Philanthropy
UBS Makes Further Impact Investing Push; Raises $325 Million

The wealth management house has raised money for The Rise Fund, which seeks to make changes through the impact investing route.
UBS has raised $325
million for an impact investment fund that collaborates with
individuals such as rock musician and campaigner Bono and
philanthropist/film-maker Jeff Skoll.
The Swiss banking group has raised the money for The Rise Fund,
which UBS said is its “largest investment in the private equity
impact investment vehicle”.
The fund will focus on investments in seven sectors in which
independent research has shown that impact is both achievable and
measurable in quantitative terms, UBS said. The sectors are
education, energy, food and agriculture, financial services,
growth infrastructure, healthcare, and technology, media and
telecommunications.
The Rise Fund is “committed to achieving measurable, positive
social and environmental outcomes alongside competitive financial
returns,” UBS said; the fund’s interests are in line with United
Nations’ sustainable development goals, or SDGs.
After raising $471 million for its UBS Oncology Impact Fund last
year, UBS committed to raise $5 billion for SDG-related impact
investments over the next five years at the World Economic Forum
Annual Meeting 2017 in Davos, Switzerland.
Impact investing - putting money to work to win non-financial as
well as monetary returns - has been one of the hot trends of
recent years, drawing in interest from financial players such as
Goldman Sachs
and Bank of
America. The phenomenon is seen as a way to draw in investors
worried about the world’s natural environment, poverty,
homelessness, substance abuse, inadequate schooling and
crime.
The Rise Fund is an impact investing collaboration among several
parties, including: co-founders Bill McGlashan, Bono, and Jeff
Skoll. Bill McGlashan is chief executive of the fund founder and
managing partner at TPG Growth; The Bridgespan Group, a
global non-profit advisor and resource for mission-driven
organizations, philanthropists and investors; The Founders Board,
a group of influential thought leaders, and The Rise Council,
which supports the Fund and the impact investing industry more
broadly, and whose members include UBS.