In this episode, Steve Chen talks with Toussaint Bailey, CEO of Uplifting Capital, about aligning wealth with impact. Toussaint shares his journey from law to wealth management, where he built innovative financial structures, and ultimately to impact investing, proving that doing good and earning strong returns aren’t mutually exclusive. They dive into the future of values-driven investing, the wealth transfer to women and younger generations, and how financial advisors can integrate impact into portfolios.
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Callouts:
Website: UpliftingCapital.com
Toussaint Bailey’s LinkedIn
(42:49) 2030: How Today’s Biggest Trends Will Collide and Reshape the Future of Everything
(44:42) Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN)
Transcription
Steve Chen (00:00):
This episode is brought to you by the Boldin Financial Planning Platform. Formerly NewRetirement, create a financial plan for free at Boldin.com. Welcome to the Boldin Your Money podcast. Today we have an amazing guest, Toussaint Bailey, the CEO of Uplifting Capital. Truant. Started his career as a lawyer and then moved into wealth management and then started uplifting Capital where he wanted to focus on impact investing. And so his journey is one of purpose, passion and redefining what it means to invest. With that. Toussant, welcome to our show. Thanks for making the time.
Toussaint Bailey (00:44):
Oh, thanks for having me. Been looking forward to this for a while.
Steve Chen (00:46):
For our audience, which is mostly 401k millionaires, people thinking about how to transition to financial independence or retirement, it’s always great for them to hear people’s journey, how they got to where they’re today, so we’d love to give us a few minutes on what brought you here.
Toussaint Bailey (01:01):
I think as pretty jagged path, which I’m a big fan of, I feel like people with unique paths to wherever their final landing place is, seem to be apologists about it, but I think at least in my case, there’s so much that I’ve pulled from each stop along the way. So started my career in law. Both of my parents are sort of, my dad taught for a long time at the junior high school that he went to and South Central Los Angeles and continues to teach junior high school now into his late sixties. My mom ran a homeless support program for most of my adult life and has done all sorts of stuff including DARE programs, but never talked about it. Right. Never gave any pressure to go into that stuff, and so for me, going into law, I went in after graduating law school, just started to look at what seemed to be aligned and so worked at the LA City Attorney’s office for a while doing environmental stuff and worked at the LA Community Redevelopment Agency during law school and got interested in that and I just found my way to give back was going into doing public law, so did a lot for cities and government agencies and learned a lot about how local politics and local municipalities function, and I did it at a private firm.
(02:17):
The idea was just to go into that because it was interesting and it felt good and I ended up there for over 10 years and left that as a partner. I was doing litigation there and people asked me what I did as a litigator and I always said I was a problem solver, but at some stage you start managing people and I just figured there was other contexts to be a manager of people and you get further away from some of the good you’re doing sometimes, and so I started to look for the next step. For me building something unique and wealth management was really exciting. I’d sort of watched my brother-in-law’s trajectory as I became more senior at my law firm. He was first an accountant, then went and worked at Ed Jones, a big sort of wealth management firm, and then went out on his own just as I was making partner and he seemed to be living so much better and smiling so much more than I was in these silly battles with litigators on the other sides of cases.
(03:10):
And so I always have one eye on him just trying to checking out what he was doing. And sometime in 2016 he started talking about bringing advisors together, so by this time he was out on his own. He’s a pretty social guy, so he was like, yeah, I have some advisors who are kind of coming to me and thinking about joining by this time. I was a couple years into being a junior partner and had all sorts of ideas about how I thought professional services business should run. Nobody wanted to hear those ideas in my law firm, but I had a willing audience in him. He was like, oh no, that sounds great, and I thought you should share equity like this, and they don’t properly incentivize growing professionals. I’m good at growing and retaining business. Here’s how it should be done. And so I ended up writing what our wealth management firm ended up calling the manifesto.
(03:56):
So it was this whole idea of bringing an abundance mentality to ownership of a wealth management firm, like having fulfillment be the driving factor not only of what you’re trying to provide to clients, but also wealth management being a fulfilling experience for the advisors. And so that was an idea. It was sort of crazy. We put it down on paper and I started talking to him and the other people who were considering joining him, and I slowly transitioned out a law At that point I was called chief strategist with no reason to be called chief strategist to start out with, and within a few months I took over a CEO and it was such a fun experience. We grew all centered around this whole idea of creating a fulfilling enterprise and something that brought fulfillment to clients, and I was content to do that until I thought that there was a different path for
Steve Chen (04:44):
Me. How long did you do that for then?
Toussaint Bailey (04:46):
So started that informally in late 2016 and did it all the way through. I think I finished right at the top of 2022.
Steve Chen (04:55):
Okay, so that was you and your brother basically created a new wealth management firm from scratch?
Toussaint Bailey (05:01):
Yes. Along with those first few people who were thinking about joining him. So there was about five of us to start out with and I was the NUN client servicing person who was tasked with building out the enterprise. Yeah,
Steve Chen (05:14):
Great. And then that grew to what, a couple billion dollars and then what happened got sold or something? What happened?
