This would seem a tailor-made climate for impact investors, whose mandates are all about repairing the world, to tap into the massive public attention on social issues. But will these investors seize the moment and set their sights on racial inequality?

    • There are signs that this niche segment of the market has seen a pickup in deal participation in the past few years. Impact investors’ activity has grown each year since 2011, and since 2016, they’ve written checks in over 1,700 US venture-backed deals valued more than $24 billion, according to PitchBook data. However, impact firms’ fundraising has been in decline since peaking in 2017, when 17 funds gathered a total of over $2.6 billion.
    • Many of this year’s funding rounds have been for companies dedicated to cleantech or other business models with an environmentalist-minded technology. Others have agendas centered on socially responsible business practices, which often revolve around issues like economic opportunity, public safety and social equality.
  • In the current context of the plight of black Americans and other minority groups, few of the companies fundraising from impact investors have business models that focus on racial issues per se. Many advocates—including some impact investors—say that backing more startups led by people of color is one of the main ways to create economic opportunities for minorities. Although impact firms tend to share that view, their investment records have been more about the mission of the company than the race of its founder or CEO.

Source: Pitchbook

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