Please sir,talking ethical funds sir, I would like to know more about ethical funds,the risk that are involve, how it works and everything that one needs to know about ethical funds before investing into it sir?
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What Are Ethical Funds? Ethical funds are investment funds that select investments based not only on profit potential, but also on moral, social, religious, or environmental principles. Instead of investing in “any company that can make money,” ethical funds avoid businesses or activities consideredRead more
What Are Ethical Funds?
See lessEthical funds are investment funds that select investments based not only on profit potential, but also on moral, social, religious, or environmental principles.
Instead of investing in “any company that can make money,” ethical funds avoid businesses or activities considered harmful or unacceptable according to certain standards.
Examples of industries many ethical funds avoid:
Alcohol
Gambling
Tobacco
Weapons
Pornography
High-interest lending/usury
Environmental pollution
Some oil & gas activities
Companies with poor labor practices
Ethical investing is also called:
Socially Responsible Investing (SRI)
ESG Investing (Environmental, Social, Governance)
Faith-based investing
Halal investing (Islamic finance)
How Ethical Funds Work
An ethical fund pools money from many investors and then professional fund managers invest that money into selected companies or assets that meet the fund’s ethical rules.
For example:
A halal equity fund may invest only in Sharia-compliant companies.
A green fund may invest in renewable energy and environmentally friendly companies.
A Christian ethical fund may avoid gambling and alcohol companies.
You buy units in the fund, and your returns depend on how the investments perform.
Main Types of Ethical Funds
1. ESG Funds
These focus on:
Environmental responsibility
Social responsibility
Good corporate governance
Examples:
Companies with clean energy projects
Companies with fair worker treatment
Firms with transparent management
2. Halal Funds (Islamic Funds)
These follow Islamic finance principles:
No interest-based businesses
No gambling
No alcohol
No excessive uncertainty/speculation
In Nigeria, examples include:
Lotus Capital Limited halal mutual funds
ARM halal investment products from ARM Investment Managers�
3. Green Funds
These invest mainly in:
Renewable energy
Climate-friendly companies
Sustainable agriculture
Water and waste management
4. Social Impact Funds
These invest in businesses trying to create positive social impact such as:
Affordable healthcare
Education
Financial inclusion
Agriculture
Advantages of Ethical Funds
1. Peace of Mind
You know your money is not supporting businesses you disagree with morally or religiously.
For many investors, this matters a lot psychologically and spiritually.
2. Professional Management
Experts manage the portfolio for you.
This helps beginners who do not yet know how to analyze stocks individually.
3. Diversification
Instead of buying one company’s shares, your money spreads across many companies/assets.
This reduces risk compared to holding only one stock.
4. Long-Term Sustainability
Many ethical funds prefer financially disciplined and well-governed companies.
Some studies suggest companies with better governance can perform more steadily over time.
5. Suitable for Beginners
You can start investing without needing to pick stocks yourself.
Risks of Ethical Funds
No investment is risk-free. Ethical funds also carry risks.
1. Market Risk
If the stock market falls, the fund may lose value.
Example: If Nigerian banking stocks or the NGX market declines, an ethical equity fund can also decline.
2. Limited Investment Universe
Because ethical funds avoid certain industries, they may miss profitable opportunities.
For example:
If oil companies boom strongly,
a green or halal fund may not benefit much.
This can sometimes reduce returns compared to unrestricted funds.
3. Fund Manager Risk
Performance depends heavily on the skill of the fund manager.
A poorly managed ethical fund can underperform.
4. Liquidity Risk
Some ethical funds invest in less-traded assets, making it harder to sell quickly during market stress.
5. Currency & Inflation Risk
Especially in Nigeria:
inflation may reduce real returns,
naira depreciation may affect purchasing power.
6. “Ethical” Does Not Always Mean Safe
Some people wrongly assume ethical funds cannot lose money because they are “moral.”
That is not true.
An ethical company can still:
make losses,
face economic downturns,
suffer poor management,
or see its stock price fall.
How Returns Are Made
Ethical funds may generate returns from:
Capital appreciation (increase in share prices)
Dividends
Sukuk income (for Islamic funds)
Bond income (for non-halal ethical funds)
Your return depends on:
market conditions,
fund strategy,
management quality,
and investment duration.
Important Things to Check Before Investing
1. Understand the Fund’s Rules
Different ethical funds define “ethical” differently.
Read:
investment policy,
excluded sectors,
and screening method.
2. Check Historical Performance
Look at:
3-year returns,
5-year returns,
consistency,
and drawdowns during bad markets.
Do not look only at one good year.
3. Understand the Risk Level
Generally:
Equity ethical funds = higher risk, higher potential return
Bond/sukuk ethical funds = lower risk, lower return
Balanced ethical funds = moderate risk
4. Know the Fees
Funds charge:
management fees,
trustee fees,
administrative fees.
High fees reduce your net return.
5. Check the Fund Manager’s Reputation
Use reputable firms regulated by:
Securities and Exchange Commission Nigeria
and listed with the Nigerian Exchange Group ecosystem where applicable.
6. Match the Fund to Your Goal
Examples:
Long-term wealth building → equity ethical fund
Capital preservation → sukuk or money market ethical fund
Moderate growth → balanced ethical fund
Ethical Funds vs Direct Stock Investing
Ethical Funds
Buying Individual Stocks
Professionally managed
Self-managed
Diversified
Concentrated risk
Easier for beginners
Requires more knowledge
Management fees apply
Lower ongoing fees
Less control
Full control
Moderate returns possible
Potentially higher or lower returns
Are Ethical Funds Good for Nigerians?
They can be useful for:
beginners,
religious investors,
passive investors,
and people wanting diversification.
In Nigeria, ethical investing has grown especially through:
halal mutual funds,
sukuk investments,
and ESG-focused products.
But investors should still:
study the fund carefully,
understand risks,
and avoid investing blindly because of marketing language.
Practical Example
Suppose you invest ₦100,000 in a halal equity fund.
The fund manager may spread your money across:
telecom companies,
industrial firms,
agriculture companies,
consumer goods firms,
and sukuk instruments,
while avoiding:
banks earning conventional interest,
breweries,
gambling companies.
If the portfolio grows by 15% in one year:
your investment may become about ₦115,000 before fees and taxes.
But if the market falls:
the value can also decline.
Who Should Consider Ethical Funds?
Ethical funds may suit:
beginner investors,
long-term investors,
faith-based investors,
passive investors,
and people uncomfortable with certain industries.
They may not suit:
short-term traders,
people seeking very aggressive returns,
or investors wanting full control over stock selection.
Final Point
Before investing in any ethical fund, ask:
What exactly does this fund invest in?
What sectors does it avoid?
What are the historical returns?
What are the fees?
Is the risk level suitable for me?
Is the fund regulated?
What is my investment time horizon?
Ethical investing works best when:
your financial goals,
your risk tolerance,
and your personal values
all align together.
Thank you so much sir and God bless you... But sir, there's what I still don't understand about ethical funds, what is unit price and what app can one use to invest in ethical funds sir
Thank you so much sir and God bless you…
But sir, there’s what I still don’t understand about ethical funds, what is unit price and what app can one use to invest in ethical funds sir
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