TGIF, Agents of Impact!
- Roundup: Predistributing the spoils of capitalism
- Podcasts: Community Capital Live, Criterion Institute and This Week in Impact
- The Call: Family offices are committing to impact-first investing
- Spotlight: Islamic finance expands beyond Muslim markets
đŁ Share the wealth. The glimmering of an AI-driven productivity boom raises the question: How should the spoils of such productivity gains be distributed? Power, more than technology, will determine the answer. Instead of (or in addition to) ex post facto largesse, âThere should be a citizensâ shareâ of both the AI companies and the software itself, Rutgers Business Schoolâs Joseph Blasi declared at this weekâs inaugural Aspen Ideas: Economy gathering in Newark, NJ. More than a decade ago, Blasi co-authored the book, âThe Citizenâs Share,â to argue for broad-based profit sharing and employee ownership. Such âpredistributionâ strategies, which also include expanded access to home ownership, commercial real estate and financial assets, can cut workers, residents and communities in for a larger share of the gains. On our own panel in Newark, Lyneir Richardson, Santhosh Ramdoss, Catherine Godschalk and I surfaced new financial products and fresh ideas for building a nation of owners. And A to Z Impactâs Alex Evangelides nailed it on this weekâs Agents of Impact Call on impact-first investing (see below): âSo much of this is just about how we cut the pie differently,â he said. âIf you, as the investor, are willing to take a smaller piece of the pie, it can go somewhere else â and a lot of good things can happen if you do.â
Fair gainsharing appears to be the last thing on Elon Muskâs mind as he campaigns for shareholder approval of a pay package worth up to $1 trillion (granted, a lot of other Tesla shareholders would get rich as well if he hits his milestones), as Climate Finance Actionâs Mary Cerulli lays out in a guest post. Such proposals make now the time for foundations to wield their shareholder power,â argues Eric Horvath. Power dynamics will also shape the balance between wealth-creation and wealth-extraction as private equity heavyweights get their hands on workersâ 401(k) balances, as Navys’ Amr Jomaa explains. And Gen Z protesters from Nepal to Madagascar to Peru are flexing their own power to protest unemployment, shortages, corruption and out-of-touch leadership, as Amy Cortese reports. âThe energy of these young people, thatâs what will define this century,â the World Bankâs Ajay Banga said at last weekâs bank meetings. With the right investments, he said, âWe can unlock a tremendous engine of growth.â
As Agents of Impact know all too well, making change is hard. Nevertheless, they persist. In a guest post, One Acre Fund’s ClĂ©mence Michelsen and Brian Heese are admirably transparent in recounting the lessons learned five years after an infusion of $20 million in catalytic capital. âSubordinated debt helped, but it was not enough on its ownâ to shake stubborn perceptions of risk about financing smallholder farmers in Africa, they write. With five years to go, most of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals remain stubbornly out of reach. ImpactAlphaâs Erik Stein wrote about how the UN Development Program is trying to do more with less. Erik and Jessica Pothering detailed the investors backing food waste reduction even as federal funding dries up. And Erik, again, reported from the Mexico City gathering of the Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers (yes, thatâs a thing), who are trying to simplify impact transactions. A worthy assignment: making fair gainsharing a standard feature of deal structures and investment term sheets. â David Bank
Next Weekâs Event
SOCAPâs ImpactAlpha track. Step up and step out as ImpactAlpha helps kick off SOCAP25 in San Francisco with a night of music and momentum, co-hosted with Candide Group and Partners in Equity. Special feature: live music by Candideâs Morgan Simon and the Iya Lingua Quartet. Only a few spots left â RSVP now.
