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How Can I Take Action?
Sustainability is an issue that must actively involve all countries in the world, whether they are more or less developed, and promoting sustainability in the world requires the cooperation of every state. It is essential that richer states help poorer ones keep pace with progress, both technological and social, and that they commit themselves to following the core principles of the most important international organizations.
Fostering international cooperation means promoting relations between states and Society in such a way as to achieve common goals in political, economic and environmental matters.
The goals that mutual funds can set to support international cooperation focus on complying with and adhering to the most significant international regulations (Paris Agreement, Convention on Corruption, PRI), constant monitoring of the ESG activities of their holdings.
Another goal that mutual funds can set is to choose some of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and promote their achievement by following the guidelines of the action plan approved by the 193 countries that are part of the UN.
Sustainable investors use different management strategies:
The Exclusion Approach: Many funds address the issue by excluding from their Portfolio those states that are not fiscally transparent according to the OECD Blacklist.
The Normative Approach: Most funds adhere to and comply with the most important international regulations on the environment (Paris Convention, Biodiversity Convention), labor (ILO), transparency and governance (PRI, Corruption Convention, Freedom House).
Best practices: Some funds conduct ESG performance assessments of the countries in which they intend to invest or are members of organized associations that strive for greater transparency in investments (GIIN, ILG, GRI).
We use 55 criteria to determine the significance of international cooperation in mutual fund management in our universe.
Impact, ESG Risk and Screening strategies are fairly balanced with a slight prevalence of ESG Risk in the valuation systems. At the Screening level the most widely used strategy is the regulatory approach with a focus placed on bribery and exclusion of those who use it; at theESG Risk level the strategy that is most widely used is adherence to supranational principles or particular initiatives aimed at sustainability by Society management(PRI, ILO, CDP); while at the Impact level much emphasis is placed on the use ofEngagement to influence ESG decisions within the Assemblies.
Assessing the negative impacts associated with international cooperation is useful in facilitating international convergence toward a UN-coordinated model where individual countries agree to a minimum level of rights, transparency, tax policy and coordination.
The European Union has taken a strong position in this regard, making it mandatory for sustainable funds to measure the following indicators:
- Violations of the principles of the UN Global Compact and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) guidelines for multinational enterprises:
The Share of Investments in Society investees that have been involved in violations of the UNGC principles or the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.
- Share of investments in Society investees that do not verify compliance with the UNGC or the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.:
The Share of Investments in Society investees without policies to monitor compliance with the UNGC principles or the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises or complaint handling mechanisms to address violations of the UNGC or OECD principles.
The meaning is clear: sustainable funds must follow the principles of the UN Global Compact and discard investments in Society involved in litigation or not caring.

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The 5 most profitable sustainable equity funds intent on fostering international cooperation :
| type_name_en | Classification | instrument_id | isin | masterisin | Fund | Currency | ESGAP | class_type | Theme | Cod_impact | Area | ESG Intensity | Performance | RIschio | Performance 6 months | Performance 1 year | Performance 3 years |
|---|
The 5 most profitable bond funds intent on fostering international cooperation :
The 5 most profitable bond funds intent on fostering international cooperation :
| type_name_en | Classification | instrument_id | isin | masterisin | Fund | Currency | ESGAP | class_type | Theme | Cod_impact | Area | ESG Intensity | Performance | RIschio | Performance 6 months | Performance 1 year | Performance 3 years |
|---|
The 5 most profitable sustainable ETFs intent on fostering international cooperation :
The 5 most profitable sustainable ETFs intent on fostering international cooperation :
| type_name_en | Classification | instrument_id | isin | masterisin | Fund | Currency | ESGAP | class_type | Theme | Cod_impact | Area | ESG Intensity | Performance | RIschio | Performance 6 months | Performance 1 year | Performance 3 years |
|---|
The 5 most profitable sustainable thematic funds intent on fostering international cooperation :
| type_name_en | Classification | Theme | instrument_id | isin | masterisin | Fund | Currency | ESGAP | class_type | Cod_impact | Area | ESG Intensity | Performance | Risk | Performance 6 months | Performance 1 year | Performance 3 years |
|---|
