Monday, February 27, 2012

Heart of a Development Investor, Discipline of a Lender

Takeaway: Grassroots Business Fund’s investment in social enterprises throughout developing countries enforces discipline investing using patient capital from impact investors.

Investing in social causes has for a long time remained an oxymoron. But with companies like Grassroots Business Fund (GBF), such investments are becoming real, abound, and very much desirable.

GBF was founded in 2008 by the International Finance Corporation of the World Bank initially as a Grassroots Business Initiative. As way of background, the IFC was created in 1956 as an institution through which private investors can invest in developing countries. Similarly, GBF intends to mobilize private capital from developed to developing countries. Unlike IFC, however, GBF’s investments are in a much smaller scale involving small start-up social enterprises.

In the talk about GBF I attended on February 24, 2012 at John Hopkins University, Harold Rosen, GBF’s CEO, very eloquently shared the company’s business structure and investment strategy. GBF is essentially an investment manager that invests in high impact businesses, which are for-profit businesses that create economic opportunities for people at the base of the economic pyramid. Unlike traditional venture capital firms, GBF incorporates both financial and social metrics to assess its investments, which Rosen stresses to be one of the main challenges in investing in social enterprises. The funds managed by GBF come from various institutions, including Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), DEG (German Development Bank), FMO (the Netherlands Development Finance Company), and Deutsche Bank. GBF charges a 3% management fee, and its average investment size ranges between $500,000 and 2 million with an average investment span of 6 to 9 years. GBF has investments in Kenya, Ghana, Tanzania, Indonesia, India, Bolivia, and Peru.

Rosen stressed the importance of obtaining patient capital for investment with an eye on development. GBF strives to identify nontraditional investors who are willing to wait for returns to finally kick in. This requires investors who believe in the underlying cause of creating positive impact in the enterprises’ surrounding communities. Such investors are now popularly known as impact investors. Factors that signify “impact” include the numbers of people employed and family members supported.

However, GBF’s typical investment structure in these social enterprises combines equity with debt, which Rosen refers to as quasi-equity or hybrid securities. These investments are debt-type instruments with equity features, such as convertible loans or redeemable structures, that incorporate a current income component. Unlike equity, quasi-equity holders have a known cash flow. GBF distinguishes itself from other sources of funding that Rosen refers to as “soft money”―grants and equity, investors of which do not care much about returns―by characterizing its investment as discipline investing. Through the current income component, these social entrepreneurs are obligated to bring steady investment returns to the investors. The reason for such a structure is to discipline the investees to allocate income on a steady basis, which would thereby affect their business planning, enhance investment accountability, and consequently strengthen their financial viability.

In addition to, or part of, its investment, GBF also provides technical assistance in areas of corporate governance, financial management, operations and supply chain management, environmental and social impact, and human capacity. GBF builds the portfolio companies’ capacity to create, maintain, and use simple management dashboards. By having the skills to build such dashboards, these entrepreneurs can leverage their data to obtain future financing for their high impact businesses.

One final but very enlightening point raised by Rosen: there is more capital out there than social enterprises. It took me several minutes to really understand and agree with him. My guess is that Rosen was not referring to simply any business ventures that call themselves social enterprises; rather, he was probably referring to social enterprises that directly benefit the communities while creating profit, or what our business friends would call reaching scale. The smooth and successful marriage between profits and philanthropy remains a mystery to most.

For the talk’s power point slides and taped talk, visit http://www.sais-jhu.edu/academics/functional-studies/international-development/events/index.htm.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Expanded and Rigidified Duty of Reasonable Care for Directors of California Benefit Corporations

As codified in section 309 of California’s General Corporation Law, which applies to benefit corporations, directors of California corporations are protected by a business judgment rule. This broad protection of directors in performing their duties, however, is subject to certain limitations, including the duty of reasonable inquiry. The duty of reasonable inquiry requires directors to “not close their eyes to what is going on about them in corporate business, and must in appropriate circumstances make such reasonable inquiry as an ordinarily prudent person under similar circumstances.” Gaillard v. Natomas Co., 208 Cal. App. 3d 1250, 1265 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989). As the court in Gaillard noted, “[t] he term ‘under similar circumstances’ requires a court to consider the nature and extent of a director's alleged oversight or mistake in judgment in the context of such factors as the size, complexity and location of activities involved, and to limit the critical assessment of a director's performance to the time of the action or nonaction and thereby avoid harsher judgments which can be made with benefit of hindsight.” Id.

Despite the facts and circumstances application of section 309, the duty of reasonable inquiry appears to have been expanded and rigidified for directors of benefit corporations. In order to pursue a general public benefit, directors of benefit corporations are required to “consider the impacts of any action or proposed action upon all of the following:
  1. The shareholders of the benefit corporation.
  2. The employees and workforce of the benefit corporation and its subsidiaries and suppliers.
  3. The interests of customers of the benefit corporation as beneficiaries of the general or specific public benefit purposes of the benefit corporation.
  4. Community and societal considerations, including those of any community in which offices or facilities of the benefit corporation or its subsidiaries or suppliers are located.
  5. The local and global environment.
  6. The short-term and long-term interests of the benefit corporation, including benefits that may accrue to the benefit corporation from its long-term plans and the possibility that these interests may be best served by retaining control of the benefit corporation rather than selling or transferring control to another entity.
  7. The ability of the benefit corporation to accomplish its general, and any specific, public benefit purpose.” Cal. Corp. Code § 14620 (emphasis added).
Although subsection (d) explains that directors do not need to give priority to any particular stakeholder, section 14620 presumably requires a reasonable inquiry into the impact to each stakeholder for each and every decision made by directors. By not considering all listed stakeholders, directors may face potential liability. And while the statute is not clear as to what consideration directors should give to each stakeholder, the bar would probably be set rather low, especially given that directors cannot be held liable for the failure to create a general public benefit. Directors seeking to avoid potential liability, however, will want to, at the very least, document their consideration of each of these stakeholders, whether through their own investigation or by relying on certain other persons allowed by subsection (e) of section 14620. 

Ultimately, section 14620 makes directors accountable for at least considering the broader impact of their decisions on stakeholders, which is what was intended by the statute. Directors, however, should be aware of the practical consequences of section 14620’s language, and should take the necessary steps to satisfy their new duties in order to avoid messy litigation over whether consideration was given to the listed stakeholders.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Testing and Welcome

Testing out the new blog for the Social Enterprises Legal Society, made up of students of the Washington College of Law. We met for the first time as a group on February 9, 2012 and are hoping to be formally accepted as a student group at WCL shortly. In the meantime and going forward, we have set up this blog as a way to enter the discussion on the growing trend of social enterprises as students of the law.

We have many ideas for what this blog could be used for:
  • Posts discussing the numerous legal issues surrounding social enterprises, and what that means for social entrepeneurs
  • Case studies of social enterprises, with a specific focus on why the company was formed as a social enterprise in an effort to understand whether the law helps or hinders that goal
  • Journal the process of forming a social enterprise (e.g., benefit corporation)
  • Collaborations with other groups, both academic and professional, including the Social Entrepeneurship Masters Program at American University and Law For Change
  • Announcing any events, including our own, relevant to those interested in social enterprises
Hopefully much more to come on the blog.