doing economic development finance differently

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Doing Economic Development Finance Differently: A Primer June 2, 2015 Prepared by: Lisa Richter, principal [email protected]

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Page 1: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Doing Economic Development Finance Differently: A Primer

June 2, 2015

Prepared by:

Lisa Richter, principal

[email protected]

Page 2: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Context: Impact Investing

Risk Management & Leverage

Frontier

Discussion

$

Page 3: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

3

Wealthworks Background & Context

How to

mobilize,

structure and

leverage

regional

financial

capital for

regional

wealth

creation?

Page 4: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

4

Mobilizing Development Finance Capital via Impact Investments:

Social Thesis + Investment Thesis

Impact

Investment

Investment

Thesis

Repayment?

- Revenue?

- Savings?

- Growth?

- Liquidity?

Social

Thesis

Build local wealth

via value chains

Page 5: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

5

Impact Investing: Investor Entry Points

Investing into companies, organizations, and funds with the intention to generate measurable social and environmental impact alongside a financial return.1

• Any asset class or structure (cash, fixed income, equity, etc.) • Any expected financial return (interest rate, dividend, capital gain) • Same fiduciary care as any institutional investment

Program-Related Investment / PRI Mission-Related Investment / MRI

BELOW MARKET-RATE INVESTMENTS2

Higher Risk Lower Risk

Lower Risk Higher Risk

MARKET-RATE INVESTMENTS

Alternatives

Alternatives

Cash

Fixed

Income

Public

Equities Fixed

Income

Grants &

Recoverable

Grants

Cash

1Global Impact Investing Network, www.thegiin.org. 2F.B. Heron Foundation

Page 6: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

6

Investor

Local

State/R

egion

Nat’l/G

lobal

Demand

Local Stakeholders ✔ Local wealth via value chains; includes

Community Development Financial

Institutions (CDFIs), firms, orgs, individuals

Community Foundation ✔ ✔ Vibrant, healthy community for all

Private Foundation ✔ ✔ ✔ Place and/or Program

Faith-Based ✔ ✔ ✔ Vibrant, healthy community for all

Health System ✔ ✔ ✔ Vibrant, healthy community for all

Banks ✔ ✔ ✔ Fulfill CRA*

Pension/Insurance

Company

✔ ✔ Pre-empt CRA

Other Corporation ✔ ✔ ✔ Brand Value / Market Share

Government ✔ ✔ ✔ Incentivize / protect / leverage private sector

* Community Reinvestment Act of 1977

Investor Demand

Page 7: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

7

Foundation PRI by Program Area 2006 – 07 / Total = $738 Million

Investor Demand

Source: Foundation Center 2009

Education $177MM, 24%Econ & Comm Dev $140MM, 19%Housing & Shelter $103MM 14%Environment & Animals $81MM, 11%Public Affairs $52MM, 7%Human Services $44MM, 6%Health $37MM, 5%Arts & Culture $37MM, 5%Religion $30MM, 4%Interational Affairs $30MM, 4%

Page 8: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

8

Investor Demand: Mapping Sectors to Opportunity Across Asset Classes

Guarantee Cash Debt Fixed

Income

Public

Equity

Private

Equity

Venture

Capital

Micro, Small & Growth

Business Finance

Ag & Food Systems

Health & Nonprofit

Facilities

Arts & Culture

Infrastructure &

Transit-Oriented Dev

Open Spaces

Affordable / Supportive

Housing

Early Childhood

Development

Quality Education over

the Life Course

Page 9: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

9

Implications for Wealth Building: Screening

Geography

Access / Networks / Value Chains

Ownership

Wealth

Building

Populations Served

Governance

Screen

ing

Portfolio

Track

ing

Metrics

Page 10: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

10

Implications for Wealth Building: Metrics

There is an opportunity to systematically apply social metrics to inform investment strategy and

track advances in equity, wealth, health and environmental sustainability.