Toussaint Bailey (05:20):
Yeah, so the idea of that, not to bore too much with how the equity was structured, but the whole idea was to disaggregate ownership in the enterprise from ownership in the practice. And we thought an advisor who was successful enough to go out on their own but chose to join us should be left with the full benefits of ownership in their practice, and then we would all share ownership in the enterprise that serviced those practices according to who contributed to growth and who contributed to management of that enterprise. And that would be freely shared with new people who were joining. Based on that merit, we grew and we made decisions together. Everyone had equal decision making rights, and so we got to a point in 2020 where we started to get overtures to join others and we found an attractive enough opportunity at that point, I had already had the seeds of uplifting capital in my mind, and so we knew I wasn’t going to stay on for the long term with the firm, and I think everyone realized nobody wanted. My job as CCEO sounds great, but it’s a ton of work and it’s probably much more fun to work with clients. So yeah, we found the right partner. All of my partners from that was Enzo Wealth Management are now at that new firm, Corio happy there and I think made a good decision.
Steve Chen (06:33):
That’s pretty cool. That’s interesting. And it sounds like you had a pretty innovative ownership structure and way of granting equity. I know that there’s been some huge farther and savvy wealth or these, I think farther is an example, but they’re trying to buy or bring together various advisors and send them, bring their practices together, group that cashflow together and those assets together and then find a, yeah,
Toussaint Bailey (06:54):
And not to get too far into it yet, but there’s this idea that you have to be on the polar ends of a spectrum between being a silo if you’re going to collect practices and share resources or being an ensemble and you have to be the Navy and do everything the same. And we called ourselves an on silo where we thought there’s a band that I think all of us want to practice in that a smart approach to managing money, but there are benefits to doing things in concert at the enterprise level and being a unified brand, everyone we brought in we were proud to be associated with, and so we wanted to be branded with and it was innovative. I think there are more doing similar things now.
Steve Chen (07:30):
Yeah, well, farther just raised 70 million on a close to half a billion dollar valuation, so there’s definitely lots of money going into this kind of model right now as a venture backed thing. So parents are do-gooders quiet, do gooders. You’re like, all right, picking up on some of that, get your law degree, practice public service law, then see your brother and be like, all right, let’s get into wealth management, do some cool innovative stuff there
Toussaint Bailey (07:54):
And do some good. I think I have a pattern of finding do-gooder opportunities where I am and then I get to a place where I feel like I can do more. And so that was the case with going from the law firm to going to Enzo. Enzo for me was about not only kind of seeing this way of living where you’re not in contention like a litigator all the time, but also we talked about this waterfall of fulfillment, which was a little woo woo. We’re in California, but it was a little woo woo for most people in the industry. But really the foundation of what we did that first stage in the waterfall was about loving and trusting relationships, and we talked to clients about that. We talked to advisors about that. And so we came to work for loving and trusting relationships. And then the second stage in that waterfall was about self-actualization.
(08:36):
So if we have those relationships, we create a great container for self-awareness and also self-mastery. Then beyond that, once we get there, we talked about collective impact and so coming together, doing something special, and the contention was if we get those first three things, personal rewards will fall out naturally for everyone who’s associated with the firm and all of our clients. And so bringing that mindset to the firm and being in charge of driving that culture was part of my responsibility and it felt great, but for me, the impact that I wanted to have starting in 2020, the world got quiet. We realized a lot about, it was funny, people talk about the social unrest and this social awakening in 2020, but environmentally when the world shut down and we stopped, we got off the roads, we saw things flourish that we’d never seen flourish.
(09:24):
And so there was all this perspective that came from being quiet in 2020. And at that time, ESG was all the rage. Everyone who has an asset managed firm, meant firm had an ESG product to push. I thought that there was probably a more authentic way to do that and a more accretive financially way to do that for clients in the private markets. And so in 2020 was when I started down that path first after just reflecting on my own impact journey and doing some things around that that had nothing to do with wealth, really started to look at building something better to bring individual investors proximate to the impact that they were having and also do that in a way that made, I just saw advisors as kind of wanting to do this and seeing all these problems that they wanted to affect, but it wasn’t done in a way that made sense for their professional lives and it makes sense for their client’s personal lives.
Steve Chen (10:18):
It’s super interesting. I really like this idea of first having a great environment that you work in with people that you like this kind of loving and trusting environment and then focusing on people’s individual, I think that’s the word you use and then collective impact. I think that’s a powerful way to cascade, create a great environment, let people lean into their strengths, and then together have a great team that does some really good stuff.
Toussaint Bailey (10:40):
And we talked about the waterfall and those three levels and then personal rewards being that last level. We always talked about businesses going wrong or being less than satisfying when people put number four, number one,
Steve Chen (10:51):
So
Toussaint Bailey (10:51):
They start with personal gain and they’re like, oh, you know how we can accomplish these goals. Let’s go build relationship or how I can make more money if I make myself better. And we found that having those things not be a means to an end, but actually B ends in themselves, it felt better. And B, it was actually a more effective way to do business.
Steve Chen (11:11):
Did you just come up with this on your own or a do? Is this from a book or something?
Toussaint Bailey (11:14):
It has little bits of Maslow in it, and then I do a lot in the mindfulness and emotional intelligence space, and so thought a lot about self-awareness as the building block for a lot of good things that happen in business. Self-awareness is really the foundation for empathy and empathy is foundation for good relationship. And so a lot of ingredients and a lot of good ideas from a lot of other people came together in a mix by me. I did the remix.
Steve Chen (11:40):
No, no, it’s great. I mean totally. We talk about self-awareness here. It’s the first part of this. Can people reflect and understand and listen well and through that it can make gains.
