Impact investing can be a driver of investment alpha

Schroders and Oxford University’s pioneering research findings

Impact investing can be a driver of alpha across listed equities under the right conditions, according to new proprietary research published today by Schroders, in partnership with Oxford University’s Saïd Business School.

The findings demonstrate that firms with higher impact materiality – the extent to which a company’s revenue is derived from products or services delivering positive impact – tend to exhibit stronger financial performance. Examples of companies delivering positive impact encompass, for example, firms that are leading the low carbon transition, and companies expanding financial inclusion.

The data collection, financial modelling and back-testing was run independently by the Saïd Business School to ensure methodological independence and rigour.

Analysing 257 impact companies, the research assessed whether the firms outperformed traditional benchmarks using asset pricing models and regression analysis. Key financial drivers were controlled - size, value, momentum, profitability, and investment factors - to determine if impact firms generated alpha independent of risk characteristics.

By introducing impact materiality as a potential return driver and incorporating real-world case studies, the research provides a data-driven look at the financial viability of impact investing in listed equities.

The analysis highlights three key findings:

  1. Competitive Returns: impact portfolios delivered strong absolute and risk-adjusted returns, exhibiting statistically significant alpha unexplained by traditional risk factors.
  2. Lower Volatility, Greater Resilience: impact portfolios exhibited lower volatility, reduced drawdowns, and milder negative skewness compared to conventional indices, suggesting stronger downside protection. They also showed stronger correlation with the market in expansions and weaker correlation in recessions, indicating asymmetric market exposure and stability.
  3. Impact Materiality Drives Returns: companies with higher revenue alignment to measurable impact themes generated superior financial returns.
Maria Teresa Zappia, Global Head of Impact, Schroders, said:
"For too long the assumption in markets has been that impact investing requires sacrificing returns in favour of purpose. Now, our pioneering research provides answers on the relationship between impact and financial returns, and evidence that impact investments can be a driver of alpha generation in listed markets.
“Active investment via a robust impact measurement and monitoring framework remains key, however. For investors that get this right, aligning financial strength and impact could not just deliver positive purpose outcomes, but an investment return edge as well.”

The study identified firms such as Schneider Electric, a leader in digital energy solutions helping businesses optimise energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions, and Gentera, a Latin American microfinance firm, focused on providing credit and financial services to underserved groups including female entrepreneurs.

Amir Amel-Zadeh, Director of the Oxford Rethinking Performance Initiative, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, said:
“This research offers a timely and important challenge to the persistent belief that impact investing must come at the cost of financial performance. By integrating impact metrics with traditional financial analysis, the findings show that well-constructed impact portfolios can deliver competitive returns with lower volatility and downside risk. While not every impact strategy will outperform, the findings in this study challenge the assumption that purpose-driven investing requires financial sacrifice—and suggest that, when executed with discipline, impact can contribute to long-term value creation and portfolio resilience.”
Amit Bouri, CEO and Co-Founder of the Global Impact Investing Network, said:
"Impact investing is about solving problems in order to improve people's lives and the health of our planet. As more impact investors build diversified portfolios, listed equities play an important and growing role." 

Click here to download the complete research findings

PDF 783 KB

Media contacts

Wim Heirbaut

Press and media relations, BeFirm

Tânia Jerónimo Cabral

Head of Marketing Schroders Benelux, Schroders

About the Oxford Rethinking Performance Initiative

The Oxford Rethinking Performance Initiative (ORP), at Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, is at the forefront of research and practice in sustainable business and finance collaborating with international corporations and investment managers. Our goal is to support companies, investors and policy makers in creating sustainable, long-term value for the benefit of the economy, planet and society. Together with our partners, we seek to produce academic research for evidence-based corporate decision-making and policy formulation, as well as a knowledge repository for insights into sustainable business, ESG measurement and sustainable investment.

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