of affordable transit-oriented

housing units built or preserved # of affordable transit-oriented

housing units built or preserved

# of vulnerable patients served

# of square feet of community clinic

or other facility space built

#

of low-income child care and

school slots added and/or quality

enhancements for the underserved

# of square miles of park space

accessible to low-income people

# of people with increased access to

healthy food

#

and quality jobs created for low-

income residents and/or residents

of color

#

and amount of small business and

other loans to people of color &

rural residents

Page 11: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Break-

Even

Point

Start-up Proof Expansion Sustainable of Concept Growth

Organizational Growth

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

Revenue

ExpenseCapital needed to fund growth

Break-Even Point

#2

Take-Off

Adapted from George Overholser, Third Sector; previously Nonprofit Finance Fund

Risk Management & Leverage: Over Time

Break-Even Point

#1

Page 12: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Risk Management & Leverage: “Capital Stacks” - from a Moment in Time

Credit Enhancement

First loss tranche

-- often grants or public subsidies

“Junior,” subordinated tranche

-- often foundation PRI

“Senior” tranche or layer

-- Conventional capital + foundation MRI

Page 13: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Risk Management & Leverage: Broad Strategy

Risk Management Leverage capital to: Build capacity among individuals/organizations Foster value chain expertise, competitive advantage and anchor strategies Forster value chain skills transfer

Foster communications to promote local development Preserve clean sites and buildings Promote transit-oriented development, infrastructure Support policy that mobilizes private capital

Foster local philanthropy, capital markets and ownership

Page 14: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

14

Risk Management & Leverage: Qualifying Demand via Business Plans

1. Business Description and Impact Investing Potential:

Social Thesis + Investment Thesis

2. Market Assessment and Competitive Analysis

3. Marketing and Sales Strategy

4. Management, Board and Organization

5. Financial Projection

6. Risks and Mitigation

7. Implementation Plan

14

Page 15: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Way Forward

Multiple Capitals Driving Systems Change

Healthy,

Wealthy,

Equitable,

Sustainable

Communities

Bank

CRA

+ MRI

+ Others

Concessionary

Investing

PRI

Grants

& Subsidy

Subsidy Return

Innovation: Greater Real or Perceived Risk “Impact”

Scale

Technical Assistance / Capacity Building Supports:

• Value Chains / Data / Technology / Shared Lessons

• Financing Links / Credit Preparedness

• Innovation

• Active Ownership Strategies

Leadership: Vision / Policy / Positive Messaging

Page 16: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

16

Timeline of U.S. Impact investing by Sector & Support

1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s

IMPACT INVESTING SECTORS

Community and

economic development, including affordable

housing

Microenterprise

(primary launch overseas)

Environmental

conservation

Education / Charter

Schools

Asset Building (Family Economic

Security / Financial Inclusion)

Technology: - Clean Tech

- Edtech

Health

Food Systems

Transit-Oriented Development

Arts & Culture

PARALLEL DEVELOPMENTS

PR

IVA

TE

SE

CT

OR

Ford Foundation Community

Development Corporations; Program-

Related

Investments

Community Development

Financial Institution(CDFIs launched;

formalized in 1990s)

Sullivan

Principles (anti-apartheid)

Earth Day

Social Investment

Forum

Opportunity Finance

Network (CDFI trade association)

Investors Circle (venture / angel

trade association)

CERES Principles from the Coalition

for Environmentally Responsible

Economies (late 1989)

Mission investors

Exchange

Global Impact Investing

Network

Convergence Partnership

Green overlay for all sectors

Healthy communities

overlay

Technology overlay

Anchor Overlay

Value Chain Overlay

Life course overlay

PU

BL

IC S

EC

TO

R

War on Poverty

Home Mortgage

Disclosure Act

Community Reinvestment

Act

Low Income

Housing Tax Credit

Federal CDFI Fund

Hope VI incentivizing mixed-income

communities

New Markets

Tax Credit

Healthy Food

Financing Initiative Coordinated

Federal Policy via Promise, Choice and Sustainable

Community / Neighborhood initiatives

Affordable Care Act

Page 17: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

17

Frontier: Place-Based Impact Investing Sectors – Environmental Overlay

Sustainable

Development

Conserve, restore

natural resources

• Farm, fish, forest

value-added

enterprises

• Energy, Transit-

Oriented

Development

Community Development

Meet underserved needs;

create jobs; enrich community

life

• Community facilities

• Arts & Culture

• Health, human services,

human development

• Affordable housing

• Family economic

security

Economic Development

Create Jobs

• Early stage and

Growth stage

enterprises

Page 18: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Frontier:

Place-Based Investing with Health / Life Course Overlay

The County Health Rankings Model

suggests investment opportunities that “create social and

physical environments that promote good health for all.”

