Acquisition Cost |
The cost of acquiring a Holding including any expenses incurred
in acquiring or protecting the Holding. |
Administrator |
|
Agreement |
The subscription agreement (including schedules)
between Shareholders of The Fund constituting The Fund and to be
entered in to at the Closing. |
Astraea |
Astraea Limited, a private limited company. |
Capital Contribution |
In respect of each Shareholder, the amount of the capital of
The Fund contributed by or credited to that Shareholder. |
CIMA |
Chartered Institute of Management
Accountants |
Closing |
[2003] |
Commitment |
In respect of each Shareholder, the aggregate of the Capital
Contribution advanced or agreed to be advanced by such Shareholder
(whether or not it has been or may still be drawn down and if drawn
down whether or not repaid in whole or in part). |
Commitment Period |
The period commencing on the Closing Date and ending on the
second anniversary of the First Closing Date. |
Committed Funds |
The total amount of Commitments of all the Shareholders. |
Custodian |
|
Employed Funds |
The aggregate of the Acquisition Cost of all Holdings still
held by The Fund. |
Extraordinary Resolution |
A resolution by The Fund requiring at least 75% of The Fund
votes cast to be in favour of the resolution. |
The Fund |
The Fund, a company to be formed with the purpose of making
investments in businesses demonstrating globally responsible management
initiative. |
GR, Globally Responsible |
GR means globally responsible. It means balancing the demands
of economic and financial survival and growth with the demands of
ethical and environmental survival and growth.
Being globally responsible is a way of doing business that accounts
for externalities and operates within normal parameters of natural
systems. "Do unto others as you would have them do to you"
applied to humanity and the biosphere on individual and global scales.
Being globally responsible means being inclusive, rather than exclusive,
however, some commercial activities are inherently globally irresponsible
such as nuclear power and military activities. |
Globally Responsible Initiative,
GRI |
GRI means globally responsible initiative. It is a behaviour
change to more sustainable methods. GRI supports sustainable development.
GRI may be manifested in a product or service or its delivery,
and/or in a business's culture or business model.
Examples of GRI include the Earth Charter
Initiative chaired by Mikhail Gorbachev, alternative energy businesses
like Vestas and Ballard, organic production, donationware, Siemens'
web based knowledge system. |
Information Memorandum or Memorandum |
This document or any part of this document indicated by the
contents in the left margin. Issued by Astraea from time to time
amended and published on the world wide web (originally drafted
in March 2001 and issued in March 2003) and any printed versions
of this document or part of this document. |
Initial Public Offering or IPO |
The first time the equity shares of a private company are offered
publicly to investors as a precursor to a listing. |
IRR or internal rate of return |
The interest rate at which a stream of cash flows must be discounted
to yield a net present value of zero, measured in percent. |
Last Closing Date |
The final date by which new Shareholders may be admitted to
The Fund. This date is to be determined by the Directors. |
LOHAS
|
Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability, a term used to describe
a marketplace populated by consumers that focus on value for money
and that value sustainability. (About LOHAS from LOHAS journal.)
|
Liquid Assets |
Cash on hand or on deposit and investment grade debt securities
with an original maturity of less than 366 days and rated A1-A3
by Standard and Poors or P1-P3 by Moody’s. |
Listing |
Relevant shares or other securities that have been admitted
to listing, or permission has been granted to deal in the same,
or such shares or securities have been listed, registered or are
regularly dealt in, on any officially sanctioned stock or investment
exchange, and the term "listed" shall be construed accordingly. |
Manager |
GRI Equity Management Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of The
Fund. |
Major Shareholder |
Any Shareholder which has a Commitment of US$ 5,000,000 or more. |
Ordinary Resolution |
A resolution of the Shareholders passed by a simple majority
of votes being cast in favour of the resolution. |
PE |
Private equity and/or venture capital. |
Probability Threshold |
A statistical term indicating that the time horizon for predictions
is too great to make any statistically significant discrimination
between possible outcomes. For example, the probability threshold
for weather forecasting is about 5 days, even with perfect information. |
Shareholder |
A legal person registered as owner of shares of The Fund. |
Holding |
Any investment acquired by The Fund. A Target Holding is a potential
investment that may or may not be acquired by the Fund and may be
at any stage of screening. |
The Securities |
Interests in The Fund. |
Special Resolution |
A resolution requiring the consent of all Shareholders except
that of the Sponsor. |
Sponsor |
Astraea Limited |
US$ or US Dollar(s) |
The lawful currency of the United States of America. |
VC |
Venture capital and/or private equity. |
General Terminology |
|
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) |
The integration of business operations and values whereby the
interests of all stakeholders including customers, employees, investors,
and the environment are reflected in the company's policies and
actions. |
Double Bottom Line |
Refers to a balance between a company's social and financial
return. |
Social Venture Capital |
Funds raised to support economic ventures with a focus or mission
involving the improvement of society. |
