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(https://www.ceres.org/resources/reports/bridging-institutional-capital-and-community-climate-investments)

Across the U.S., the need for housing, infrastructure, small business financing, and climate resilience in rural and underserved communities is accelerating.

Community lender investments in these areas can generate returns and help reduce risks from extreme weather, such as droughts, fires, and floods.

Yet institutional investors often perceive community lender investments as unable to deliver competitive risk-adjusted returns, citing barriers such as scale, liquidity, and risk perception.

This report from Ceres and the Justice Climate Fund reveals how private capital can be more effectively mobilized to close this gap.

Drawing on insights from more than 40 institutional investors, community lenders, and industry experts, the report outlines four key strategies to unlock greater private investment:

  1. Traditional Financing Tools
  2. Innovative Financing Models
  3. First-Loss or Low-Cost Capital Strategies
  4. Outside-the-Box Collaborations

[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Fable 5 | Human-directed; AI-powered]

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(https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5d0cee8d37a63200017a0906/t/6a31bb89bc9a0719f5e82aa0/1781644169186/2026+Zevin+Asset+Management+Impact+Report.pdf)

Report focus

Zevin Asset Management's 2026 Impact Report documents the firm's shareholder advocacy, proxy voting, and public policy action over 2024–2025. The report frames responsible investing not as a preference but as a discipline — tested by anti-ESG legislation across dozens of states, SEC rollbacks on climate disclosure rules and shareholder proposal rights, and an administration effort to redefine fiduciary duty as a mandate for short-termism. ZAM, a 100% employee-owned, majority women-led, certified B Corporation®, holds that durable investment returns depend on the health of the underlying system: how companies treat workers, manage risk, govern themselves, and respect communities and the environment.

Sustainability issues in focus

  • Governance & accountability — corporate lobbying (direct, indirect, and through trade associations); alignment between stated sustainability commitments and political spending; shareholder rights under Delaware SB21 and new SEC no-action rules
  • Worker rights & economic justice — living wages, noncompete agreements, freedom of association; immigration enforcement and its cascading labour-market impacts
  • Technology & human rights — AI due diligence, data privacy governance, cloud services deployed in conflict zones and surveillance contexts
  • Climate & place-based impacts — science-based targets, data centre energy and water footprints, EPA Endangerment Finding reversal

Engagement highlights

... features ... Unilever, Danaher, AbbVie, Apple, Digital Realty Trust, Analog Devices, Home Depot, Amazon and Alphabet

    Other highlights

    ... features ... Proxy voting, Portfolio carbon intensity, Diverse ownership, FTC noncompete ban, Public policy

    Report parameters

    • Publication date: June 2026
    • Period covered: 2024–2025

    [Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Claude Sonnet 4.6 | Human-directed; AI-powered]

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    (https://www.msci.com/research-and-insights/blog-post/mapping-geopolitical-risk-across-the-value-chain)

    Key findings

    • Geodiversity has helped explain stock returns during major geopolitical events over the past decade. Companies with more concentrated value chains tended to be more vulnerable during periods of heightened geopolitical tension.
    • Geodiversity measures the geographic concentration of a company's suppliers, production facilities and customers. Initial results suggest that higher concentration may be associated with greater exposure to disruption.
    • Investors seeking to understand their geopolitical exposures may find value in mapping their portfolios along these three value-chain dimensions.

    Contains

    • Geodiversity as a measure of geopolitical risk
    • Tariffs and conflict: When geodiversity mattered the most
    • Geodiversity in action: The April 2025 tariff announcements
    • A promising signal for geopolitical risk

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    (https://www.eurizoncapital.com/-/media/Project/Eurizon/EurizonPortals/EurizonPortal/Files/Sustainability/ENG/stewardship-report-eng.pdf)

    Published: April 2026

    Summary: Covers engagement outcomes, voting records, collaborative initiatives and sustainability integration across public market portfolios.