Toussaint Bailey (11:50):
And it’s interesting, a lot of people grapple with that being the first thing. So you talk about this and self-mastery actually come first, but we said, and I contend it’s really tough to do that in a place where you don’t feel psychologically safe. It’s not quite unconditional in business, but you don’t have trust. It’s really easy to show up and look at yourself and own stuff when you have a trusting environment. And so we talked about these loving and trusting relationships being the right environment to curate.
Steve Chen (12:22):
Yeah, that’s so funny. A lot depends on the context. People here, folks talk about psychological safety. When I first heard that, I was like, ah, that sounds goofy, but I have kids that play football. It’s about the team and the team as a family and trusting each other and doing well. And if you’re like, oh yeah, listen, we have a great football team and the football team starts with trust and trusting your teammates because a sport where it’s not an individual thing, it’s very much like you have to work as a unit. That is the exact same concept of you got to have core trust in the team. Psychological safety,
Toussaint Bailey (12:58):
It doesn’t mean making everything or accepting everything that someone does. Part of trust is trusting that people are going to speak truth to you. We talked a lot about sandpaper at that ferment and having these tough conversations that actually smoothed out business edges. You have to trust that you’re also getting candor from people and you’re getting straight facts from people. So trust also includes telling people what needs to be done when it needs to be done.
Steve Chen (13:22):
Yeah, it’s interesting as you grow, we hired our first head of people last year and we have started writing things down in terms how we talk to each other and how we treat each other standards for leadership. We don’t over document it. I mean people should hopefully instinctively know a lot of this stuff, but it’s sometimes good to reflect on it and it is tough in any growing environment making it like, okay, yeah, we got to trust each other, but it’s also business. But we have to be able to communicate really clearly and hold each other accountable.
Toussaint Bailey (13:54):
It’s hard to scale culture because how those values are reflected at each stage in the business. Trust means something different when the layers of management are two or three people deep rather than one person deep. And what you have to do to have those values reflected in a business are drastically different. And so scaling culture is really hard. I think it’s an underappreciated business skill
Steve Chen (14:18):
A hundred percent. Just the more we do, the farther we go in our business and we’re 50 people now, it’s totally different than when you’re five people, 10 people, everyone knows each other. I mean really well. And all you do is just do stuff and now you’re trying to be organized and get a couple of different things done. And I remember talking to a CEO EO and he had 300 people and he is like, yeah, the big difference between 30 people and 300 is now instead of one thing, I can do two things.
Toussaint Bailey (14:43):
Yep, there’s new benefits, new dangers, because when you’re five people, osmosis works for you. Just being in the same room and the stuff that happens on accident is fantastic because people kind of intuitively know each other, know what’s going on, but the stuff that happens on accident at 50 people and things just happening because people are around each other can actually be really dangerous to business and can have a lot of misunderstanding built into ’em. And so there’s a lot of intention that has to be brought to bear as you start to grow past that 10 people at a table level of the business.
Steve Chen (15:17):
A hundred percent. Well, so you’ve gone through this a lot, then you had this successful traditional, well not fully traditional, but also doing good but with money. And then you’re like, okay, so what led you decide to go do uplifting capital?
Toussaint Bailey (15:28):
I was inspired that I could do more. I had this seat and I was sort of excited by the idea of private markets becoming more mainstay in wealth management, particularly for higher net worth clients and what was going to happen there. I was excited by people starting to talk about their values and money together more regularly, but just found that these two trends, these two exciting things hadn’t been brought together in wealth management in a way I thought they should be. And so started to have those conversations with the advisors who I worked with and talk about what could be a value, started to have those conversations with clients that we had and appropriate level clients and just thought if we could accomplish three things, then I thought we could really scale the number of people who are thinking about doing good for people, planet and economy alongside of thinking about growing their finances.
(16:24):
And those were if we could build something unquestionably institutional from day one, if we could be really good stewards of capital from the start, if we could build something uncompromisingly scalable for advisors and wealth management firms, not trading anything for scale, and then if it could feel profoundly personal to the individual client even while scalable for advisors and even while kind of institutional in nature one, I thought we could kind of thread that needle and do those three things at the same time and I thought we could have a genuine impact on the world and on the way that people think about managing money and investing money. And so boldly kind of set out with that crazy idea and found some people along the way who agreed with me and some brilliant folks who came along to work with me on that and filled different pieces of those attributes. And so we’re been at it now for a few years, started in earnest in late 21, but really in 2022 really started at it when I gave up the role at Enzo completely.
Steve Chen (17:25):
And so does uplifting work directly with consumers or it works with RIAs or other wealth managers?
Toussaint Bailey (17:31):
No, we serve wealth managers. So if individuals came to us, we’re just not built for them. For us scaling this space and building something that’s useful to advisors, primarily ria, some family offices, that also means, I think it’s underappreciated how many foundations are through wealth management firms, not just kind of the big consultants. So we work with foundations, we work with individual clients, but all of it goes through fiduciaries.
Steve Chen (17:57):
That’s interesting. And so for the wealth managers, what do you do for them? How do you bring impact investing to their clients essentially and then they give us sleeve like assets to you or how does it work?
