Global Alliance for Banking on Values Advisor David Korslund and First Green Bank CEO Ken LaRoe Talk About Money & Spirit

Jan 13, 2016 11:00 AM ET

This piece originally appeared in Capital Institute’s Year in the Life of a Regenerative Bank project

The GABV Scorecard as a Strategic Tool for Values-Based Banking

a conversation with David Korslund

David Korslund began his banking career at the storied ShoreBank of Chicago, the nation’s first community development finance bank.  He went on to work at a succession of mainstream banking institutions, finally at ABN AMRO, where he had responsibility for managing the planning and performance management process for the full group. He subsequently developed a plan to reorganize European network activities prior to the bank’s takeover by a consortium led by the Royal Bank of Scotland. In 2009 he returned to his banking roots, helping to support the Global Alliance of Banking on Values, a network of banks now 28 strong with over $100 billion in combined assets under management seeking to deliver economic resiliency, environmental regeneration, and social empowerment by lending to individuals and enterprises in the real economy.

David is now a senior advisor to the GABV directing the network’s Scorecard Initiative, an assessment tool crafted by GABV members to monitor their progress against the above “triple bottom line” goals.  It was David who introduced Capital Institute to First Green Bank’s CEO Ken LaRoe in 2014, shortly after the latter joined the board of the GABV.  A Field Guide story then led to our current collaboration with First Green on the “Year in the Life” project.  ​

At a Scorecard convening in October at First Green Bank we captured David and Ken on video as they go deep in a discussion about what it means to be a values-based banker (see video above).  In this follow up below David shares some GABV Scorecard history and his views on how First Green Bank, and in fact any interested bank, can utilize the Scorecard to guide its regenerative banking practice.

A History of the Scorecard

The first meeting of the Global Alliance of Banking on Values took place in Zeist in March 2009 when a group of 12 values-based bankers from 10 countries got together to explore how they might collaborate with one another to secure new sources of financial capital, develop human capital, better communicate their stories, and advocate for their special brand of banking to civil society, government, and regulators. ​

In March 2012, GABV released a report, partially funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, that demonstrated that its member banks were actually outperforming in financial terms those banks whose primary focus was on shareholder value maximization.

Download the Scorecard here.

Those noteworthy findings, and a desire to create a metrics system that would support a new long-term-capital-raising effort for values-based banks, now called SFRE, motivated members of the GABV to work together to develop a set of metrics that would enable them to formally track their progress in meeting the shared mission that sets them apart from other banks. ​

The GABV Scorecard emerged as members used their practitioner knowledge to determine how best to provide evidence of their business models focused on a Triple Bottom Line. From this practitioner knowledge grew the conviction that both quantitative factors and qualitative elements are needed. For both sections of the GABV Scorecard objective evidence is gathered,  but consistent with the Triple Bottom Line strategy, the GABV Scorecard looks at a bank holistically. 

The most closely watched nonfinancial measure that the Scorecard tracks is the percentage of a bank’s assets that qualify as triple bottom line. “What we came up with to determine that,” David explains, “were two questions that any lending officer in the credit process should be able to answer:  does the purpose of this loan deliver at least one of the three bottom lines and does the purpose of this loan do anything that hurts one of those bottom lines?  So if you have a situation where you lend to an enterprise that creates jobs but if it does that by using child labor or creating pollution then you have a big negative on people or planet and the loan doesn’t qualify.”  A grey area in which, David admits, GABV members have yet to reach consensus is where a given loan may have negative impacts but where the borrower has a mitigation plan in place to eliminate that negative.  If that plan is sufficiently robust, for example, a loan to an energy company that is historically focused on fossil fuels but is borrowing money to transition to a less fossil-fuel-dependent model, some GABV banks would argue that that loan might still be counted as triple bottom line.   “Deep green,” purist GABV members would say it should not," says David. These kinds of healthy debates among GABV bankers will continue, and the Scorecard will continue to evolve to reflect them.

"I think what makes the Scorecard different from other initiatives,” David elaborates, “is that it is built by practitioners who are in banks doing good work but with limited resources."

