Responsible Investing Impact
Responsible Investing Impact
For greater impact, we’re using more of our assets for good
To achieve higher impact and returns more responsibly, Toronto Foundation invests within a spectrum of impact-first to traditional options. Further, we’ve diversified beyond public markets to include more equity within private markets and to invest more responsibly overall*. First read our 2024 Investment Impact Report outlining key outcomes for our assets as well as those we administer for others. Then read about the evolution of our impact investing strategy including how we increasingly use our assets for good across an impact continuum.

INVESTMENT IMPACT SNAPSHOT






*The transition from a traditional portfolio to one invested responsibly typically spans several years. Because certain investments have been locked in for extended periods, it takes time to divest.
Investment-Focused Impact Report 2024






PLANET
Planet Portfolio Investment Spotlight
Wyvern


Generate Upcycle


Clean Bus Solution


InvestEco


Efficiency Capital



PLANET
Planet Portfolio Investment Spotlight
Wyvern


Generate Upcycle


Clean Bus Solution


InvestEco


Efficiency Capital




Toronto Foundation’s public portfolio vs. international benchmark:*



*MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI)


Toronto Foundation’s public portfolio vs. international benchmark:*



*MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI)

PEOPLE
People Portfolio Investment Spotlight
BenchSci


TAS


Spare


Windmill Microlending


Canadian Canoe Museum



PEOPLE
People Portfolio Investment Spotlight
BenchSci


TAS


Spare


Windmill Microlending


Canadian Canoe Museum












OUR IMPACT EVOLUTION
OUR IMPACT EVOLUTION
How we got here and why
For years we’ve used an action-oriented and equity-focused research agenda. That informs donor and community engagement designed to disrupt traditional philanthropic practices, including flowing more money to smaller, local and equity-focused organizations. When only 15% of our funds are endowed, our collective impact through fundholder granting matters that much more.
Equity is the central pillar of our discretionary granting. Over the last four years, we’ve disbursed an average of 14.5%, well above the 5% minimum. But more and more we’re looking to integrate impact across all that we do.


From Granting to Investing and Leveraging the Capital in Between
In 2017 we created a standalone social impact investing pool for groups that needed more money than we could grant and where there was an opportunity to repurpose capital from one social purpose venture to the next.
Then we hired internationally renowned Outsourced Chief Investment Officer, RockCreek Canada, to re-imagine our broader investing strategy for more aggressive, yet responsible, financial returns. What started with a finance-first agenda with our establishment in 1981, started evolving in 2021 to match our equity-driven vision that bold financial and social yields can be achieved in tandem.
As we annually increase the percentage of our assets responsibly invested to our goal of 70%, we can confirm that our full portfolio already adheres to the principle of doing no harm.
More on our collective impact
Read a letter from RockCreek Canada for more on our investment performance and plan to navigate 2025 and review our financials. Fundholder and foundation-led granting
Impact Continuum


Give charitable gifts

Prioritize social or environmental benefits while also generating financial gains.

Prioritize financial returns while creating social or environmental gain through private strategies and companies.

Proactive approach to incorporating environmental, social and governance ESG factors into investments through public markets.

Geography:
Local (mostly)

Example:
Toronto's Vital Signs Grants

Geography:
Canada

Example:
Windmill
Microlending

Geography:
Global

Examples:
Generate Capital
Equality Fund
Private Debt Fund
Impact Continuum


Give charitable gifts

Prioritize social or environmental benefits while also generating financial gains.

Prioritize financial returns while creating social or environmental gain through private strategies and companies.

Proactive approach to incorporating environmental, social and governance ESG factors into investments through public markets.

Geography:
Local (mostly)

Example:
Toronto's Vital Signs Grants

Geography:
Canada

Example:
Windmill
Microlending

Geography:
Global

Examples:
Generate Capital
Equality Fund
Private Debt Fund