Toussaint Bailey (18:07):
They give a leave of assets to us. We manage vehicles, so we have a vehicle each year that has assets across a number of different asset classes and a number of different impact themes. First believing that economic drivers and impact drivers can work together synergistically, and so we’re unabashedly investors first. So again, on that theme of sort of meeting financial firms where they are, meeting advisors where they are, and then when advisors invest with us, we put together institutional vehicles that include venture capital investments, private equity investments, and also real assets investments across about nine themes that touch on people, planet and economy. Things like financial inclusion, which would certainly be I think in the wheelhouse of bolden affordable housing. It could be climate change solutions, food and agriculture health. So all of these things, we invest those in a portfolio that makes sense. And then we personalize impact. And so thinking about how people experience that portfolio, how individual investors experience that portfolio, they might be in a common portfolio and one would be interested in climate change and another would be interested in health and wellness. How they experience that portfolio is different. What we report on the learning that they get alongside of that, the content that they get alongside of that and they can even lean in.
Steve Chen (19:26):
So you’re saying you’re creating vintages by a year or there’s like a 2025 portfolio that gets assembled essentially.
Toussaint Bailey (19:32):
So we closed the first vintage in late 23. That was sort of our proof of concept starting vintage, and we partner with wealth management firms at times in multi-year commitments. And so we can have a firm come in and say, we’ll commit to your first three vintages. Sometimes they’ll come into one, and so we close one out with the second one now, and the idea is to have something always available and so the second we close this one, we’ll have another one open,
Steve Chen (19:56):
And so then the RIA is saying, Hey, I’m going to bring in money from various families or whatever they’re going to contribute to this thing. Do you know Opto investments?
Toussaint Bailey (20:05):
I do, yeah. Matt Malone and I were both a part of this organization, adisa and got to know him when Opto was more of a thought than what it is now. I think. Yeah, they’re doing some great stuff.
Steve Chen (20:16):
It just comes to, I mean I just happen to see Ryan VanGorder has been on the podcast, they’re doing alternatives, but also they have this kind of vintage approach, which is like, Hey, we’re creating these vehicles in similar motion. I mean I’m sure you guys compare notes about how to go to market and stuff like that. It’s kind of interesting stuff though.
Toussaint Bailey (20:30):
I don’t know as much about what they do from a structure standpoint, but I could certainly see this whole idea of building a model that makes sense and having the ability to customize that within Rails and adjust that for what an advisor’s portfolio needs are, how they see those portfolio very aligned in that thinking. I think private markets have been and continue to be probably 10 years behind public markets in terms of thinking about product rather than thinking about investor need. And so as those solutions have come together in ETFs and different SMA and portfolio management solutions in the public markets, I think we’ll continue to see portfolio construction innovation in the private markets.
Steve Chen (21:10):
That’s cool. I like this a lot. I like this idea a lot. It’s pretty interesting. What do you want this to become? What does success look like in five or 10 years?
Toussaint Bailey (21:17):
To me, people start the conversation around investments with values in the possibility of values alignment as just a normal thing. It’s not thought of as something that’s concessionary, it’s not thought of as something that’s sort of a corner of the portfolio that can’t be financially reconciled. It’s just a normal thing. So hopefully we have tons of competitors who are doing all sorts of great things for the world, maybe with different opinions on what’s great for the world, but our savvy investors and are thinking about this from an investment standpoint. And for us that means scale. So we see ourselves as having infinite scalability and hopefully this whole space continues to scale.
Steve Chen (21:58):
Yeah, no, I could totally see how you deal with a bunch of RIAs on one side of the network. They’re out there gathering assets and building distribution, but you’re saying, Hey, I can help you deliver a scalable impact investing. You make it easy for them by creating the vehicles that let them invest in but also report on. I think the personalized reporting is a really good idea of like, Hey, you can tell Steve you care about climate and maybe solar panels or whatever. It’s like here’s happening in the portfolio for what you care about Andan cares about.
Toussaint Bailey (22:29):
Well, it’s like when we were first starting, there was a lot of thought that this was a nice to have. Even on our own parts, much has been made of the generational wealth transfer or not even generational, also the horizontal wealth transfer from one spouse to another. There’s wealth transfer that’s going to happen at charity. All of that adds up to the numbers often around 70, 80 trillion that you hear that transfer isn’t sort of one principle gone and another principle appear as a one event occurrence. It happens slowly and it happens messy and new seats at the table are being brought. And so the idea of aligning values while often thought of as individual to keep a family together at a certain level of means requires values alignment. And so the opportunity to have this discussion vehicles for having this discussion and then the ability to do that in ways that keep a portfolio aligned with the integrity of the financial goals, but also satisfy some of these values and allow people to be reflected in their investments, it’s a need to have for families with a certain level of complexity, at least the discussion is a need to have and a tool for offering something on the other side of that discussion we have found has been well received.
Steve Chen (23:41):
That makes sense. I definitely am curious what the wealth break are. So there’s a couple points on this. One counterpoint is I’m a member of bogleheads. I went to their conference and they are generally like EH, ESG, we don’t like E-S-G-S-G has crummy returns and it’s a mistake. I think also many of those folks are, our users are kind of like 401k millionaires. So like, Hey, I’ve worked to save my whole life. Yay, I’ve got a couple million bucks. I don’t have 10, I don’t have 20, but I’ve got enough to be, I got to take care of this and do a good job of managing the withdrawals and taxes and all that stuff. So I think for a lot of, well at least some of the bullheads, they’re like, ah, I don’t know. This is a good economic return. But I also think that for many people they would like to align if they could, if it wasn’t too expensive or if it was great, I could invest according of my values, like vote my dollars and get a good return. Great. So I guess my question is how do you react to that and also as people hit different strata of wealth, does this become more important?