Stakeholder |
Anyone who is affected by or who has an affect on an organization. |
Triple Bottom Line |
Refers to a balance between a company's social, environmental,
and financial return. |
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|
Community Investing |
|
Affordable Housing |
Initiatives community lending used to build or rehabilitate
housing for low-income families. Loans are usually accompanied by
supportive programs helping individuals secure and repay mortgages. |
Community Banks |
For-profit, insured banks or savings institutions that target
low-income people or others who lack adequate access to financial
services. Given the typically low to moderate-income customer base
of development banks, they often depend on additional deposits from
outside of the community to fund their lending activity. |
Community Development |
Lending supports non-profits and cooperatives that are working
directly with disadvantaged populations and communities to develop
enterprises that provide core social resources, such as health services
and daycare centers. |
Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) |
Community banks, credit unions, loan funds, and microcredit
institutions. |
Community Development Loan Fund (CDLF) |
A non-profit organization providing loans to undeserved communities
at below market rates for affordable housing, small businesses,
and community facilities. |
Community Investing |
Investment programs, which support development initiatives in
economically challenged communities through community-based financial
institutions such as development banks, loan funds, and community
credit unions. |
Cooperative Lending |
A group of entrepreneurs form a cooperative whereby the group
disburses loans to members and each member has ownership for the
ventures. |
Informal Sector |
Non-registered, but legal enterprises or under-the-table businesses
such as street vendors and babysitters. |
Microcredit |
Small, low interest loans to low-income entrepreneurs who have
little or no collateral. |
Microfinance Institutions |
Organizations that provide small amounts of capital, often as
little as $50 in developing countries, to people with little or
no collateral so they can avoid usurious rates. Also gaining recognition
in U.S. communities as well, although micro-loan amounts are considerably
higher there. |
Peer Lending Groups |
A group of entrepreneurs who receive formal loans typically
through an intermediary such as a non-profit organization. Group
accountability ensures successful loan repayment and members gain
access to credit. |
Revolving Loan Fund |
Within a group of entrepreneurs, a loan is made and must be
paid back in full before a second loan is granted to another member
of the group. In some cases group members will provide the funds
rather than an outside funding source. |
Small Business Development |
This category of lending assists low-income people in disadvantaged
communities to start or increase the scope of their own businesses
by providing loans generally over $25,000. |
Social Investing |
The act of making investment decisions to achieve social as
well as a financial return. |
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|
Shareholder Activism |
|
Corporate Governance |
The balance of power within corporations that determines who
controls company policy among the Board of Directors, corporate
executives, and shareholders, and often challenged by the latter
through shareholder activism. |
Divestment |
Discontinuing investment in a corporation because of social
concerns. |
Proxy Ballot |
Used in voting on shareholder resolutions. All proxies not submitted
are considered in accordance with management's recommendations. |
Shareholder Activism |
Investor efforts to submit and vote proxy resolutions as a means
of influencing company behavior. |
Shareholder Resolutions |
Method by which stakeholders attempt to change corporate policies
and practices. |
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|
Social Screening |
|
Affirmative Screening |
The act of investing in companies with values aligned with your
own. Examples include investments in companies with good minority
hiring records, good environmental records, or good community relations. |
Best of Class |
A positive approach to screening employed by some mutual funds
and money managers, which includes the social and environmental
leaders among each industry, even those with many challenges such
as the oil industry. |
Child Labor |
Employment of children, generally under the age of 15 or below
the compulsory schooling age, often under hazardous or harmful working
conditions and at the cost of the children's physical, educational,
and psychological development. |
Exclusionary (negative) Screen |
An ethical criteria that may disqualify companies for consideration
of investment. |
Index |
A means of measuring the performance of a financial market or
a sector of a market by calculating the prices of its constituents. |
Prospectus |
A document that contains complete information detailing the
financial condition of a fund, including management fees and expenses. |
Screening |
The inclusion or exclusion of corporate securities in investment
portfolios. |
Social Auditing |
The process whereby an organization can account for its social
performance, report on and improve their performance. It assesses
the social impact and ethical behavior of an organization in relation
to its aims and those of its stakeholders. |
Sweatshops |
Production factories often marked by low wages, inadequate working
conditions, overcrowding, poor health conditions, and long hours. |
Vendor Standards |
Workplace and human rights standards employed by corporations
to assure that their products provided by supplier factories overseas
are not tainted by sweatshop conditions, child labor, or other labor
abuses. |