About this episode
Canada has a housing crisis in its Indigenous communities that has run for fifty years. The federal government's social housing programme - capped at $150 million annually - produces fewer than one home per community per year across 630 First Nations. The major banks, operating on policies written in the 1960s, have largely refused to lend on-reserve. And yet the infrastructure, the legal frameworks, and the investor appetite to solve this problem exist today.Tracee Smith, President and CEO of Keewaywin Capital Inc., is the private credit fund manager who is stepping into that gap and building a compelling investment case in the process.A Missinaibi Cree entrepreneur, former Bay Street lender, and founder of the nationally recognised Outside Looking In youth charity, Tracee brings a rare combination of community credibility and institutional financial fluency to an underserved market. Keewaywin's model is methodical: advance construction capital to First Nations communities, partner with CMHC's Section 95 social housing programme as a near-guaranteed takeout mechanism, and deploy funds at the point where traditional lenders refuse to go - the design-to-completion construction phase.In this episode, Rob Brant speaks with Tracee about:Why Canada's major banks have structurally failed on-reserve communities - and why that represents a private credit opportunityHow Keewaywin's partnership with CMHC provides investors with a near-sovereign-backed repayment structureThe fund's first major deployment: a $25 million deal in Manitoba delivering 30 modular homes and infrastructure for 200 unitsWhy UK and European pension capital is beginning to look seriously at Indigenous private credit fundsThe systemic policy failures - from siloed government programmes to discriminatory lending practices - that make private capital essentialFor UK and continental European institutional investors, Keewaywin represents something increasingly rare: a private credit fund with quantifiable social impact, a defined security structure, and access to a Canadian market that remains almost entirely overlooked by international capital.