Three-agent knowledge base (Leo, Rio, Clay) with: - 177 claim files across core/ and foundations/ - 38 domain claims in internet-finance/ - 22 domain claims in entertainment/ - Agent soul documents (identity, beliefs, reasoning, skills) - 14 positions across 3 agents - Claim/belief/position schemas - 6 shared skills - Agent-facing CLAUDE.md operating manual Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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| description | type | domain | created | confidence | source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The market that Living Capital enters -- massive demand for thematic impact but collapsing trust in manager-discretion allocation, with retail investors structurally excluded and young investors wanting direct influence not delegated ESG | analysis | livingip | 2026-02-28 | likely | GIIN 2024/2025 surveys, Morningstar 2024/2025, Morgan Stanley Sustainable Signals 2025, Stanford 2025 |
impact investing is a 1.57 trillion dollar market with a structural trust gap where 92 percent of investors cite fragmented measurement and 19.6 billion fled US ESG funds in 2024
Market Size
Global impact investing AUM reached $1.571 trillion in 2024 (GIIN Sizing Report), managed by 3,907+ organizations, growing at 21% CAGR over six years. The average impact portfolio is $986 million but the median is only $42 million -- a 23x gap revealing massive concentration among a small number of large players. Energy is the largest sector at 21% of AUM, followed by financial services, housing, and healthcare.
The broader sustainable fund market is $3.7 trillion (Morningstar, September 2025). Climate-themed funds alone are $572 billion across 1,600 funds. Thematic fund AUM hit $779 billion in Q3 2025 -- recovering but still 15% below the 2021 peak. New thematic fund launches surged 128% in 2025 (82 new funds vs 36 in same period 2024), signaling renewed supply-side conviction.
The Trust Gap
The defining feature of this market is not insufficient demand but collapsing trust in how capital is allocated.
Measurement crisis (GIIN 2024 survey, 305 organizations):
- 92% cite fragmented impact frameworks using different metrics
- 87% report difficulty comparing impact results to peers
- 84% struggle to verify impact data from investees
Greenwashing dominance: 85% of institutional investors view greenwashing as a bigger problem today than five years ago. SEC enforcement actions hit WisdomTree, DWS Group, and Goldman Sachs for impact-washing. Research shows funds signing the UN PRI attract large inflows but do not significantly change their actual ESG investments.
Capital flight from manager discretion: US sustainable funds saw $19.6 billion in net outflows in 2024 (up from $13.3B in 2023), with another $11.8 billion in H1 2025. Only 10 new sustainable funds launched in the US in 2024 -- the lowest in a decade. Fund closures now outnumber launches. This is US-specific (Europe maintained inflows), suggesting the problem is not anti-impact sentiment but anti-manager-discretion sentiment.
Retail Demand vs Access
Only 18.5% of US households qualify as accredited investors (SEC, 2023). Meanwhile:
- 99% of Gen Z and 97% of Millennials report interest in sustainable investing (Morgan Stanley 2025)
- 80% of Gen Z/Millennials plan to increase sustainable allocations
- 68% of Gen Z already have 20%+ of portfolios in impact-aligned investments
- 72% of investors aged 21-43 believe above-average returns require alternatives (Bank of America 2024)
But a Stanford 2025 study found ESG priority among young investors dropped from 44% to 11% between 2022-2024. This is not contradictory -- it reflects disillusionment with ESG-branded products (delegated to managers) rather than reduced demand for actual impact. Young investors want direct influence over where capital goes. The product hasn't been built yet.
US equity crowdfunding (Reg CF) raised $547 million in 2024, with the total crowdfunding market projected to reach $5.53 billion by 2030. This is a demand signal but not the right product -- crowdfunding lacks governance mechanisms, analytical infrastructure, and investment-quality deal flow.
Why This Matters for Living Capital
Three structural tensions define the opportunity:
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Demand exceeds trustworthy supply. $1.57T in AUM with 97-99% young investor interest, but capital fleeing because investors don't trust the allocation mechanism. The combination of fragmented measurement (92%), unverifiable claims (84%), and no investor influence over allocation creates exactly the trust gap that futarchy-governed vehicles address.
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Thematic is where energy concentrates, but governance is broken. Climate alone is $572B. Investors want thematic exposure but have no mechanism to influence how thematic capital gets deployed beyond redeeming their investment entirely.
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Community governance exists but hasn't crossed into real-world impact. DAOs hold $24-35B in treasuries. MetaDAO has proven futarchy works mechanically. Average DAO governance participation is only 17%. Nobody has bridged DAO governance to traditional thematic impact allocation.
Since futarchy-based fundraising creates regulatory separation because there are no beneficial owners and investment decisions emerge from market forces not centralized control, Living Capital vehicles could capture the intersection: thematic impact investing with market-governed allocation, transparent measurement, and retail access through crypto rails. The $19.6B fleeing US ESG funds is not anti-impact capital -- it's capital looking for a better allocation mechanism.
Relevant Notes:
- Living Capital vehicles pair Living Agent domain expertise with futarchy-governed investment to direct capital toward crucial innovations -- the vehicle design these market dynamics justify
- futarchy-based fundraising creates regulatory separation because there are no beneficial owners and investment decisions emerge from market forces not centralized control -- the legal architecture enabling retail access
- futarchy is manipulation-resistant because attack attempts create profitable opportunities for defenders -- governance quality argument vs manager discretion
- ownership alignment turns network effects from extractive to generative -- contributor ownership as the alternative to passive LP structures
- good management causes disruption because rational resource allocation systematically favors sustaining innovation over disruptive opportunities -- incumbent ESG managers rationally optimize for AUM growth not impact quality
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