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The views expressed are those of the teams comprising Wellington’s Impact Platform including our impact equity and fixed income investment teams and IMM Practice. For these teams and strategies, impact measurement and management and engagement is a core component of the investment process. These practices do not necessarily extend to other strategies that Wellington Management offers. Views are those of the authors at the time of writing, and other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional, or accredited investors only.

Impact Investing Platform

Impact themes

Wellington's impact investment teams invest globally across three broad impact categories — Life essentials, Human empowerment, and Environment — which we then divide into 11 impact themes. While not explicitly linked to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), we believe the 11 themes we invest in closely align with the SDGs, and we map our portfolios’ desired impact outcomes to these goals and their underlying targets.

Impact opportunities can represent innovative solutions across sectors, asset classes, and market capitalizations. All impact investments must meet our thresholds for materiality, additionality, and measurability. That is, companies or issuers must generate most of their revenue from products and services related to at least one of our impact themes, the impact they generate must have a low prospect of being achieved by other means, and we must be able to track and measure their impact.

Once we determine whether a company or issuer meets our impact criteria, we add it to our opportunity set. Our fundamental analysis then seeks to identify those investments with the most attractive long-term return potential.

Our impact themes

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Life Essentials

Affordable housing

 

Clean water & sanitation

 

Health

 

Sustainable agriculture & nutrition

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Human Empowerment

Digital divide

 

Education & job training

 

Financial inclusion

 

Safety & security

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Environment

Alternative energy

 

Resource efficiency

 

Resource stewardship

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Affordable housing

We believe access to safe, affordable housing enables people to focus less on basic survival and more on  physical, emotional, and economic well-being. Without the daily anxiety of homelessness or unaffordable shelter, families can concentrate on education and career building, both of which can lead to long-term financial stability, better health outcomes, and upward social mobility.

Clean water & sanitation

For hundreds of millions of people globally, securing clean water is a constant, time-consuming struggle that can hinder economic development and perpetuate community-level inequities. When families, particularly women, have ready access to water, health and economic outcomes may improve. Water infrastructure, sanitation, and resource management are also critical for building climate resiliency.

Health

Providing health care to underserved or vulnerable populations, researching novel treatments for complex diseases, and advancing diagnostic technologies are significant, often expensive challenges. But the personal and societal-level benefits of broader access to health care are far-reaching and long-lasting. 

Sustainable agriculture & nutrition

Solutions for sustainable food production, including resilient seeds, crops, and livestock, may help reduce food insecurity and enhance nutrition. Technologies geared toward smallholder farms may help mitigate the negative effects of large-scale industrial agriculture, including air, soil, and water pollution and natural-resource depletion. 

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Digital divide

Lack of internet access can hinder education, social inclusion, and economic empowerment, compounding structural inequalities. Individuals or businesses without reliable access may fall further behind in an increasingly digital-dependent economy. Narrowing the digital gap is particularly important for rural communities and developing countries.

Education & job training

Education can be a key that opens the door to economic stability. Solutions for improving in-person teaching and expanding remote-access education, especially for low-income populations, can have positive, community-level multiplier effects. Done affordably and in conjunction with other connectivity solutions, online learning and job training can help lift millions out of poverty.

Financial inclusion

Access to equitable financial services, credit, and other forms of capital is critical for individuals and small businesses. We believe companies that expand access to these services can enable financial stability and help sustain economic development. 

Safety & security

As the world becomes increasingly reliant on connectivity and online transactions, cybersecurity — protecting data and privacy — is vital. Other forms of safety, including innovations for the home and workplace, or resilient infrastructure to protect life and property from natural disasters, can also have wide-ranging positive impact.  

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Alternative energy

Decarbonizing the energy sector is, in our view, the biggest step along the path toward achieving net-zero carbon emissions. Renewable-energy companies play a pivotal role in the transition to a low-carbon future, enabling the world to gradually wean itself from fossil fuels, decelerate global temperature rise, and clear polluted air.  

Resource efficiency

Rising consumption and a dwindling supply of finite resources including minerals, base metals, arable land, water, and timber present costly social and environmental challenges. Innovating and modernizing existing resource extraction, production, and distribution methods can help reduce waste, mitigate pollution, save money, and safeguard human health. 

Resource stewardship

In our view, solutions that enhance resource stewardship and promote circular, sustainable economies are becoming more vital and valuable, as the harmful effects of linear, disposable economies become apparent. Self-sustaining, regenerative systems of production and consumption, where waste is minimized or avoided altogether, could become an economic necessity.

Impact reports

See impact highlights from each of our strategies, along with measurable impact results from the companies and issuers in which we invest.