On Tuesday, the âImpactAlpha trackâ at SOCAP gets going with the opening panels of many of the conference’s major themes. Dennis Price is tackling the future of global finance with Amit Bouri of the GIIN and Elizabeth Boggs Davidsen of GSG Impact. Amy Cortese will introduce climate and nature-based solutions with Betsy Fore of Velveteen Ventures, Kate Williams of 1% for the Planet and Chante Harris of the Eunoia Group. Roodgally Senatus is teeing up âjustice and economic prosperity for allâ with Curt Lyon of Transform Finance and Susan Gouijnstook of Jobs for the Future. And David Bank will kick off âCatalytic Capital 2.0â with MacArthur Foundationâs Urmi Sengupta, Ceniarthâs Greg Neichin and Carolina Suarez Visbal of Latimpacto.
And on Wednesday, Amy will talk about unlocking small business potential with the Navajo Nationâs Alisha Murphy, Winrock Internationalâs Tonitrice Wicks and Mayor Frank Scott, Jr., of Little Rock, Ark. To help close out the three-day gathering, David will lead a timely discussion, âSurviving four more years: Protecting and advancing impact,â with Candide Groupâs Morgan Simon, VertueLabâs Aina Abiodun and Adriana Abizadeh-Barbour of Kensington Corridor Trust. âIf youâve been wondering when was the time to step up,â Simon says, âhere we are.â Check out the full agenda.Â
The Weekâs Podcasts
đ§ This Week in Impact. Host Brian Walsh takes up ImpactAlphaâs top stories with editor David Bank. Up this week: The surprising resurgence of impact-first investing; how lawyers, yes lawyers, are working to simplify impact transactions: and, at Aspen Ideas: Economy in Newark, new products and fresh ideas for building a nation of owners.
- Listen to the new episode of This Week in Impact. Get the podcast in your feed by subscribing on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube.
đïž Community Capital Live: Blake Jones on Kachuwa Impact Fundsâ cooperative investment model. Host Joel Skene is joined by Blake Jones of the Kachuwa Impact Fund, which pools money from accredited and non-accredited investors to invest in mission-driven, employee-owned, or cooperatively structured businesses (see, âMaking co-ops work for investors, too.â). âWe wanted to create a fund where everyday people can own pieces of the companies that are doing the most good in their communities,â Jones says. Watch the conversation, and RSVP for the next Community Capital Live, Wednesday, Nov. 5.
đŻ The Criterion Institute Podcast: Whatâs in a name. In this special birthday episode, host Joy Anderson muses on the meaning of her name in her life and work. Check out the latest episode.
The Weekâs Call
The surprising resurgence of impact-first investing. For at least some wealthy families, itâs impact on. Hundreds of Agents of Impact showed up for Agents of Impact Call No. 73, featuring Trimtab Impactâs Caleb Ballou, Spring Point Partnersâ Margot Kane, Ceniarthâs Greg Neichin and A to Z Impactâs Alex Evangelides and MacArthur Foundationâs Debra Schwartz. âFamily offices have flexibility. They can be patient, they can be risk-tolerant,â Schwartz said. âWe have to have impact-first as well as finance-first strategies.â (Disclosure: Through the Catalytic Capital Consortium, MacArthur supports ImpactAlphaâs coverage of catalytic capital).
- Multi-additionality. With Trace Welch, Ballou launched Trimtab Impact as an impact holding company to make catalytic investing accessible for more families (for background see, âTrimtabâs unapologetic pitch to wealthy families seeking outperformance â on impactâ). Trimtab looks to âinvest where others are not,â says Ballou. âWe underwrite for impact.â Added A to Zâs Evangelides: âWhat’s important for us when we’re looking at individual deals is, why do you need money at a below market rate? What does that unlock for you as a fund or direct organization?â
- How, not why. Ceniarth has deployed more than $400 million in impact-first capital. Neichin brought his usual straight talk. âThe ultimate beneficiaries â small farmers, shop owners, low-income workers â donât care why we do this,â he said. âThey just care that money gets into communities that actually help vulnerable and marginalized people.â The notion of âmarket rateâ returns is a subjective construct, noted Kane of Philadelphia-based Spring Point. âWe are trying to back the next generation of managers who are going to make decisions differently, who are going to back overlooked founders and solutions, who are going to envision a different way in which early-stage risk taking capital shows up in society.â
- Read the recap and watch the replay.