Toussaint Bailey (24:41):
One, we have to have better conversations. One of the themes that we continue to hit on this year as a firm is this whole idea of real world impact versus labels even in our space because people want to run off with DI is a hot button issue, ESG is a hot button issue and people are reacting to their perception of what that is rather than reacting to what that is in a lot of respects. And that’s a whole diatribe I could go off on, but ESG, which is not what we are and I can kind of take you through a spectrum of values seeking capital or sustainable capital, but ESGI will defend for a second as I think we need to think through what the E actually stands for, what the S actually stands for and what the G actually stands for. If it’s a risk management tool, ESG is not an investment strategy, it’s a strategy for managing risk and everyone deploys it to some extent.
(25:30):
There’s only some people out there marketing it after California wildfires. Every insurer in the world and everyone who is insurance adjacent is an ESG investor because they are thinking about the environmental impacts of what they do. No one’s ever stopped thinking about governance, right? The G and ESG, and yes, you can find some tussling around the social issues and what people think is appropriate risk management in that social bucket, but there’s something that everyone sees appropriate to look at em. We just talked about culture for five minutes, that’s the s. And so at its essence, ESG is just paying attention to factors that people didn’t necessarily think about as financial factors traditionally.
Steve Chen (26:09):
That’s super helpful actually. That’s great.
Toussaint Bailey (26:12):
But that aside for us, we are a basket of investments or a portfolio that makes sense for a set of investors at a certain wealth level, whether you put values alignment on it or not, that set of investments makes sense for investors at a certain wealth level. For us right now we’re a qualified purchaser fund and which is 5 million of investible assets in them. So we’ll work with very wealthy families and advisors who serve those families or foundations with a significant amount of assets. We will in future get down to the accredit investor level, which is million dollars of investible assets or a couple hundred thousand dollars a year in income. Still, that’s a significant amount of money no investor should be. They should be looking at our portfolio from an asset class and a portfolio construction standpoint and thinking about whether or not that’s appropriate for their clients.
(26:59):
I will say at the level of wealth that we typically work at, which is kind of the lower end of that qualified purchase spectrum, that five to 50 million of investible assets, us like opto are probably a better solution than most of the private market’s product that’s being hucked at people. Private credit’s being thrown at everyone because that’s hot. Our real estate’s being thrown at everyone because that’s familiar. A portfolio construction approach should be taken, and so I think we’re appropriate there for other investors. There’s ways to align your values and your investments in the public markets. So one of the firms that I love and we’ve been close to from our very beginning is ethic investments. I don’t know if you know ethic, but they’re sort of a values alignment tool where you can choose a tracking error budget and you can choose themes that you care about and you can see how much you’re deviating and you can see what the likely financial outcomes of that is. There’s others that do that same thing. I think used to be aerio now acquired by BlackRock and there’s others that do similar stuff. There are ways to align your investments and your values and have this conversation at different wealth levels. I don’t think we are the solution for everybody.
Steve Chen (28:03):
That’s awesome. We actually had the Aperio guys on here. It was pretty interesting seeing these stories weave together and this ecosystem, it’s not that huge,
Toussaint Bailey (28:12):
But they’re doing similar stuff on finding tax efficiency and finding really good financial reasons to come into something that could be also aligned with one’s values.
Steve Chen (28:21):
Yeah. I want to dive a little bit more into uplifting, but I actually am curious, when you were starting this thing, how’d you finance it?
Toussaint Bailey (28:29):
Friends and family money. My own money and salary sacrifices just believers, so it was just early believers.
Steve Chen (28:37):
So it’s all angel, no venture,
Toussaint Bailey (28:38):
No, no venture.
Steve Chen (28:40):
Do you think you’ll ever raise venture institutional money?
Toussaint Bailey (28:43):
It would be tough to convince. If we could keep the integrity of what we do and continue to drive at impact as the core component of what we want to scale, then there’s a possibility not in the foreseeable future,
Steve Chen (28:56):
Maybe strategic money I could see coming in and saying, Hey, we like this idea. Much more
Toussaint Bailey (29:00):
Likely
Steve Chen (29:01):
People inside the industry. This makes sense. I was propping for this, pulling the data on just for our audience, they know we’re a venture backed company. The data on women and minorities getting venture, which I mean obviously you didn’t seek it, but it’s so shockingly low. Female founded companies get 2% of VC dollars and African-American black founders get 1%. It’s like it’s tough.
Toussaint Bailey (29:25):
We are part of the answer to that reality and we didn’t raise venture partially because I wanted to see this company stay what it was, but it is also really difficult and both of my partners are women and so one’s a female immigrant and so we have all sorts of statistics that you would think work against us, but it also makes resiliency a native language. You find a way and one of the real inspirations for investing in this space is creating more opportunity where not only should it be because it’s good for the world, but also it’s just overlooked. And gaps are great for investing. Alongside those same statistics are a compelling set of statistics about how women with that venture capital money actually perform against their peers or companies with at least one female founder perform against their peers. That there’s all sorts of great stuff about women investors and how they perform against their peers. And so the overlooked are an opportunity.
Steve Chen (30:22):
There’s a ton of data that having a diverse workforce, having diverse investors leads to better thinking, more dynamic thinking and better outcomes.
