Drumbeats: Canadian Indigenous Investment Podcast

Drumbeats is a must-listen Canadian investment podcast for investors interested in Indigenous investment in Canada. We cover newsworthy events and bring together the movers and shakers of Canadian Indigenous investment.
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This episode breaks down Indigenous investment, global capital markets, outcomes financing and where the next wave of Indigenous-led impact is heading.

🎧 Jeff Cyr: Founder & Managing Partner, Raven Indigenous Outcomes Funds; CEO, Raven Indigenous Impact Foundation, returns to explain how outcomes-based financing is scaling across Canada and capturing international investment attention.

In Part Two, Jeff goes deeper into how Raven’s model differs from other outcomes funds in the UK, US and Australia—centering community decision-making, prioritizing Indigenous leadership on every project, and designing investments that deliver both measurable societal benefit and fair investor returns.

You’ll hear how Raven’s model is:

  • Reshaping the perception of Indigenous economies
  • Structuring returns that look and feel like fixed-income products
  • Attracting capital from Switzerland, Germany and the United States
  • Scaling impact by running multiple $5–$10M investments rather than chasing mega-projects
  • Working with governments to shift how public dollars are deployed

Jeff also shares what’s coming next: A national pipeline of First Nations projects, partnerships with governments seeking to accelerate outcomes rather than react to crisis, and a growing international awareness that Indigenous-led funds are delivering both impact and market returns.

Whether you’re an investor, policymaker, development leader or a member of an Indigenous community exploring capital partnerships, Part Two shows the scale of what’s possible—and why Indigenous leadership is shaping Canada’s most exciting economic opportunities.



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OUTCOMES FINANCE | INDIGENOUS INVESTMENT | COMMUNITY CAPITAL This episode breaks down how Indigenous communities are accelerating infrastructure, financing clean energy, and reshaping the investment landscape through outcomes-based financing.

Guest: Jeffrey Cyr, Founder & Managing Partner, Raven Indigenous Outcomes Funds.

How do Indigenous Nations deploy housing, energy, and infrastructure faster while delivering investor returns and community impact? Jeffrey Cyr, Founder and Managing Partner of Raven Indigenous Outcomes Funds, breaks down how outcomes-based financing moves projects out of government bottlenecks, channels capital directly into communities, creates measurable public savings, and repays investors from those savings with verified returns.

Jeffrey has spent 20+ years advancing self-determination from negotiating land rights to designing policy systems, leading the National Association of Friendship Centres, and launching the first globally Indigenous-led VC firm.

In this episode, Jeffrey explains:

  • How outcomes contracts pool federal and provincial programs into scalable capital pipelines
  • Why blended finance unlocks projects that foundations, private equity, or governments can’t fund alone
  • How Raven structures returns (4–7%) while keeping wealth inside communities
  • How geothermal and solar projects lower housing costs, cut emissions, and keep skilled jobs local
  • Why Canada has become a global leader in Indigenous economic development
  • Where the next wave of investable projects will emerge housing, clean energy, health, diabetes reduction, and workforce development

You’ll learn why outcomes financing is more than a funding model it’s a tool for redistributing power, capital, and decision-making back to Indigenous communities.

Whether you’re an Indigenous leader, policy-maker, or investor exploring Canada, the UK, the U.S., or Europe, this episode reveals how First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities are moving from surviving to thriving and what opportunities exist for aligned capital.



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This episode breaks down Indigenous investment strategy in Saskatchewan’s critical minerals and nuclear sector—including uranium, small modular reactors (SMRs), and Nation-owned economic development models. We explore how First Nations are securing supply chain opportunities in the mining sector, pursuing a diversified investment. Saskatchewan holds 20% of the world’s known uranium reserves and the province’s new focus of also on deploying small modular reactor is creating new opportunities in the nuclear supply chain for Indigenous-led economic development organizations.

 

Our guest Alex Fallon, CEO of Birch Narrows Dene Nation Development Inc., explains how First Nations are partnering with mining companies like NexGen through Mutual Benefit Agreements to create investment and employment opportunities..

Alex brings a rare threefold perspective:

  • A Saskatchewan mining sector focus with his role as CEO Birch Narrows Dene Development Inc.
  • Knowledge and opportunities across Canada through his role as Founder & Chair of the Western Canada Economic Forum.
  • International investment bridge-building as British Honorary Consul for Saskatchewan for the past 14 years.

