Divestment Fever Spreads as 'Eco Radicals at Goldman Sachs' Downgrade Exxon Stock to 'Sell' Status
Three days after CNBC host Jim Cramer pronounced fossil fuel investments as being “in the death knell phase,” Goldman Sachs on Monday downgraded its stock assessment for ExxonMobil, advising investors to sell their shares of the oil and gas giant.
The Wall Street firm changed its “neutral” rating to “sell” following its fourth quarter earnings reports which showed Exxon’s earnings falling from $6 billion in 2018 to $5.6 billion last year.
The firm found no “compelling case” for holding on to Exxon’s stocks, according to CNBC, and advised investors that “more compelling returns opportunities exist both among the global majors and global large cap stocks outside of energy.”
As author and 350.org co-founder Bill McKibben tweeted, Goldman Sachs’ decision confirms that aside from helping to “preserve a livable planet,” another reason to divest fossil fuel stocks is “so that you won’t lose your money.”
Goldman Sachs predicted that Exxon will meet just half of its targeted returns by 2025.
The firm’s prediction is just the latest indication that the financial sector and other profit-driven entities are beginning to see fossil fuels as an impractical investment.
“A reminder that capital often doesn’t walk, it runs.”
Click Here: All Blacks Rugby Jersey—Nathan Lemphers, Smart Prosperity InstituteAs Common Dreams reported last November, analysts at Toronto-based firm Corporate Knights found that investing in fossil fuels cost pension funds in California and Colorado cost retirees $19 billion collectively over a decade.
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