Key Takeaways:
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Values-based investing starts with clarifying what matters most to the client, since the same phrase can mean very different things to different investors.
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A fee-only fiduciary approach helps cut through marketing labels and evaluate values-based strategies based on holdings, costs, tradeoffs, and long-term fit.
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The strongest values-based strategy often blends portfolio decisions with broader financial planning, including giving, family priorities, and long-term legacy goals.
Most people who ask about values-based investing are trying to connect their money with what matters to them. That sounds straightforward in theory, even if the investment choices underneath it are not always obvious. They want a portfolio that reflects their priorities and still feels sound, practical, and true to who they are.
That is where the real work comes in. Values-based investing is not just about finding a fund with the right label. A portfolio still needs to be diversified, built with risk management in mind, cost-conscious, tax-aware, and tied to the client’s actual goals, time horizon, and cash flow needs.
In practice, values-based investing usually starts with careful discovery. We want to understand what matters to a client, what concerns they have, and what they want their wealth to support. Sometimes that shows up in the portfolio itself, through certain investment preferences, exclusions, tilts, or impact-oriented allocations. Sometimes it shows up more clearly in the planning, through gifting, family priorities, charitable goals, or other long-term intentions. Often it is a combination of both. What matters most is not forcing every value into a product label, but thoughtfully aligning investment decisions and planning priorities with what is genuinely important to the client.
Table of Contents
- 1 What People Actually Mean When They Say “Values-Based”
- 2 Why a Fee-Only Fiduciary Lens Matters
- 3 How Values Show Up in the Portfolio, and in the Plan
- 4 Tradeoffs Are Part of the Conversation
- 5 Inherited Wealth Can Add Another Layer
- 6 What Ongoing Alignment Actually Looks Like
- 7 Values-Based Investing FAQs
- 8 How Colorado Capital Management Thinks About This
What People Actually Mean When They Say “Values-Based”
One challenge is that the phrase values-based investing can mean different things to different people. Two investors may use the same words and mean very different things.
For some, it means avoiding certain companies, industries, or business activities.
For others, it means leaning toward businesses or funds that better reflect what they want to support.
For others, it is more about ownership and engagement, including how proxies are voted and how managers think about stewardship.
And for some, it means wanting part of their portfolio directed toward a specific outcome or area of impact.
Those approaches can overlap, but they are not all the same. They involve different tools, different tradeoffs, and different expectations. That is why the front-end conversation matters so much. Before deciding on an approach, it helps to get clear on what the client actually means, what matters most, and how far they want to take it.
Why a Fee-Only Fiduciary Lens Matters
This is one reason a fee-only fiduciary approach matters.
When advice is not tied to commissions, product payouts, or sales incentives, there is more freedom to evaluate choices on their actual merits. That is especially important in
values-based investing, because many strategies can sound similar on the surface while being quite different underneath.
The label may sound appealing, but the real questions are more specific. What is actually in the portfolio? How is it being built? What does it cost? What tradeoffs come with it? How much complexity is being added?
A fiduciary lens helps keep the discussion grounded in the client’s interests, not in marketing language. It also helps keep the process honest. Good intentions matter, but they are not enough on their own. The strategy still has to hold up over time.
How Values Show Up in the Portfolio, and in the Plan
Turning values into action is partly an investment question and partly a planning question.
Sometimes the answer is inside the portfolio. That may involve screened funds, direct indexing, a separately managed account, a sustainable bond allocation, or a private impact investment.
Other times, the deeper expression of a client’s values is not mainly about the holdings themselves. It may be about how wealth is used over time, supporting family members, helping fund education, making charitable gifts, or creating flexibility to direct capital toward priorities that matter personally.
That distinction matters. Not every value has to be expressed through a specialized fund or a detailed exclusion list. Sometimes the better answer is a sound, diversified portfolio paired with planning decisions that more directly reflect what the client cares about. In many cases, the best result comes from marrying the two.
Tradeoffs Are Part of the Conversation
There is no version of investing without tradeoffs, and values-based investing is no exception. But those tradeoffs can vary quite a bit depending on the approach.
In many public market portfolios today, investors can express certain values with relatively modest additional cost and without giving up broad diversification. In some cases, performance may look fairly similar to a traditional benchmark, though there can still be some tracking difference depending on the constraints being applied.
