global capabilities, “several of which are explicitly impact focused,” or aligned with UN Sustainable Development Goals, McDonald said.
IRAs now hold nearly twice the assets of 401(k) plans — and most of that money didn't arrive through annual contributions.
A new survey finds that many women prioritize financial security but continue to leave savings in accounts that may not keep pace with inflation.
Roundhill, Bitwise and GraniteShares funds remain on hold while the agency weighs how novel ETFs should be regulated.
"Shares of alternative assets managers have lagged this year as investors grow wary of private-credit exposure."
The fintech platform is touting a new AI-free Planning Observations feature, which draws on IRS tax records to uncover opportunities for advisors.
Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income
Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.