Ford’s Roy Swan on how the Church of England is tackling its slavery legacy

Roy Swan, director of mission investments at the Ford Foundation, is helping The Church Commissioners for England set up a new impact fund to tackle its slavery legacy. He tells Top1000funds.com about the fund that will provide grants and make impact investments intended to increase access to capital for Black-led businesses.

The Church Commissioners for England, which manages the £10.3 billion assets and properties of the Church of England has established an oversight group to advise the Commissioners on their approach to deploying a landmark £100 million commitment made in response to the Church of England’s sponsorship of the transatlantic chattel slave trade.

The oversight group’s members include leading global experts from a variety of fields, including academic, advocacy, community development, investing, journalism, law, and theology from all over the world.

Roy Swan, director of mission investments at the Ford Foundation, also a member of the group, tells top1000Funds this melting pot filled with a wide range of perspectives and decades of practical knowledge, has begun to collaborate to chart a course of action that will ensure this innovative fund will leave an enduring legacy.

The focus at this early stage has been providing the Church Commissioners with a clear, impactful, and ambitious strategy to launch the Fund for Healing, Repair and Justice, HRJ,” he says.

The HRJ fund will provide grants to community-oriented NGOs, academic research on the continuing legacy of transatlantic chattel enslavement, and make impact investments intended to increase access to capital to Black-led businesses; all into perpetuity, says Swan.

Sponsored Content

The oversight group recently released a report containing several recommendations for the fund, which included an assessment that this fund, while a historic gesture, is just a start

“The Church Commissioners should invite others, including Christian institutions and other moral authorities, those with blood on their hands and those who are inspired by noble action, to join this worthy effort,” he says.

The Church Commissioners warmly received the oversight group’s recommendations which Swan calls “encouraging,” adding:  “I know from experience that the best impact investing strategies take time to design based on rigorous, meticulous, and wide-ranging analysis.  I look forward to helping the Commissioners on the journey from plan to execution.”

 Much like the impact investing endowment he manages at the Ford Foundation, the HRJ fund is intended to be perpetual. That means it must generate a financial return of its spending plus inflation over time.

“That is a higher financial hurdle rate than other funds. But as we’ve seen at Ford, aligning an investment strategy within those parameters can not only be done, it can be done well.”

Achieving market-rate returns through impact investing is harder than with traditional investing, but Swan says that’s a challenge the team have embraced.

“Just like with traditional investing, impact investing requires a great deal of diligence and rigorous analysis. At the Ford Foundation, we’re very pleased with the returns we’ve achieved in our Mission Investments program, which is why we believe that others can also achieve success.”

Over the portfolio’s first five years, Ford’s impact investing endowment generated a 28 per cent compound annual return.

“We see the Ford Foundation impact investing strategy as a case study for other endowments and institutional investors on how to take advantage of unconventional approaches to generate conventional market-rate financial returns together with meaningful and measurable positive social impact.”

“The Church of England has made a significant, and symbolic step in the right direction with the Fund for Healing, Repair and Justice.  I have no doubt that this fund will provide a template for others because of its inspirational and aspirational objectives.  Although impact investing is harder than traditional investing, the returns are also more robust– financial and social– and lead us to a brighter and more prosperous future. That’s hard work worth doing,” he concludes.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Australian allocators revisit China as AI race heats up

Top Australian allocators have conceded it is time to rethink the underweight positions to China which have characterised their portfolios, as the Asian superpower’s intensifying AI race with the US creates attractive opportunities.

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Falling dollar dents Canadian pension returns; triggers hedging rethink

A weakening US dollar has eaten into the returns of Canada’s largest pension funds as annual reports revealed the currency shock forced a fundamental rethink from some investors around hedging practices. OMERS has pivoted from a policy hedging target to a more flexible approach fulfilling multiple objectives, while OTPP more than halved its US dollar exposure in 2025.

OPTrust: hiking rates because of the oil shock is a mistake

To navigate rates and inflation uncertainty, OPTrust is leaning into dynamic portfolio construction, actively managed options, and a total portfolio approach supporting the belief that inflation resilience is built into how portfolios are constructed not an individual asset or exposure.

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’

The on- and off-stage antics at the extravagant Milken Global Conference in Los Angeles tell us a lot about where institutional capital is right on the money – and where it is putting its head in the sand.

NBIM lays out case for real estate turnaround

Norge Bank Investment Management chief executive Nicolai Tangen conceded the $2.1 trillion fund is “not satisfied” with the performance of its real estate portfolio, as weakness in the asset class was a main contributor to three consecutive years of negative relative returns. All eyes are now on whether its overhauled strategy, which includes new structures and sector composition, can turn things around.

Previous