The tradeoffs tend to become more meaningful when preferences are narrower, customization is more extensive, or private impact investments are part of the mix. Those opportunities can offer a more direct connection to a particular theme or outcome, but they may also bring higher costs, less liquidity, and more complexity. In many cases, they are best used selectively, as one part of a broader and well-diversified portfolio.
Inherited Wealth Can Add Another Layer
This conversation can become even more important when inherited money is involved.
Inherited assets often carry emotional weight, family history, and a sense of responsibility. At the same time, they may also come with concentrated positions, embedded gains, unfamiliar holdings, or immediate planning decisions.
In that situation, the sequence matters. Usually the first step is to understand liquidity needs, tax considerations, concentration risk, and timeline. Values-based decisions can absolutely be part of the process, but they tend to work best when layered into a thoughtful plan rather than forced into an immediate overhaul.
A disciplined approach can still reflect strong values. It just helps to do it in a way that respects both the emotional side and the financial realities.
What Ongoing Alignment Actually Looks Like
Values-based investing is usually not about constantly reinventing the portfolio. It is more about continuing to monitor, evaluate, and revisit whether the strategy still reflects what matters most to the client.
Over time, priorities can become clearer, new opportunities may emerge, and a client may decide they want to lean in more, simplify, or make a change at the margins. The role of ongoing advice is to keep evaluating whether the direction still fits, whether the implementation still makes sense, and whether the portfolio and planning remain aligned with the client’s broader goals.
The point is not to make changes for their own sake. It is to stay thoughtful, practical, and intentional over time.
Values-Based Investing FAQs
1. Is values-based investing the same as ESG investing?
Not exactly, though there can be overlap.
ESG generally refers to environmental, social, and governance data or scoring frameworks. Values-based investing is broader. It is really about how a client’s preferences, priorities, and concerns are translated into investment decisions, ownership decisions, and sometimes planning decisions as well.
In other words, ESG can be one input. It is not the whole conversation.
2. How do you verify that a strategy really matches my values?
You do not know just by reading the label.
You have to look underneath at the holdings, the approach being used, the rules being applied, and the way the strategy is maintained over time. That is where the real alignment shows up, or does not.
3. What tradeoffs should I expect?
That depends on the approach.
In many public market strategies, tradeoffs may be fairly modest, especially when the preferences are broad and the tools are well designed. In other cases, more specific constraints or the inclusion of private impact investments can create higher costs, less liquidity, added complexity, or more noticeable tracking difference.
The right approach is the one that reflects your priorities and that you can realistically stick with through different markets and life stages.
4. Should I use funds, ETFs, or direct indexing?
It depends on what you are trying to accomplish.
For some people, a fund or ETF is enough. It can provide a practical, lower-maintenance way to express certain preferences.
For others, direct indexing or another customized approach may be more appropriate, especially when preferences are more specific or tax management is an important part of the equation.
The right answer is usually the one that fits the level of customization needed, the account type, the tax context, and the client’s tolerance for complexity.
5. How often should a values-based portfolio be reviewed?
There is no single rule, but it should be reviewed on a regular basis and revisited whenever there is a meaningful change in goals, planning priorities, tax circumstances, or the investments themselves.
The point is not to make constant changes. It is to make sure the strategy continues to fit.
How Colorado Capital Management Thinks About This
At Colorado Capital Management, we believe values-based investing should be thoughtful, disciplined, and personal.
That starts with understanding the client, not with reaching for a product. It means listening carefully, identifying where values truly belong in the investment strategy and where they may be better expressed through planning, and then building an approach that the client can actually live with over time.
For some clients, that will mean specific investment screens or impact-oriented allocations. For others, it may mean a more modest set of portfolio preferences paired with meaningful planning priorities around giving, family, or long-term legacy. Often it is a mix.
Either way, the goal is the same: to help clients make decisions about their wealth that are financially sound, personally meaningful, and sustainable over the long term.
As a serial entrepreneur and world traveler, Lee Strongwater, president of Colorado Capital Management, brings a global perspective to investments and life planning.
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- Lee Strongwater
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Editor’s Note: This blog post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Readers are encouraged to consult with a qualified professional regarding their individual circumstances. Please refer to our firm’s website for full disclosures and important information: CCM Website Disclaimer

