World’s Most Ethical Companies 2010 Edition

2010 World’s Most Ethical Companies

Ethisphere Institute just announced its list of the World’s Most Ethical Companies for 2010.

Of the 100 companies on their list, 26 are new to the list. The sole winner for the real estate industry is Jones Lang LaSalle. For the financial services industry there were three companies: American Express, The Hartford and The Principal Financial Group.

A tidbit that caught my eye was the comparative performance of the companies. Ethisphere claims that the “2010 World’s Most Ethical Companies have outperformed the S&P 500 by delivering a 53 percent return to shareholders since 2005—compared to the S&P’s four percent shareholder loss over the same period.”

It’s interesting to see that these companies consistently outperformed the broader in good times and bad. I’m tempted to go back through all of the past winners to see how it would have worked out by investing in these companies over the years. (If I could just find the time to do so.)

Ethisphere’s looks at 7 categories under their “Ethics Quotient”:

  1. Corporate citizenship and responsibility (20%)
  2. Corporate governance (10%)
  3. Innovation that contributes to public well being (15%)
  4. Industry leadership (5%)
  5. Executive leadership and tone from the top (15%)
  6. Integrity track record and reputation (20%)
  7. Internal systems and ethics/compliance program (15%)

2009 World’s Most Ethical Companies

ethisphere

Ethisphere has published its collection of 2009 World’s Most Ethical Companies. Twenty companies dropped off the 2008 list and 25 new ones were added, leaving a list of 99 companies.

Who caught my eye was Jones Lang LaSalle, a real estate company (one of my company’s business relationships) who was back on the list again. They seem to be the benchmark for the real estate industry.

(The Ethisphere website has been up and down all day. Try back later if the links are not working)

Code of Business Ethics for Jones Lang LaSalle

Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated was named to The Ethisphere Institute’s 2008 World’s Most Ethical Companies list.

The World’s Most Ethical Companies are the ones that go above and beyond legal minimums, bring about innovative new ideas to expand the public well being, work on reducing their carbon footprint rather than contributing to green washing and won’t be found next to the words “Billion Dollar Fine” in newspaper headlines any time in the near future. These are the companies that stand out among the competition in their industry.

The Jones Lang LaSalle Code of Ethics (.pdf) is published on the “investor relations” section of their website.