News

New research examines rules for a Social Stock Exchange 
(16/08/2010 )

A new research project, funded by Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian (EFC member) and carried out by UK charity CAN in collaboration with the Social Stock Exchange (SSE) Ltd, is aiming to support the development of a Financial Services Authority-regulated global social stock exchange that will allow investors to trade exclusively in companies with social and environmental goals.

The exchange, when it becomes operational, will be designed for companies, both large and small, that specialise in providing goods and services explicitly for a social purpose who need to raise significant amounts of capital for growth and expansion. The objective is to help these socially-minded companies – essentially market-led business that prioritise social mission rather than just profits – to raise equity and gain access to capital in order to fulfil their social goals.

The research is focusing on the production of a set of rulebooks for the Exchange that will require companies to be more transparent about their social impact.

Andrew Croft, Chief Executive of CAN, says:
“Partnering with the Social Stock Exchange on this research is an important step in encouraging investment in companies trading for financial and social benefit. CAN is committed to supporting the development of a social investment market – one that recognises the value of both social enterprises and socially-minded companies. This research is a cornerstone of the vision organisations like CAN and  SSE share.”  

Pradeep Jethi, Chief Executive Officer of SSE, says:
“What makes a social stock exchange different from normal stock exchanges is that it is able to authenticate its issuers as being primarily for social or environmental purpose. The research into and development of a unique set of admissions rules, trading rules and disclosure rules is fundamental to this differentiation.”

Andrew Barnett, Director of Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian in the UK says:
“One of our core objectives is to build the capacity of civil society to improve impact through the clear measurement of outcomes; the development and implementation of the Social Stock Exchange rulebooks offer an innovative model to achieve this objective and represents the first time so many social enterprises will have been assessed on such a scale.”
 
Before the Social Stock Exchange can be launched the rulebooks and guidance notes will need to be approved by the Financial Services Authority. CAN and its delivery partner, the Social Stock Exchange Ltd, will solicit views from leading social enterprises, social impact investors, social capital market participants and specialist law firms who advise the sector.


More information:

http://www.gulbenkian.org.uk/news/press-releases/2010/social-stock-exchange

 
 

Source: CAN; Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian      13/08/2010