IIG launches impact fund


Impact Investment Group (IIG) has launched a $70 million Impact Alternatives investment fund, designed to balance profit and purpose with socially-conscious investment.
The Australian impact investment market was valued at almost $20 billion, according to the Responsible Investment Institute Australasia (RIAA), and IIG said it had seen client demand for this type of fund.
The fund would be a diversified portfolio of impact investments with a return target of 6% to 10% per annum and an income yield objective of 3% to 5% per annum, distributed quarterly.
It would target a low correlation to equities, bonds and property by including a mix of investments such as renewable energy, infrastructure and impact private equity.
The first early investment deals were expected to be made before the end of 2020.
IIG chief executive and co-fund manager, Daniel Madhavan, said: “Investors want social and environmental benefits alongside attractive returns, and smart advisors are looking for ways to diversify portfolios away from public equities and bonds. This fund ticks both of those boxes.
“We want to show that finance can be a force for good and we work in the context of broader visions. We see a future where energy is 100% renewable, affordable and universally accessible. Vibrant businesses can grow while respecting the earth and contributing to our society.”
Recommended for you
Australian Ethical has become the latest fund manager to flag an expansion of its private markets range while reporting a 50 per cent rise in statutory net profit after tax in the first half of FY25.
PM Capital’s Global Opportunities Fund has made a binding offer to acquire the two listed investment companies run by Platinum Asset Management.
Costs associated with the failed KKR deal have caused Perpetual’s statutory net profit after tax to more than halve to $12 million for the first half of FY25.
The exit of co-CIOs Andrew Clifford and Clay Smolinski from Platinum has highlighted key person risk, with Morningstar raising its outflow forecast to 33 per cent of FUM per annum in response.