This glossary is meant to demystify the finance lingo.
Finance: Managing money to fund projects or investments.
Financial Instrument / Vehicle: Tools used to invest or raise money, like stocks, bonds, or loans.
Blended Finance: Public and private money combined to fund projects with social or environmental goals.
Concessional finance: An instrument with below-market interest, often to support development or conservation.
Nature Finance: Investment in nature-positive outcomes, like restoring forests or protecting biodiversity.
Micro-credit: Very small loans given to individuals, often in poor or rural areas, to start small businesses.
Loan: Money borrowed that must be paid back later, usually with added interest
Bonds: A way for governments or companies to borrow money from investors, with a promise to repay it with interest. A bond can be traded on public markets
Sovereign Bonds: Bonds issued by national governments to raise money, repaid with interest.
Green, Social, and Sustainable (GSS) Bonds: Bonds that fund projects with environmental, social, or combined positive impacts. The Green Bond Principles (by ICMA) are often used as guidelines to define what is a GSS bond. Otherwise, GSS bonds are mostly self-labeled
ESG: Stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance. There is no standard definition, but it is mostly used as indicator of risks on financial assets, but linked to non-financial criteria. ESG investing limits those risks, unlike impact investing, which targets positive outcomes.
Impact Investment: Investments aimed at generating both financial return and positive impact.
Impact Investor: An investor focused on both financial return and positive impact.
Impact Fund: A fund focused on investments with social or environmental benefits.
Impact Metrics: Tools to measure the environmental or social effects of an investment.
Institutional Investor: Big organizations (like pension funds or insurers) that invest large sums of money.
Fund: A pool of money collected from investors to be invested in assets.
Fund Manager: Person or firm that decides how to invest the fund’s money.
ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund): A fund (pool of assets) traded on a public market like a stock
Liquidity: How easily an asset can be bought or sold.
Illiquid Investments: Hard-to-sell assets, like land or private equity.
Maturity (of an investment): The time when a loan or bond must be repaid.
Long-term Investment: Investments held for many years (usually more than 8-10 years), often for steady growth or impact.
Seed Investment / Seed Capital: Early funding to start a new project or company.
Venture Capital: High-risk investment in startups, aiming for high returns.
Natural Capital: Nature’s resources like forests, water, and biodiversity seen as economic assets.
Carbon Credit: A permit to emit one ton of CO₂, used in carbon markets.
Biodiversity Credits: Credits earned by protecting or restoring biodiversity, used to offset impacts.
Sustainable Land Use: Managing land to meet human needs while protecting nature.
TNFD: Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures, NGO providing a framework on corporate reporting on nature to be used as a tool for portfolio risk management. Most likely the reporting framework that will be adopted by governments and industry to report on nature-related metrics
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