TGIF, Agents of Impact!
- Roundup: Mitigating disinformation risk
- Podcast: Unpacking the Liist of actively raising funds
- Spotlight: Riding the MAHA wave
đŁ Disinformation risk. Freedom of speech underpins free societies and productive markets. So too does trusted information rooted in reality. âTimely, accurate, relevant information enables people to participate in public life, to claim their rights, and to make informed choices about themselves, their environment and society,â states Media Development Investment Fund, which invests in independent journalism as a pillar of social cohesion and economic growth around the globe. With Metaâs decision this week to join Elon Muskâs X in lifting guardrails on content in the name of free speech, unchecked mis- and disinformation is set to flood the zone. Call it disinformation risk.
The inevitable countertrend: A premium on investment strategies built on the most material, most accurate and most comprehensive information and analysis available. ESG investing may be under attack, but at its most fundamental, the practice is about taking into account the crucial social, environmental, governance and economic context, data and risks. Diversity, equity and inclusion, also under fire, offers strategies for companies and investment firms to draw more widely from talent pools and business ecosystems (as Costco says it will continue to do). Sure, investing in impact, climate and inclusion is about values, but it is also about value, as in creating it in the real world, based on solid information.
Those fleeing ESG, climate and impact strategies may be underpricing the value of operating with a more complete picture. Check out Jessica Potheringâs analysis of ImpactAlphaâs long-running Liist database, which highlights actively raising funds. One insight: While VC fundraising has cooled, emerging managers with unique insights into overlooked markets are gaining traction with investors. Or page through the details of more than 200 transactions leveraging catalytic capital compiled by the investor network Toniic, including Meraki Impactâs investment to close a capital gap for smallholder finance in Brazil, (as showcased in our new series with Toniic). BlueOrchardâs track record in microfinance let it build its new climate adaptation strategy, BlueOrchardâs Maria Teresa Zappia explains in an interview with ImpactAlpha. Governance will be the key differentiator in the new information landscape, as Ford Foundationâs Margot Brandenburg laid out in her piece on the range of mechanisms available to Bluesky, the social media platform emerging as the alternative to Muskâs X, to protect its mission and its users. Amid the noise, good information leads to good investment decisions and good outcomes â in reality. â Dennis Price
Other must-reads on ImpactAlpha:
- âThe âAI impact paradoxâ and six other impact investing trends for 2025,â by Rehana Nathoo and Eric Stephenson
- “Investors bet on drones to lift agricultural productivity and womenâs livelihoods in India,” by Shefali Anand
- âClimate tech investors retool for a changed landscape,â by Amy Cortese
- âSweat equity and the 39th president,â by Kimberlee CornettÂ
The Weekâs Podcast
đ§ This Week in Impact. Host Brian Walsh takes up the weekâs top stories with ImpactAlphaâs Jessica Pothering. On the show: Glimmers of hope for impact fundraising, catalytic capital in Brazil, and investing in drones to lift agricultural productivity in India.
- Listen to the new episode of This Week in Impact. Get the podcast in your feed by subscribing on Apple or Spotify.
The Weekâs Deal Spotlight
Sustainable food and ag investors line up to Make America Healthy Again. Last yearâs US election is creating surprising opportunities for impact investors looking to disrupt the food and agriculture industries. The odd pairing of President-elect Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. means a foe of Big Food and Big Pharma is likely to be the new leader of the US Department of Health and Human Services. Kennedy has said he wants to âMake America Healthy Againâ by ridding our food supply of pesticides, food additives, ultra-processed foods and other hallmarks of industrial agriculture that have contributed to a spike in chronic disease. âWith more attention being put into the food system, there are a lot of opportunities there,â says Meifan Shi of Toronto and New York-based Waterpoint Lane, which secured $6 million this week for its first food and ag sustainability fund. âWhen you look at the issues within the food system, the ingredients and the way food is being processed and travels through the entire supply chain, there are so many things that need to be changed.â
- Regenerative ag. The new attention coincides with a rush of innovation in healthy and sustainable food and agriculture. Companies with solutions in alternative proteins, regenerative farming, sustainable fertilizers and food waste solutions represented a rare bright spot in a tough fundraising year. A new report from Sightline Climate found nearly 250 food and land use startups raised capital in 2024, making the sector second, in terms of volume of deals, only to energy in the climate tech space (see, âClimate tech investors retool for a changed landscapeâ). Agricultural conglomerates such as ADM and private equity giants such as Bain Double Impact are seeking opportunities in regenerative agriculture.