Toussaint Bailey (30:32):
Absolutely. We have this whole concept of impact alpha, obviously Alpha comes from manager selection and it comes from for us illiquidity, but when thinking thematically about Alpha, we have three main sources and one of those is underserved markets looking for these overlooked founders and fund managers. We invest in funds looking for these underserved markets, looking for under-resourced problems, things like affordable housing, things like healthcare, and then looking for these underutilized value creation levers and ways that you can both create impact value, but the problem that you’re talking about, we see as significant opportunity when properly invested.
Steve Chen (31:10):
That’s awesome. I mean when you’re out there, so you’re getting this capital, then you’re out there deploying it. So basically you have two sides of this thing that you’re running. What’s the time split between raising money and deploying it? And I understand the raising money side of it, that’s how we cross paths at these RA conferences and stuff like that run around with these wealth managers who are sitting on giant pools of capital. It sounds like the other side of your job is venture or whatever, private equity. I mean you’re out there looking for deals. How do you find those?
Toussaint Bailey (31:37):
In our investment team, we call ’em the Lindas. We have two brilliant women named Linda, our chief investment officer, Linda Asante is really tasked with leading our firm around not only how we find those deals, which for us the first place those deals come from is investment managers who are thematically focused, but also kind of diligence seeing those deals. So we’re paying attention to 1500 plus managers at any given time looking for who’s open, who’s closed across private equity, venture, real assets, and then constructing that in this portfolio that includes the right balance of things that have a shorter duration like real assets or including affordable housing is a shockingly good investment. Renewable energy is discussed a lot now and it’s great investment. And then you have venture on the other side. So what makes sense for your average investor and how can that be tweaked for an investor specific needs is what Linda Asante is charged with leading for.
Steve Chen (32:35):
So she’s not investing in individual deals. I live in venture land where these VCs show up at. These companies are like, Hey, we’ll invest in you bold and here’s a chunk of capital. It’s a direct investment. It sounds like you guys are investing in fund managers that might be like a venture fund
Toussaint Bailey (32:48):
Primarily, and we’ll opportunistically invest in individual deals alongside those fund managers, but we won’t source something in its infancy and we’re not built to do that. And that level of risk without a manager who we trust coming in alongside just doesn’t make sense for the people who we’re investing for.
Steve Chen (33:06):
Totally. It feels a lot like Opto and just alternative investing in general. I mean, are there systems, it’s like is some of the stuff public or is it all private or how would you characterize these investments? Do they count as alts or
Toussaint Bailey (33:19):
They’re all private In a larger bucket, you would count ’em as alts, but Alts is an amorphous term. It includes all sorts of stuff that’s somewhat public. Hedge funds are alts and gold is Alts for us, it’s all private and it’s all private equity. It’s broadly speaking private equity. So the capital private equity is much later stage investments in private companies for us, broadly speaking, private equity is just private ownership that starts at venture and some of that goes pretty early stage and some of that goes into later growth venture. And then real assets are private ownership of projects, which include things like infrastructure and housing. But we are broadly a private equity company and we benchmark ourselves against traditional cover up the impact label private equity, and right now we do pretty good against it.
Steve Chen (34:08):
That’s awesome. Okay. So how do you feel like you guys are doing in terms of growth? Are you achieving the goals you want to achieve in terms of getting capital together, deploying it and all that stuff?
Toussaint Bailey (34:17):
Yeah, so I think the goals we want to achieve from a growth perspective, from company growth perspective is by good partners. And so we count our growth. We had some folks who jumped on very early. It’s funny, we started out joining us on the journey was a phrase that we felt like we said to death not only to our RA partners who were joining us on the journey betting that they’re coming into something that was sound and institutional. If very, very early we turned to fund managers who we were asking to decrease their investment minimums and work with us and join us on the journey, join us on the journey. And so from the start, I’ve been pleased with our growth because we’ve been growing with the right set of partners. We’ve been fortunate to have some really mega firms join us from very early on, even into fund one and some smaller firms join us on that journey, but they’ve brought great clients with them.
(35:06):
And so this second vehicle that we’ve launched, I am overwhelmed with the quality of partners who’s chose to entrust us with their capital and how they’re thinking about utilizing us. There’s places where we are starting to build out whole impact programs and think about how they drive that impact and sit alongside some pretty sophisticated philanthropic practices. And there are others who just see us as sort of a deficient product to bring alongside other more sophisticated impact products or more idiosyncratic impact products that their firms are utilizing. But we’re growing with the right partners, never fast enough for me. I’m a founder, so if you ask me if we could grow with those right partners faster, absolutely we could add more daily. But I have to say bottom line, I’m super pleased with our growth because it’s healthy.
Steve Chen (35:55):
We have 40,000 paying subscribers now on the D two C side. They have a hundred billion in their financial plans that they’re invested, probably mostly public markets and equities, fixed income and stuff like that. That is amazing, but we don’t manage the money,
Toussaint Bailey (36:10):
But you’re affecting that amount of financial security and financial wellbeing, which is phenomenal.
Steve Chen (36:16):
Yeah, thanks. No, it’s interesting. I mean it’s so interesting when you’re doing a new model, we’re doing a new model, this very aligned, transparent way of doing business. And I’ve always thought, oh, as we grow, could we make it easier for people to do stuff like this? Could they say, Hey, actually I like this idea. I mean we do have an RIA inside of this thing, but it’s almost like crowdfunding like, oh, would people like to do this kind of thing? And we all like this idea we’re all going to jump on and invest this way or that way. I do think that some of that could happen in the future. And also conversations like this, there’ll be thousands of people that listen to this, which is kind of crazy. We’d be nervous and sometimes it could be 10,000 people, but the world is changing with the distance.