The Weekâs Deal Spotlight
The âethical natureâ of Islamic finance opens new markets. Islamic finance may be the original impact investing. To comply with Islamic law, or Shariah, transactions must meet certain parameters to ensure they are not extractive. Charging interest on loans, for example, does not comply. Credit arrangements instead may be structured around revenue- and profit-sharing to ensure both lender and borrower are invested in a businessâs success. âInclusivity is the raison dâĂȘtre of Islamic finance, bringing the Muslim community into the modern economy and having a strong emphasis on serving underserved and vulnerable communities,â states a report by the Islamic Development Bank and the London Stock Exchange Group on the state of Islamic finance. The field has grown to nearly $6 trillion in assets, up from $1 trillion in 2010.
- Shariah-compliant. The âintrinsically ethical natureâ nature of Islamic finance is helping it grow beyond Muslim-majority countries, according to the “2025 Islamic Finance Development.” The UK, for example, is now a key hub for listings of green and Islamic bonds. Other areas of Islamic finance that appeal to non-Muslim markets are home financing and exchange-traded funds. UK-based Janus Henderson earlier this month raised $125.5 million for its fourth private credit fund for mid-sized businesses in the Middle East and North Africa. The $457 billion asset manager was among the first to launch an institutional Shariah-compliant private credit fund in the region. Its fourth iteration, which is aiming to raise $300 million, is backed by Saudi Industrial Development Fund, Abu Dhabi Catalyst Partners and the Saudi Venture Capital Company.
- Market growth. Banking anchors the sector. But Shariah-compliant bonds, known as sukuks, insurance and funds like Janus Hendersonâs are also on the rise. Shariah-compliant fund managers have about $300 billion in assets under management. Sukuks have surpassed $1 trillion. Since the UAE hosted the COP28 climate summit, there has been an uptick in green and sustainable sukuk issuances to fund renewable energy, green buildings, small businesses and low-carbon transport. âSustainability is an increasingly important area of the Islamic finance industry,â finds the report.
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The Weekâs Talent and Jobs
đŒ See and share more than a dozen new impact jobs posted this week on ImpactAlphaâs Career Hub and view hundreds of more jobs in impact investing and sustainable finance. Have a job listing to post? Submit it here.
The Principles for Responsible Investment appointedCambria Allen Ratzlaff as interim CEO. She replaced David Atkins, who is staying on as an advisor to facilitate the leadership transition⊠Mesirow addedMikiyon Alexander as managing director and Ryan Carter as a director on its impact finance team⊠Jaspal Sandhu will replaceMargaret Laws as president and CEO of Hopelab, effective January 1. Laws will become executive in residence to support Hopelabâs mental health and wellness projects (listen to ImpactAlphaâs podcast conversation with Laws).
Impact Capital Managers promoted Justin MacLennan to senior analyst of impact management and research⊠Charles Wade resigned as investment director of Black Farmer Fund. Myra Marcellin, currently business support director, stepped into the role⊠Amy Skoczlas Cole was named director of NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business. She replaced founding director Tensie Whelan, who is stepping down at the end of the year.
Thrive Impact Fund brought on Nicole Bradbury as senior advisor⊠The Neighborhood Impact Investing Fund added Eric Stephenson, formerly with Southway Builders, as a construction lending specialist⊠Macro hired Jeremy Stein as executive vice president of development and production⊠US Green Bank 50 tapped Dan Adler, formerly with IBank, as executive director.
Oakland Thrive welcomed Camille Walker Banks, formerly with BUILD Institute, as CEO⊠Suma Capital tapped Nicolo Balice, previously with Ancala Partners, as an investment director⊠Watchen Harris Bruce, Baltimore Community Lending’s president and CEO, will retire at the beginning of 2026. The CDFI is looking for a replacement.
That’s a wrap. Have a wonderful weekend.
â Oct. 24, 2025