- Future of food. Waterpoint writes early-stage checks of around $250,000 for startups developing tech-enabled solutions that have potential to drive efficiency and sustainability across the agrifood value chain. Among the seven companies in Waterpointâs portfolio is New York-based Starfish Technologies, which offers a real-time food traceability system for food businesses, and Myland, a Phoenix-based soil regeneration startup.
- Keep reading, âSustainable food and ag investors line up to Make America Healthy Again,â by Roodgally Senatus on ImpactAlpha. Catch up on all of this weekâs dealflow reporting.
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.
Michelle Arevalo-Carpenter stepped down as executive director of content for SOCAP Global. She will focus on her role as founding general partner of IMPAQTO Capital and a consultant at Skoll Foundation⊠Warburg Pincus promoted Leela Ramnath to managing director and global head of sustainability strategy⊠Trillium Asset Management promoted Lisa Hayles to director of sustainability and stakeholder engagement⊠Principles for Responsible Investment promoted Cambria Allen Ratzlaff to chief officer of responsible investment ecosystems.
Aligned Climate Capitalâs founding partner Lawrence Rodman retired at the end of 2024⊠US SIF appointed Stephanie Cohn Rupp of Veris Wealth Partners as board chair, along with eight new board members, including Boston Trust Waldenâs Kimberly Gluck, Nakia Maddox Eubanks of Trillium Asset Management, and Rebecca Adamson of First Peoples Worldwide⊠Potlikker Capital added David LeZaks of Food System 6 to its board of directors⊠StĂ©phanie Bernier-Monzon, former head of communications at Impak Finance, joined Rally Assets as a communications senior associate.
Traven Joseph, previously with Island Mountain Development Group, joined Raven Indigenous Capital Partners as an investment analyst⊠Beyond Capital Ventures promoted Shiddhi Gupta from investment fellow to investment analyst⊠HSBC promoted ZoĂ« Knight to global head of sustainability and integration⊠Kai Preugschat of Qatar Development Bank joined Acre Impact Capitalâs advisory boardâŠCoalition for Green Capital named Richard Kauffman, a CGC board member and Generate Capital chair, as its next CEO. Kauffman takes over from Reed Hundt, who has held the role since 2009.
Pete Stavrosâs Expanding ESOPs tapped Daniel Massey, previously with BerlinRosen, as head of strategy and communications⊠Crosscut Ventures welcomed Jon Ylvisaker, previously with Yield Capital Partners, as partner of its new energy transition investment business⊠Ninety One recruited Alper Kilic from Standard Chartered Bank as head of alternative credit⊠Ownify promoted Allie OâShea to product and marketing vice president⊠Rob Tashima was promoted to managing director of pipeline and partnerships at Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation.
Mark Carney, former governor of the Bank of England and chair of impact investing at Brookfield Asset Management, is mulling a run to become Canadaâs next prime minister⊠Paul Helmsing, previously with Wire Group, joined De Hoge Dennen to manage its impact fund portfolio⊠Taylor Rowe, previously with CIV:LAB, joined Energy Impact Partners⊠BlackRock promoted Nicoline Good to corporate sustainability vice president⊠Emily Thaden replaced Paul Bradley as CEO of Roc USA. Bradley will become CEO of Integrity Community Solutions⊠Catalyze tapped Regina Green, previously head of Goldman Sachsâ Launch with GS, as managing director of investments
That’s a wrap. Have a wonderful weekend.Â
â Jan. 10, 2025