2X reports
All the research and publications produced by 2X Global to advance knowledge and build investor capacity.
This report serves as a snapshot of the activity of gender lens funds in private markets. It is aimed primarily at fund managers, Limited Partners, ecosystem builders, and researchers who are actively engaged in the field of gender lens investing or who are interested in better understanding the field. While the report captures a broad set of information about 175 gender lens funds, representing the work of 126 fund managers from around the globe, it is important to acknowledge that an even broader context exists. There are segments within the gender finance ecosystem that are not captured because the investors did not report data nor publicise their gender-focused initiatives. Additionally, this report focuses on activity in private markets only. There are also gender lens equity and debt funds, gender bonds, and other securities that are trading in public markets.
This report explores the connection between gender and climate finance, focusing on the importance of gender-smart investments in the broader climate finance and policy arena. The analysis presented in this report highlights why a gender lens matters for climate finance and outlines key points to inform discussions and deliberations during seminal policy discussions, covering COP29, other regional climate events, the New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance (NCQG) Technical Expert Discussions (TEDs) on global climate finance goals beyond 2025 and more.
As the finance field increases in maturity, more investors are deepening their approaches and enhancing the rigour of their gender analysis by integrating considerations around gender-based violence and harassment (GBVH).
This brief illustrates how gender-smart investors can integrate considerations around GBVH into their climate and gender finance strategies.
Investments reflect our belief in the future. As investors, we deploy capital to assets and activities that they believe will generate returns over time. We have the power to choose where, how our capital is allocated. What if we can utilise this power to actively shape the future in which our investments happen?
Investing at the nexus of gender and climate finance has been evolving in recent years: from the development of new research and case studies that help make the case for this approach and illustrate its benefits, to the emergence of tools to support investors in adopting an integrated approach. Yet few of these examples and tools have engaged intentionally with the full breadth of intersections between climate action, gender and a broader inclusive and JEDI lens in the investment community. This guide is designed to help investors and investment intermediaries do just that.
This Framework, developed by the Women in Finance Climate Action Group in partnership with Oliver Wyman, 2X Global and the 30% Club, is designed to help financial institutions to embed gender considerations into their climate investment decisions, to both mitigate the disproportionate impact of climate change on women and support women as change makers in the net zero transition. It is designed specifically for private institutional investors given the key role the play in financing the net zero transition. The framework provides practical guidance on target outcomes, key organisation and investment process changes, and metrics for gender-smart climate investing.
In order to amplify the importance of the care economy, provide investors with an understanding, raise awareness and spotlight actionable roadmaps, the GenderSmart & 2X Collaborative Care Economy Working Group 16 commissioned two briefs. This second brief provides practical guidance to investors and employers on how to engage.
In order to amplify the importance of the care economy, provide investors with an understanding, raise awareness and spotlight actionable roadmaps, the GenderSmart & 2X Collaborative Care Economy Working Group 16 commissioned two briefs. This first brief is a primer on what the care economy spans, what different business types are emerging and the breadth of the sector to set up the foundation for investing in the care economy.
In the last few years, investors have begun to recognise the vast financial risks that climate change poses. Few investors, however, fully recognise the potential from integrating gender and climate lenses together in investments for long-term climate solutions. The following case studies illustrate the ‘what, why, why now and how’ of gender and climate investing in developed markets, and the opportunities that can arise from integrating both lenses
This How-To-Guide on integrating gender into sustainable bonds outlines the opportunity to bring gender considerations into all sustainable bond issuances and takes the reader through a step-by-step approach to integrating gender in green bonds and sustainability-linked bonds.
Fiduciary duty is often cited as the reason why investors and investment advisors limit the universe of investable propositions to structures and managers that are familiar and considered established. And yet we know that a significant portion of the market – investment in women setting up funds for the first-time – is currently being overlooked. Many of the most innovative funds are from emerging managers. This guide, produced by GenderSmart’s First-Time (Women and Diverse) Fund Managers Investing with a Gender Lens Initiative, is a tool for asset allocators and advisors, as well as for fund managers. It is designed to help you make the case, be inspired by leading investors who are showing the way, understand the structural solutions to backing more of these funds and structured vehicles, find deal flow, and understand how to diligence and move capital into these innovative managers.
GenderSmart Climate & Gender Working Group
Content Partner: Kite Insights
Climate change is set to cause unimaginable ecological, societal and economic disruption if its progress is not slowed. And these impacts will disproportionately affect women, low-income, and other disadvantaged groups. By the same token, gender equality and women’s leadership can jump-start climate action and climatesmart solutions, to build environmental sustainability and resilience.
Gender and Climate investment presentation that brings disparate data sets together; showcases benchmark projects to illustrate the diversity of gender-smart climate investments; provides some useful tools and frameworks that can be adopted; and offers deep dives into three critical sectors: to highlight opportunities and risks.
The guide provides practical insights for individuals and institutions on how to approach investing in pathways to employment of adolescent girls and young women in low- and middle-income (LMIC) countries, through six core investment themes and examples of investment opportunities.