 

In this episode, we cover:

  • How Birch Narrows Dene Nation is positioning itself beside one of Saskatchewan’s next major uranium mines
  • Why First Nations are pursuing early-stage equity in critical minerals rather than waiting for projects to mature
  • Lessons from the Sparrowhawk and Roal Helium MOU
  • How loan guarantee programmes can unlock Indigenous ownership in emerging resources
  • Saskatchewan’s fast-moving SMR roadmap, including leadership from Bruce Power and Ontario Power Generation
  • What UK and European investors should understand about working with Indigenous partners in Canada’s natural resource sectors

 

We also explore the important role of Western Canada Economic Forum plays in bringing key stakeholders from industry, provincial government, and federal government together to spur greater collaboration across Western Canada (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba) in energy and mining, agriculture, and supply chain development.

Whether you’re a Nation building your economic development strategy or an investor looking to partner respectfully and effectively, this episode offers clear, practical insights into where the opportunities are emerging and how Indigenous Nations are positioning to lead them.



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This episode examines Indigenous investment in Canada, institutional capital, and Indigenous partnerships, as well as why Indigenous-led finance is now central to infrastructure, energy, and natural resource investment outcomes. Under Dawn Madahbee-Leach leadership a $150,000 First Nation–owned loan fund scaled to more than $170 million, supporting more than 4,000 projects across Canada. In this episode of Drumbeats, she joins Mark Magnacca and Rob Brant to examine what that growth reveals about Indigenous-led capital, governance, and long-term economic value creation. Recorded on the 10th anniversary of Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, this conversation offers a rare, inside perspective on the National Indigenous Economic Strategy for Canada a landmark framework authored by Indigenous leaders and 25 national organisations, outlining 107 calls to economic prosperity across four pathways: people, land, finance, and infrastructure. Dawn explains how corporations, institutional investors, and government agencies are already implementing elements of the strategy, reshaping procurement, equity participation, and significant project development in the energy, infrastructure, mining, and trade sectors. She also shares what senior decision-makers should watch for ahead of the 2027 progress report and why Indigenous partnerships are no longer optional but foundational to successful investment in Canada. This episode is essential listening for institutional investors, policymakers, corporate leaders, and Indigenous economic leaders as they navigate the future of capital, reconciliation, and economic sovereignty.



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Canada's largest Indigenous equity partnerships aren't happening by accident - they're the result of deliberate corporate strategy, government support, and Indigenous communities' increasing interest in owning infrastructure that operate in their territories. Enbridge has been at the centre of this important work, having completed multiple transaction since 2022.

Until December 2025, Emily Black served as Director of Strategic Projects and Partnerships at Enbridge Inc., where she led a landmark Indigenous equity transaction with 38 First Nations in British Columbia, the first transaction to utilize the government of Canada's Indigenous Loan Guarantee Program. Emily has now been appointed Director of Corporate Strategy for Enbridge, one of North America's largest infrastructure companies with operations spanning liquids pipelines, gas transmission, gas distribution, and renewable power across Canada, the United States, and Europe.



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Mark and Rob kick off 2026 by exploring the Canadian levée tradition, tracing its origins back to 1606 and highlighting how Indigenous participation has been fundamental to this relationship-building custom since the very beginning.

The episode features the \"Best of Drumbeats 2025,\" showcasing highlights from the top 10 most influential guest conversations—including insights from leaders like Clint Davis, Harold Calla, and Jaimie Lickers—that define the current state of Indigenous investment and capital flow.

Looking ahead, the hosts discuss the massive 2026 project pipeline, with over $116 billion in energy and mineral developments now referred to the Major Projects Office, all requiring meaningful Indigenous partnership for successful execution.



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In this special Christmas episode, Mark Magnacca and Rob Brant revisit the pivotal moments of 2025 that redefined the Canadian Indigenous investment landscape, from the historic scale of the second annual summit at the London Stock Exchange to the rapid passing of Bill C-5. The co-hosts discuss the multi-billion dollar pipeline of LNG, nuclear, and critical mineral projects, emphasizing why authentic equity participation and board seats for Indigenous nations have become the new standard for project success. They also unpack the strategic pivot beyond North American trade, highlighting Canada's strong fiscal position as a stable global energy partner for the future.



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In Part Two of our conversation with Chief Ouray Crowfoot, the former CFO and Chief of Siksika Nation reveals exactly how billion-dollar First Nations are deploying capital and how international investors can engage.

