CONTACT:
Stephanie Kendall or Joy Mileham, 703/276-3254, or [email protected]
MMA PRAXIS
OFFERS NEW OPTION FOR RELIGIOUS INVESTORS: WAY TO DIRECTLY
AID COMMUNITIES IN NEED
MMA Praxis is
1st Church-Owned Mutual Fund Family to Achieve "1 Percent"
Mark; Recognition Part of Social Investment Forum Campaign
to Boost Community Investing.
WASHINGTON, D.C. and GOSHEN, IN.//January
24, 2002//MMA Praxis Mutual
Funds and the Social Investment Forum announced today that
MMA Praxis is the first church-affiliated mutual fund family
in the United States to earn recognition from the Forum for
placing 1 percent of its assets in community investments (CI).
The expansion of community investing options
into faith-based mutual funds gives religious investors important
new choices. Traditionally, mutual funds with a religious
focus have concentrated on ethical screening of their investments,
as opposed to the more direct leveraging of their assets in
communities in need.
"Community development investing within
MMA Praxis gives people a unique opportunity to help others
through their investments in addition to making charitable
donations," says Howard L. Brenneman, MMA president and
chair of MMA Praxis. "MMA Praxis is delighted to have
reached the 1 percent level. Our shareholders can now be involved
in helping these communities in the U.S. and around the globe
meet their own goals, including affordable housing, a more
stable local economy of small businesses, a healthier environment,
or neighborhood revitalization."
Social Investment Forum Vice Chair Alisa
Gravitz said: "The Social Investment Forum and Co-op
America applaud MMA for its commitment to the goal of devoting
1 percent of its assets to community investing. The Forum
and Co-op America look forward to making additional announcements
such as these on a regular basis, as more and more of our
members reach this important goal. If you think that 1 percent
doesn't sound like much of a target, consider this fact: If
all socially screened portfolios reached the goal of having
1 percent of their assets in CI the result would be a tripling
of current community investing dollars."
WHY COMMUNITY INVESTING FOR THE
FAITHFUL?
For more than two decades, an institutional
version of CI has existed among religious groups with assets,
such as pension funds for Catholic nuns and priests. But as
community investing moves into mutual funds, it allows individual
shareholders to play a direct role in these community-changing
activities. This is particularly important to people of faith
who regularly - and as a matter of principle -- open up their
pocketbooks for charitable causes.
Brenneman continued: "Now that's all
changing with community investing. Community development investing
offers average Christian investors, as stewards with the privilege
of having assets, to also follow Christ's call to care for
the poor."
Only one other religiously oriented mutual
fund has achieved the Social Investment Forum's "1 percent"
mark. However, the Aquinas Funds are not owned by the Catholic
Church. By contrast, MMA Praxis Mutual Funds are part of Mennonite
Mutual Aid, which is owned by the Mennonite Church USA.
ABOUT THE MMA INVESTMENTS
The total so far of $6 million in MMA Community
Development Investment assets are going to several worthy
organizations, including:
For more information about community investing
at MMA or its other CI projects, go to www.mma-online.org.
MMA's goal is to place investments with
carefully chosen community development organizations that
have met rigorous standards for financial stability and social
impact. Most of these investments are made at full- or near-market
rates. In some instances, organizations receive below-market
rates. However, the organizations are required to clearly
demonstrate the additional margin of value that these rates
provide.
MMA Equity Investment Manager Chad Horning
compares CI's financial returns to cash investments, while
not having the same liquidity. Cash investments already often
represent 2 to 5 percent of diversified mutual funds.
ABOUT MMA AND MMA PRAXIS
As a stewardship solutions organization,
Mennonite Mutual Aid helps Anabaptists and others practice
biblical stewardship through its expertise in insurance, financial
services, charitable-giving programs and educational resources.
For more information, visit www.mma-online.org.
MMA Praxis Mutual Funds, a division of MMA,
exists to help individuals meet their financial goals in a
way that supports their beliefs. MMA Praxis practices stewardship
investing, a philosophy that balances a need for productive
use of financial resources with a deep-seated concern for
others. For more information, visit www.mmapraxis.com.
ABOUT THE 1 PERCENT CAMPAIGN
In 2001, the Social Investment Forum launched
a campaign to help move more than $10 billion in assets in
socially responsible investments into communities in need
over the next five years. The Forum is honoring members with
at least 1 percent of their managed assets in community investing,
and highlights them as role models for all investors. Community
investing is financing that generates resources and opportunities
- including capital for small businesses, job creation, affordable
housing, child care and other needed community services -
for economically disadvantaged people in U.S. and overseas
communities that are underserved by traditional financial
institutions.
The 1 percent campaign to promote CI is
a joint partnership of the Social Investment Forum and Co-op
America. The Social Investment Forum is a national nonprofit
trade association dedicated to promoting the concept, practice
and growth of socially responsible investing. Co-op America
is a national nonprofit organization founded in 1982 that
provides the economic strategies, organizing power and practical
tools for businesses and individuals to address today's social
and environmental problems. The campaign's Web site is www.communityinvest.org.
CONTACT:
Stephanie Kendall or Joy Mileham, 703/276-3254, or [email protected]