(37:00):
It’s so interesting listening to you describe how you do work, that’s like how venture and private equity, you’re out there looking for deals, thinking about all this stuff. You’re in the inner mechanics. It’s not like I’m just buying some ticker symbol and trading it. You’re dealing with the companies and what they’re doing. And then on the other side is the people that have been saving and they want to do good with their money and have be protective. And some of them are like, I want to have it aligned with my values and I’d love to also touch and feel and know where my money’s going, what it’s doing for me or what it’s doing for the world.
Toussaint Bailey (37:29):
And I think people are increasingly thinking that more is possible and no longer accepting that they can’t have it all. We find that with, we have a lot of MBA students who come through and work with us. And for me, I was thinking about my career as I need a job and I need to feed myself and I need to do great, and at some point I’m going to turn and I’m going to try to do some good. And I ended up accidentally doing good along the way and that was great. But the main thing I was thinking about is feeding myself. And I think people now, even from a work context, are really thinking about aligning those values, doing things that reflect who they want to be, how they want to show up in the world with how they live from right now, from day one and not necessarily waiting. And I think the same thing is happening with finances. And so yeah, I do think people will continue to see what we’re doing, see what you’re doing, and find ways to have that good invited into their life, whether that’s through us or whether that’s through doing it creatively and uniquely themselves or some other means.
Steve Chen (38:27):
Yeah, I could see eventually if you scale this thing, it becoming available maybe. I mean, you ever thought about going through the workplace? I mean that’s where most people have most of their savings.
Toussaint Bailey (38:36):
Absolutely. No, no. We think about we can’t get ahead of ourselves, but we think these are good investments, double good, double bottom line, good investments. But first of all, we think these are good investments and so we feel very comfortable as stewards of people’s capital and we feel very comfortable that they’re going to see their financial goals met through what we do. And so from that frame, it makes sense to be as many places as possible and we just need to find the right avenue and the right timing to get down. Market is such a bad way to bad to say it, but become available to a lot more people
Steve Chen (39:10):
For sure. It is crazy when you look at the wealth concentration in this country and it’s like half this country has no money, literally zero savings and then it’s like 25 or 30% have a little bit, and then the top 20% has pretty much most of it. But really it’s the top 5 3 1 0.1. I think you get to 0.001, there’s a thousand billionaires in this country. The concentration just keeps lifting up, so
Toussaint Bailey (39:36):
Fix that
Steve Chen (39:38):
Bolded. Yeah, obviously I do think financial literacy makes a huge difference. It does. That’s where it starts. But then, yeah, people taking risks with their human capital. I mean the good thing about this country is that most people don’t inherit their money. They actually make it. And so there is the opportunity, but if you come from money or you come from education and you’re financially literate and you have access to the social capital, there’s a lot of opportunities that we have and our children have that people from other places may not have just growing up in this.
Toussaint Bailey (40:09):
Yes, but while wealth asymmetry is I think arguably, and maybe not even arguably being exacerbated, information asymmetry is coming down and that includes information about effective entrepreneurship, that includes information about what sound investing is. And I think if we find relationships and networks being evened out alongside of that information evening, there’s hope.
Steve Chen (40:34):
Yep. Well, and it’s interesting looking at it generationally. Yeah, the boomers had pensions like I’m Gen X, we had early 401k’s but didn’t know what we were doing. And many people suffered. Millennials kind of got the short of the stick because 2008 and various financial crisis hurt them, but the Gen Zs seem like they’ve gotten the message saving money they’re investing in, they’re richer relative to the earlier generation. So they have way more access to information. They have stronger networks, they have more access. They’re taken some of those lessons. And so
Toussaint Bailey (41:06):
They give me me hope. We’ve seen Gen Zs driving family conversations in a way that we personally like uplifting capital and myself in a way that I don’t think happened with millennials or Gen Xers at this stage in the family. And so yeah, gen Z gives me hope.
Steve Chen (41:23):
Yeah, for sure. I also think people are more open to talking about money now, which is a good thing. When I grew up, people didn’t talk about money impolite talking about money, and now people talk about how much money they make, what they’re doing with it, and there’s more intergenerational discussions anyway, all that money’s going to flow, that 80 trillions coming, getting to younger people and the world really could change in a huge way. So if it goes to people that are like, Hey, I want to invest in a values aligned way, you’re right. It’s like if someone controlled 10 million bucks and then their spouse gets it and they think differently or their kids got it and they think differently, that’s a big change all at once.
Toussaint Bailey (41:59):
They have a refreshing level of impatience about what they want to see in the world, the philanthropic inclination of women far exceeding that of men and how much they give and what drives their financial decisions and how they pick financial advisors based on values. And so I think between women coming into much more wealth and increasingly becoming heads of household and Gen Zers and even millennials having a seat at the table, we’re betting on them driving change and I’m excited about it.
Steve Chen (42:30):
I would definitely like to look at, I’ll look it up after the fact, but this cascade of money from the more traditional male head of household to I know Ellevest, and the whole thesis is women are going to inherit or control a huge amount of the assets and it’s already starting to happen.