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    (https://www.santanderassetmanagement.com/content/view/20445/file/SAM_003-26_0212_Informe%20Santander%20Prosperity_ENG.pdf?inLanguage=eng-GB&version=1)

    Published: Spring 2026

    Summary: Details voting activity, engagement themes and stewardship priorities across global portfolios. Includes climate, biodiversity and governance engagement case studies together with escalation examples.

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    (https://www.caixabankassetmanagement.com/deployedfiles/fil_cabkam/Estaticos/Documentos/2026/InformededialogoyvotoENG.pdf)

    Published: 2026 reporting cycle, April

    Summary: Covers shareholder engagement, proxy voting, climate dialogue and ESG integration activities. Includes examples of company engagement on governance, sustainability reporting and transition-related issues.

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    (https://www.holcim.com/investors/publications)

    Published: March 2026

    Summary: Holcim's integrated report covers decarbonisation of cement and concrete, circular construction materials, low-carbon product revenues and climate transition initiatives.

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    (https://www.crh.com/investors/annual-reports/)

    Published: February–March 2026 reporting cycle

    Summary: Covers operational decarbonisation, sustainable infrastructure, lower-carbon cement products and circular materials.

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    (https://esgonasunday.substack.com/p/spacex-zero)

    The first comprehensive public ESG analysis of Space Exploration Technologies Corp.

    We celebrate visionaries. We lionize disruptors. We invest billions in companies that promise to reshape our future. But what happens when extraordinary technical achievement exists alongside systematic failures in accountability, transparency, and governance?

    SpaceX—valued at $750 billion, holding over $15 billion in government contracts, launching more rockets than any nation on Earth—operates in near-total ESG darkness. No sustainability report. No diversity data. No independent board. No financial disclosure. No climate strategy. No stakeholder engagement.

    This is not an oversight. It is a choice.

    After months of research drawing on regulatory filings, investigative journalism, legal proceedings, OSHA records, FAA violations, NLRB rulings, and employee testimony, I present the first comprehensive public ESG analysis of SpaceX.

    The findings are dark.

    Environmental Score: D Social Score: D- Governance Score: F Overall ESG Rating: F (0.6/5.0)

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    (https://www.sustainablefinance.ch/api/rm/4S566D3GA6955BM/ssf-2026-investment-market-study-final.pdf)

    Key messages

    • Switzerland stands out positively in terms of asset growth
    • Financial industry remains committed in action more than in words
    • Asset owners lead by commitment, especially on real estate
    • Artificial intelligence is reshaping sustainable finance
    • Nature-related investment opportunities are taking shape
    • Extreme weather events are most material nature-related risk

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    (https://www.sustainablefitch.com/sovereigns/esg-regulations-reporting-standards-june-2026-highlights-02-06-2026)

    Early 2026 Marks Another Step Towards an ISSB Baseline, with Uneven Implementation
    • ESG regulation broadened in early 2026 beyond corporate disclosure into fund labelling and taxonomies.
    • Sustainability reporting is increasingly coalescing around an ISSB baseline, though adoption timelines and requirements still differ materially by market.
    • Climate disclosures are being implemented first, while Scope 3 treatment, assurance standards and ISSB-EU alignment continue to constrain cross-border comparability.
    ... includes ...
    • Regulatory Focus Is Broadening Beyond Corporate Disclosure
    • ISSB Convergence Is Advancing, but Comparability Remains Limited
    • Notable ESG Regulatory Developments – 1 January to 15 May 2026
    • Global ESG Reporting Converges Around ISSB, with Uneven Implementation Paths
    • Europe Remains Shaped by the EU's Separate Reporting Framework
    • Upcoming ESG Regulations to Monitor

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    (https://am.pictet.com/uk/en/responsible-investment/responsible-investment-report)

    Published: 2026

    Summary: Covers engagement, voting, investment solutions and responsible investment implementation, with a particular focus on stewardship outcomes and long-term investor dialogue.

    Companies featured as case studies

    • American Water Works
    • China Construction Bank
    • Ecolab
    • GFL Environmental, Inc.
    • Haier Smart Home Co. Ltd
    • Lindt & Sprungli
    • Mankind Pharma Ltd
    • Roche
    • Toyota Motor Corp
    • Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing