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Rich Americans Are Last in Sustainable Investing, UBS Says

Rich Americans Finish Last in Sustainable Investing, Survey Says

(Bloomberg) -- American millionaires are lagging behind wealthy counterparts elsewhere when it comes to sustainable investing.

U.S. investors ranked last among those surveyed in 10 countries with at least $1 million of investable assets, with only 12 percent claiming to have put money into environmental, social and corporate governance-related holdings, according to UBS Group AG. That compares with 60 percent of respondents in China and 53 percent in Brazil.

“Americans are focused on making money,” said Cary Krosinsky, who teaches sustainable investing at Yale and Brown universities. “Business is business.”

Rich Americans Are Last in Sustainable Investing, UBS Says

Sustainable investing incorporates broad societal concerns and personal values into investment decisions, while generally still trying to make a market-rate return. This can include such areas as investing in renewable energy, development debt or strategies aimed at promoting gender diversity.

While pension funds and other institutional investors control a large part of the market and have been leaders overseas, individuals in the U.S. haven’t had the same sort of direction, said Andrew Lee, head of Americas sustainable and impact investing at UBS’s global wealth unit.

Still, while a smaller percentage of Americans allocate assets sustainably, those who do put almost half into such investments, according to UBS.

“Once people are convinced, they do it with high conviction,” Lee said.

Defining sustainable investing can prove difficult, with more than two-thirds of respondents saying the terminology around the topic is confusing. Investors are also unsure what sort of returns they’ll get.

“The term sustainability itself means different things to different people," said Christine Harada, president of impact-investing company I(x) Investments and former chief sustainability officer in the Obama administration. “There’s also a political perception issue -- when people think about sustainability they think of it a bit as a California kind of fringe-y thing, when in reality there are very compelling economics.”

--With assistance from Emily Chasan.

To contact the reporters on this story: Reade Pickert in Washington at epickert@bloomberg.net;Suzanne Woolley in New York at swoolley2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Pierre Paulden at ppaulden@bloomberg.net, Steven Crabill, Dan Reichl

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