"Therefore," he notes, "it is not overly theoretical or costly to implement; it is something any bank can actually use.” As of 2014, he reports, 22 of the 28 GABV member banks had delivered their Scorecard results.   “Now it is ready for prime time,” he says,  “and we hope other banks will start using it.”  ​

David thinks that at some future date, even a Citibank might consider adopting the Scorecard in its retail and commercial operations.  “Or you could have a Banco Santander that says we will use it in our Brazilian operation,” he suggests. “Our belief is that values-based banks should be a bigger part of the biodiversity in the banking system.  Some banks have already approached us to use the Scorecard and I think it can grow over three to five years as a core system for many banks. Not every bank has to score well on it to begin using it as a tool. In fact by highlighting areas of improvement, the Scorecard can be a powerful tool for change.”

First Green Bank’s Scorecard Record

Thus far First Green Bank’s greatest values-based success story is its solar push. Solar is installed on all branches owned by the bank. It supplies one third of the Mt. Dora branch’s energy, the majority of its Ormond Beach’s branch, and half of its Clermont branch.   The solar-powered Winter Park branch is net zero energy most months, and some months, net-positive.

Not only has the bank installed solar on its bank branches,  it has been aggressively ramping up the marketing of solar loans: in the first 11 months of  2015 the bank closed $1,774,410 in loans for the purchase and installation of solar PV and hot water systems for a total of 502.88 kW of solar PV, versus $344,549 for a total of 82.885 kW in the same period of 2014.  The target for 2016 is 1,000 kW (1 MegaWatt) of solar loans.  All solar loans are 100 percent financed, currently at 20-year terms of 5.95% fixed for residential and 10-year balloons at 5.95% fixed for commercial.  Most recently the bank extended a 240 kW loan to a bowling alley in Orlando and a 50 kW loan to a historic building in downtown DeLand. Outright grants for solar extended by the First Green Foundation account for another 230 kW of solar installed to date. "Not only is First Green Bank leading by example," David points out, "the bank is providing the financing so others can follow."

Nearly 100 percent of First Green Bank's $103 million in loans outstanding have been made to real economy businesses. However, although FGB also scores high among GABV banks on financial performance measures, it scores at the low end on its overall triple-bottom-line performance—at 10.73 percent of total assets. But looking at the current snapshot of the bank's values-based assets does not tell the whole story, in David’s view.  “You need to look at the environment in which it operates,” he says.  “It is really easy if you are a bank in the Netherlands to score high on triple-bottom-line metrics because the values are endemic in the culture  and it is easier to find the clients that are aligned with your mission. If you are sitting in Central Florida, on the other hand, it is a whole lot harder.”  In fact David argues, First Green Bank can, over time, make powerful impacts on its less than hospitable cultural economy.  “Many values-based banks only want to work with those who are already working with best practices,” David says.

"I would say if you are looking at salvation, you don't need to focus on those who are already saved," he asserts, "you need to go after the sinner who wants to repent."

"Sometimes," he maintains, "you have to work with the people who are honestly looking to find ways to change but can benefit from help in finding those ways. The scorecard it is not a static tool but rather one where you want to see the progress over time.” ​

That’s where the Scorecard can be invaluable to the bank, David says:  “It can help the bank ask, ‘how do we adjust our organizational structure to be fully aligned with our values goals? What are the products and services we need?  Do we have the processes in place to support our mission?  When we do our work, are we sure we are delivering that mission?’ The Scorecard is putting First Green Bank on a path where it can report its progress against its relatively low baseline to its stakeholders. It can say, ‘here is where we are and here is where we want to get to’—with real data.”

David maintains that it matters less where a bank begins its regenerative journey; what matters more is how it progresses on it.

“I am convinced,” he concludes, “ that with a consistent use of the Scorecard over time the bank will deliver a much higher degree of triple-bottom-line results because the tool by its nature forces that discussion. I think one of the real values of the Scorecard is that it is not just an external or internal tool to rate a bank at a point in time, it is actually a tool the bank can use to think through how it needs to support more individuals and enterprises delivering economic resilience, environmental regeneration, and social empowerment in the community they operate. That is its long-term value."