The Borneo Post

NBA’s Chris Paul, other star athletes, invest for a cause

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NEW YORK: Giving back to their communitie­s has always been a challenge for pro athletes who get rich quick because they tend to lose the money even more quickly.

But even those who manage to build a substantia­l amount of wealth have a hard time using it charitably in a way that truly has a long-term effect.

Some celebrity athletes are turning to “impact investing,” a growing niche of do- gooder strategies that aim to put money toward charitable causes but that would otherwise lack support. Fund managers, of course, also aim to generate income in the process.

The Turner Multifamil­y Impact Fund, a private- equity style vehicle focused on preserving affordable housing, has lately drawn financial support from NBA All Star Chris Paul.

He joins former World No. 1 tennis player Andre Agassi and Basketball Hall of Famer Magic Johnson, who have invested in other funds and projects run by the parent company, Turner Impact Capital and its founder, Bobby Turner. Their contributi­ons work with dollars from hedge fund billionair­e Bill Ackman, the Rockefelle­r Brothers Fund and actress Eva Longoria.

In an interview with Reuters, Paul said he was frustrated by the feeling that giving away his own millions only “put a Band-Aid on a situation.”

As a point guard for the Los Angeles Clippers, he has earned money not just from the 5-year, US$107.3 million contract he signed in 2013, but also from lucrative endorsemen­ts for companies like Nike and State Farm Insurance.

Paul is worth an estimated US$ 30 million, according to Forbes.

“We were doing basketbal l courts here or there, we’d always do giveaways during the holidays, and we did 10 computer labs,” Paul said, referring to a few of the projects the Chris Paul Family Foundation has organised for disadvanta­ged kids. “But at times, philanthro­py can be frustratin­g.”

Whether impact investing is more successful than pure charitable giving is unclear.

Unlike simply giving money away, impact investing does provide a return, which could enable philanthro­pists to sustain or grow their charitable giving. But broadly speaking, impact funds have delivered lower returns than straightfo­rward stock or bond market indexes, according to data from the Global Impact Investing Network, a trade group.

The funds also charge higher fees than traditiona­l investment tools like mutual funds and index funds, because of the amount of work that goes into the investment­s, such as scouting apartment complexes for affordable housing funds.

But impact investing proponents argue that analysing financial returns alone is misguided.

That is because they are more concerned with whether their money is achieving an outcome, like preserving affordable housing in a gentrifyin­g neighbourh­ood, than whether the investment generates a certain profit. Around 40 per cent of impact investors polled by Global Impact said they seek below- market returns.

Counter-intuitivel­y, funds that deliver below-market returns may be the most successful because it indicates they would not otherwise receive funding, said Paul Brest, a professor at Stanford University who teaches courses on impact investing.

“That’s the sweet spot for impact investing, because by definition, ordinary investors are not going to invest in that,” he said.

There were over 400 impact investing funds and products, with US$ 31 billion in committed money, in 2015, the latest year for which data is available from Global Impact. Run by former hedge- fund manager Bobby Turner, the Turner Multifamil­y Impact Fund launched in 2015 and raised US$ 264 million in capital. It has so far acquired nine gardenstyl­e apartment complexes on the outskirts of cities like Dallas, Austin and Las Vegas, according to the fund’s website.

“We’re trying to give housing to people who make too much money for subsidised housing but do not make enough for luxury rentals or home ownership,” Turner told Reuters.

The apartments are mostly filled with tenants who earn up to 80 per cent of an area’s median income, and rent is no more than 35 per cent of a tenant’s salary.

To make t he i nvestment sustainabl­e, Turner said tenant turnover must be kept low. The fund tries to do that by providing additional services like community watch groups, free tutoring and on- site clinics run by other residents who work in law enforcemen­t, healthcare or education and receive halfprice rent for running these programmes.

At the Turner- owned Regency Pointe Apartments, a cluster of two- story red brick apartments 10 miles from Washington DC, the typical tenant would earn US$ 54,666 a year, according to US Census data. Rent for a threebedro­om starts at US$ 1,456 a month, according to the complex’s website.

The fund is aiming for 10 to 12 per cent returns net of all fees over the next few years by keeping tenant turnover and insurance costs low. Turner’s firm does not disclose fees, but generally speaking, industry sources said similar, private equity- style funds typically charge annual management fees of 1.5 to 2 per cent of assets, plus 20 per cent of profits. — Reuters

We were doing basketball courts here or there, we’d always do giveaways during the holidays, and we did 10 computer labs. But at times, philanthro­py can be frustratin­g. Chris Paul, Los Angeles Clippers point guard

 ??  ?? Chris Paul
Chris Paul
 ??  ?? Desmond (second left) and Jackliss testing the arm wrestling apparatus while prospectiv­e contestant­s and organisers including Kee (third left, back row) look on.
Desmond (second left) and Jackliss testing the arm wrestling apparatus while prospectiv­e contestant­s and organisers including Kee (third left, back row) look on.

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