This is where theory becomes practice. Chief Crowfoot provides specific details about Siksika's investment portfolio: majority stakes in hotels including Calgary's Westin (95% ownership) and the Kananaskis Lodge where the G7 Summit was held (35% ownership), infrastructure assets like bridges and pipelines, and professionally managed accounts generating 20-25% annual returns. With $200-300 million in annual excess capital, Siksika has moved from government subsidy dependence to active capital deployment.

But the conversation goes deeper than current assets. Chief Crowfoot shares his vision for Siksika to develop a $100 million private equity account focused on emerging sectors like AI, following the Southern Utes model in Colorado who manage a $13-14 billion USD trust. He explains the strategic decision to start with Canada's major banks (RBC, TD) to build community comfort, then gradually bring in specialized managers for small-cap, emerging markets, and growth strategies.



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Why would a KPMG and Ernst & Young alumnus leave corporate America to become Chief of a First Nation in Alberta? Because Chief Ouray Crowfoot saw investment potential that most people miss - and he had the financial expertise to unlock it.

In this episode of Drumbeats, Chief Crowfoot shares how he's applying Big Four accounting principles to Indigenous economic development at Siksika Nation. Located just one hour east of Calgary, Siksika occupies strategically valuable territory. But as Chief Crowfoot learned during his six years of leadership, location advantages mean nothing without the right business capabilities and mindset.

With undergraduate and graduate degrees in finance and accounting, Chief Crowfoot understands what institutional investors need: sophisticated governance, transparent financial management, and clear partnership structures. His mother's philosophy - ""a computer in one hand and a drum in the other"" - captures the balance he's pursued: maintain cultural identity and traditional knowledge whilst building modern business capacity.



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Ontario is doubling its transmission grid by 2040 through Indigenous equity partnerships - and doing it faster than jurisdictions still treating Indigenous engagement as compliance.

In this episode of Drumbeats, Matthew Jackson, Vice President of Indigenous Partnerships and Business Development at Hydro One Networks Inc., reveals how Canada's largest transmission company completely transformed its approach to Indigenous partnerships. The result? First Nations are now actively advocating to government for Hydro One's transmission projects in their territories.

Matthew leads partnership strategy at Hydro One, which operates over 90% of Ontario's transmission infrastructure across a territory five times the size of the United Kingdom. With a multi-billion-dollar capital investment programme and 14 transmission projects underway, Hydro One has implemented 50-50 equity ownership structures with Indigenous communities - proving that genuine economic



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How do indigenous communities actually access Europe's ÂŁ400 billion sustainable bond market? Part 2 provides the implementation roadmap.

Aude Rajonson from London Stock Exchange Group explains the preliminary steps debut issuers must take: creating sustainable bond frameworks with trusted advisers, identifying community priorities that align with ICMA principles, and engaging European impact investors who control 90% of global sustainable bond fund assets.

The flexibility is remarkable. Investment grade and high yield both qualify. Canadian dollars are accepted. Tenors are agnostic. The requirement is adequate disclosure in your prospectus for the investor base you're targeting.

Europe sits at the forefront of sustainable finance with sophisticated appetite for social and environmental outcomes. For indigenous communities addressing infrastructure gaps with measurable impact, this episode provides the step-by-step guidance for accessing concentrated European capital.

Essential listening for indigenous communities exploring international markets and institutional investors evaluating partnership opportunities.

 



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The London Stock Exchange's sustainable bond market represents $400 billion in securities across 16 currencies, serving 1,200+ debt issuers from 90+ countries. But can Canadian Indigenous communities actually access these markets?

In this first of two episodes, Aude Rajonson, Head of Fixed Income Origination at LSEG, answers this question definitively. She explains how LSEG's sustainable bond market works for debut issuers.

We asked the critical questions: What's the minimum deal size? Do you need ratings? Can you issue in Canadian dollars? The answers remove common barriers. LSEG has no minimum size requirement - $10 million private placements to $500 million public benchmarks all qualify. Canadian dollar issuance is fully supported. Ratings are common but not mandatory. Fee structure is upfront only, no annual costs.

Beyond practical access, Aude explains how the sustainable bond market evolved over ten years from pure green bonds to include social bonds (healthcare, education), sustainability-linked bonds, and innovative structures responding to community needs.

Part 2, which releases next week, explores specific innovations like blue and green bonds and the practical steps for debut issuers to access these markets.

Essential listening for institutional investors with sustainable finance mandates and Indigenous communities exploring international capital markets.



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