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Franklin Templeton Could Feel Darfur's Heat

05/21/07 - 10:04 AM EDT

Brett Arends

Not every U.S. mutual fund is divesting itself of stakes in Darfur.

While manager Will Danoff at Fidelity's (FCNTX - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr)Contrafund is dumping his stake in PetroChina(PTR - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr), the Chinese company targeted by activists for its involvement with the Sudanese government, others are standing firm -- or going in the opposite direction.

One example: Franklin Templeton (BEN - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr), the fund company based in San Mateo, Calif. I looked though Franklin's public filings and found that between Dec. 31, 2006, and March 31 of this year, the company's investment funds nearly tripled their holdings in PetroChina to 156,699 American depositary receipts, or ADRs, from 61,194.

Most were held by Templeton's (TEDMX - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr)Developing Markets Trust mutual fund (TEDMX). Company spokeswoman Lisa Gallegos pointed out that the stake only amounted to about $20 million.

Yet the figure doesn't include further shares in PetroChina that Franklin's offshore funds have bought in Hong Kong. Although exact figures aren't yet available, activists say those add up to a lot more.

Adam Sterling, director of the Sudan Divestment Task Force in Washington, D.C., highlights the offshore Templeton Asian Growth Fund. According to its latest prospectus, he says, the fund has 19% of its money in three big companies accused of complicity with Sudan's regime: China's PetroChina and Sinopec(SHI - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) and India's Oil & Natural Gas Co.

The man managing both funds is Templeton's legendary emerging-markets guru, Mark Mobius. He has defended the company's stance. In an interview with USA Today a few months ago, for example, he argued that "engagement is better than departure. Once you depart, you cut yourself off from any dialogue that would be helpful."

But activists aren't satisfied. "We emailed Mr. Mobius asking him what he had done to engage these companies," said Sterling. "He hasn't replied." That was two months ago.

Mobius is hardly alone.

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In keeping with TSC's editorial policy, Brett Arends doesn't own or short individual stocks. He also doesn't invest in hedge funds or other private investment partnerships. Arends takes a critical look inside mutual funds and the personal finance industry in a twice-weekly column that ranges from investment advice for the general reader to the industry's latest scoop. Prior to joining TheStreet.com in 2006, he worked for more than two years at the Boston Herald, where he revived the paper's well-known 'On State Street' finance column and was part of a team that won two SABEW awards in 2005. He had previously written for the Daily Telegraph and Daily Mail newspapers in London, the magazine Private Eye, and for Global Agenda, the official magazine of the World Economic Summit in Davos, Switzerland. Arends has also written a book on sports 'futures' betting.

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