USCCB-screened portfolios. Catholic Daily newsletter, always free. Zero management fee. Performance only. Faith and financial integrity are not in tension — they demand each other.
Every investment must pass a Catholic Social Teaching screen — the USCCB Socially Responsible Investment Guidelines. Hard exclusions for companies involved in abortion, gambling, pornography, tobacco, predatory lending, and labor exploitation. Non-negotiable. No override. Ever.
Every number is geometric, not arithmetic. Compound returns, position sizing, and risk all run on the mathematics of actual compounding — not the simplified averages that make strategies look better than they are.
This is not ESG with a cross on it. It is a quantitative system built from Catholic doctrine, honest mathematics, and the conviction that investing can be both principled and rigorous.
No fee for managing capital. Performance only — 20% of gains. If the system doesn't make money, neither does Enoch Capital.
10% of all performance fees are tithed — written into the operating agreement. Catholic Charities, diocesan outreach, scholarship funds.
Operating under the Publisher's Exemption (Lowe v. SEC, 472 U.S. 181, 1985). Educational content only. Not investment advice.
Catholic Daily goes out Monday through Saturday — Mass readings, a Catholic saint or teaching, and a market lens through the eyes of faith. Saturday brings the weekly market wrap.
Sunday is the Lord's Day. Nothing goes out.
The newsletter is ministry. It builds trust. It connects faith and work in a way that most Catholic publications don't — honestly, with real market data and real Catholic teaching, not one at the expense of the other.
"Catholic Daily goes out Monday through Saturday. This is ministry. Forward to anyone who thinks about work, money, and faith."
— Catholic Daily, every issueThe USCCB (US Conference of Catholic Bishops) Socially Responsible Investment Guidelines govern all investment decisions. The screen runs as Gate Zero — before any price data is fetched. FAIL means the investment never enters the pipeline. There is no override.
This is Rerum Novarum (Leo XIII, 1891), Laudato Si (Francis, 2015), and Caritas in Veritate (Benedict XVI, 2009) encoded in software. The preferential option for the poor, care for creation, and the dignity of labor are not negotiable at any return target.