Com

mu

nit

y F

acto

rs ~

50 -

70%

Page 19: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Potential Impact Investments

provide financing for the organizations and

projects that build communities where “the

healthy choice is the easy choice:”

- Community health centers

- Firms spurring health technology innovation

for the underserved

- Quality child care & schools

- Microenterprise

- Small business

- Anchor institution strategies that develop local

firms as vendors

- Transportation to jobs

- Banks and credit unions offering safe credit &

financial services

- Quality affordable housing

- Shelters and supportive housing

- Local recreation centers and after school

programs

- Green retrofitting

- Transit-Oriented Development

- Access to fresh food

- Local parks and green space

Page 20: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

20

Frontier: Coordinating Capital to Advance Health & Wealth

Goals Increased access to evidence-based health promoting resources via Community Development designs

Economic Development benefits (jobs, increased tax revenues)

Complement grants; leverage significant additional capital to finance healthy & vibrant communities

Healthy Ag

& Food Systems

Fund

Infrastructure &

Transit-Oriented

Development Fund

Open Spaces

Affordable &

Supportive Housing

Fund

Asset Building

Financial Services

Fund Family of Funds:

Advancing Health Equity

with Impact Investing

Microfinance

Small Business

Lending

Opportunistic Fund

Childhood / Youth

Development Fund

Community Health

Provider Fund

Built

Environment

Access to &

Quality of Care

Socio-Economic

Factors

Page 21: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

Frontier: Prevention v. Intervention at the intersection of sector, place and time

Page 22: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

22

Appendix

Page 23: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

23

Impact Investing Examples

Investor Robt Wood Johnson Foundation Casey, Heron via DBL Investors (fund)

Social Thesis Safe play in low-income public

schools

Increased healthy food and nutrition

education for low-income students

Investment

Thesis

School districts purchase service,

providing revenue

School districts purchase service

Asset Class Loan Guarantee with One Pacific

Coast Bank (a CDFI)

Equity investment in for-profit company

Impact

• Outputs

• Leverage

Over 170 US urban schools

Building

Over 15 million healthy meals served since

inception, 60,000 meals per day

$30 million in equity capital; PRIMRI

Page 24: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

24

Impact Investing Examples

Investor The California Endowment California HealthCare Foundation

Social Thesis Increase access to quality, affordable

care

Reduce cost of care, improve quality of life

for chronic respiratory disease sufferers via

med usage data tracking

Investment

Thesis

CHC reimbursements provide cash

flow

Insurance companies purchase service

Asset Class Loan Equity-like convertible debt in for-profit

company

Impact

•Outputs

•Leverage

New site, phone and IT systems;

Increased volume/quality

NCB, Capital Link loans

Reduced unnecessary hospitalizations

Additional equity investors

Page 25: Doing Economic Development Finance Differently

25

Impact Investing Examples

Investor TCE, RWJF, Hilton Cleveland Foundation

Social Thesis Reduce hospital care and incar-

ceration via supportive services

Leverage anchor institutions, circulate local

wealth via worker-owned vendors

Investment

Thesis

Housing subsidies and rent provide

cash flow

Revenue from selling services to anchors

provides cash flow

Asset Class Loan Loan

Impact

•Outputs

•Leverage

Reduced costs for health/justice

Community Reinvestment Act-

motivated banks

Create jobs and ownership for local

residents; circulate local dollars

CRA banks, HUD, EPA, Commonwealth,

New Markets Tax Credit