Toussaint Bailey (42:49):
They flip to the majority, at least there’s a great book called I think 2030, but they are slated to flip to the majority by 2030.
Steve Chen (42:56):
So 2030 women are going to control most assets in this country.
Toussaint Bailey (42:59):
Yep, it’s a good thing. Yep.
Steve Chen (43:00):
That’s pretty interesting, right? I mean, think about that. Do you have any similar data points around how they invest differently?
Toussaint Bailey (43:06):
Yeah, we do. Morgan Stanley has a study, and I’ll send it to you after the podcast, but over 50% said they would choose a financial advisor based on whether or not they could serve their values, alignment needs or matched their values. And there’s that same data by the way, on diverse investors. Very, very, very values aligned and philanthropically inclined.
Steve Chen (43:27):
And then I’d be curious how many female advisors are there and how many minority advisors are there now?
Toussaint Bailey (43:32):
Way too few to serve that tsunami of wealth transfer that’s going to happen. And so yeah, I didn’t intentionally have a female investment team and have a female co-founder and co-managing partner, but I think we are aligned with what the future of wealth looks like.
Steve Chen (43:50):
Yeah, well, so the move is if you’re a wealth manager, you should be hiring women and minority, younger people to serve this audience.
Toussaint Bailey (43:56):
At the very least, they’re starting to signal, you see a lot of the major firms are starting to have these women in wealth initiatives now. Actually hiring the talent and making sure that you’re putting the resources behind those things that folks say they’re doing is a different story. At the very least, the industry is awake to the future of wealth, which is female.
Steve Chen (44:16):
Well, they also have to, there’s just a generational, I think the average wealth advisor is like a 50-year-old male and it’s like a huge percentage. They got to just train people up and get ’em to work.
Toussaint Bailey (44:26):
Yeah, it’s crazy. A lot of good stuff and a lot of change afoot in this industry, which I’m here for it.
Steve Chen (44:32):
If you’re a retail investor, what’s something, if they want to get more aware of impact investing, how can they go to uplifting capital, learn about it there, but other things they can do to start learning about this?
Toussaint Bailey (44:42):
Yeah, no uplifting capital. We put out a lot of one-on-one content because of what we do and who we serve and we go deeper on particular themes. But that’s a great resource. The Global Impact Investing Network is a great place to look, Jen. They are tasked with training the world on impact investing and thinking about impact. SOCAP is a huge conference, that kind of big impact investing conference that puts on a lot of good stuff. So for retail investors, those are great places to start. I think
Steve Chen (45:11):
That’s super helpful. Any questions or any thoughts as you look forward for the future of wealth and investing that you see coming in the next five, 10 years?
Toussaint Bailey (45:21):
I would love to know about how you think about, and I think of Boldin is a very mission driven, or at least good for the world company. How do you think about the values of your company and what beyond financial success you want to accomplish in the market you want to make as you grow?
Steve Chen (45:40):
Our big idea is can we help a hundred million people achieve financial confidence? But when you get financially confidence, you’re kind of getting literate. But they like this idea of people getting financially literate, people having plans and using a plan as a way of framing up what’s possible. Well, where am I today? What’s possible? How did my money work? And also think about this idea that financial wellness as a practice is a life long thing that you have to engage in. We see with our current users who are 50 plus, these 401k millionaires, they’ve done the right things over the course of their life. They have a fair amount of money and that money gives them agency. And that agency lets ’em do things with their human capital, retire earlier, pursue things that they want to pursue that they might not have done. If you’re like, I just got to feed myself. And then we want to get more people under that tent and get ’em on that journey and seeing that it’s possible earlier. But what’s interesting about money is that it’s also like a generational unlock. If you’re smart about money and you’ve done well, your kids are way more likely to see that and that affects their lives over the course of their whole lives and hopefully cascades through multiple generations. So broadly, that’s how we think about it.
Toussaint Bailey (46:52):
Financially Confident is such a great bar to look at hitting. I love that. Financially confident.
Steve Chen (46:59):
Yeah. We call it Boldin, your financial confidence platform. We rebranded from NewRetirement to Boldin because we want to be more accessible. Someone who’s 25 and they see Boldin, they might be, I’ll check it out, but if it’s new retirement, they might be like, I don’t know if that’s quite the right thing for me. And then this idea, I mean it’s still like you we’re on this journey, right? By the way, I love this. Join us on the journey. So many things that you’re doing in the cultural side. You should be a culture consultant and just go around to companies and here’s how to think about what you’re doing and here’s how to build the culture. I mean, it’s cool what you’re doing.
Toussaint Bailey (47:29):
I feel like I did a good chunk of my career is no matter what the title is, pretty much just culture defender.
Steve Chen (47:35):
Yeah, it’s super important. Well, anything else you want to share with our audience before I wrap it up?
Toussaint Bailey (47:39):
No. This is a gift impact investment is not concessionary. If they don’t walk away with anything else, walk away with the belief and the confidence that impact and financial goals can be synergistic.
Steve Chen (47:53):
Alright, awesome. Well, Toussaint, thanks for coming on here and this was really great learning about your work and why you do it and how you’ve gone about it. Hopefully it inspires other people who are thinking about their own entrepreneurial journey and thinking about an impact investing. Definitely we’ll link to uplifting capital so people can check it out. It is great hearing about how you can make your money kind of align with your valets. Thanks for listening. All reviews and feedback are totally welcome and we’ll chat with you next time.