Profil
Frank F.
DeGiovanni is currently the Director at The Boma Project, Inc. He was previously the Director at Ford Foundation from 1991 to 2016.
He also held positions as Director at ShoreCap Management Ltd. and Senior Research Associate at The New School for Social Research.
DeGiovanni received graduate and doctorate degrees from The University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Postes actifs de Frank F. DeGiovanni
| Sociétés | Poste | Début |
|---|---|---|
The Boma Project, Inc. | Directeur/Membre du Conseil | - |
Anciens postes connus de Frank F. DeGiovanni
| Sociétés | Poste | Fin |
|---|---|---|
Ford Foundation
Ford Foundation Investment Trusts/Mutual FundsMiscellaneous Ford Foundation maintains a balanced and diversified portfolio that includes equities and fixed-income securities (both US and international), private equities, venture capital and equity partnerships. | Gestionnaire de Portefeuille-Actions | 01/04/2016 |
ShoreCap Management Ltd.
ShoreCap Management Ltd. Investment ManagersFinance ShoreCap Management (SCM) provides capital, governance and capacity building assistance to locally managed small business banks and regulated microfinance institutions in developing and transitional economies in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. SCM invests in small business banks, regulated microfinance institutions and other regulated non-bank financial service companies striving to profitably meet the credit needs of micro entrepreneurs and small businesses in underserved markets. NGOs seeking to transform their operations into for-profit, regulated institutions are also eligible for investment. The firm invests in institutions located anywhere in Africa, Asia or the non first-round ascension countries of Eastern Europe are eligible for investment. Investees must have achieved a level of unsubsidized operating profit or have plans to do so within the next 12 to 18 months. As a minority shareholder, SCM seeks financial institutions with a strong, experienced management team and a committed set of local development-minded investors. They look to exit its investments within five to seven years through such means as a share put option, recapitalization by local investors, sale of company to strategic buyers or an IPO. In most cases, investments take the form of common or preferred stock along with convertible debt tied to performance milestones and a minimum capital-asset ratio. SCM generally invests in the local currency of the investee institution, although they often look for hedging mechanisms to protect against currency devaluation. | Private Equity Investor | 15/02/2009 |
The New School for Social Research
The New School for Social Research Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Corporate Officer/Principal | - |
Formation de Frank F. DeGiovanni
Expériences
Fonctions occupées
Actives
Inactives
Sociétés cotées
Entreprise privées
Relations
Relations au 1er degré
Entreprises liées au 1er degré
Homme
Femme
Administrateurs
Exécutifs
Sociétés liées
| Entreprise privées | 5 |
|---|---|
Ford Foundation
Ford Foundation Investment Trusts/Mutual FundsMiscellaneous Ford Foundation maintains a balanced and diversified portfolio that includes equities and fixed-income securities (both US and international), private equities, venture capital and equity partnerships. | Miscellaneous |
ShoreCap Management Ltd.
ShoreCap Management Ltd. Investment ManagersFinance ShoreCap Management (SCM) provides capital, governance and capacity building assistance to locally managed small business banks and regulated microfinance institutions in developing and transitional economies in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. SCM invests in small business banks, regulated microfinance institutions and other regulated non-bank financial service companies striving to profitably meet the credit needs of micro entrepreneurs and small businesses in underserved markets. NGOs seeking to transform their operations into for-profit, regulated institutions are also eligible for investment. The firm invests in institutions located anywhere in Africa, Asia or the non first-round ascension countries of Eastern Europe are eligible for investment. Investees must have achieved a level of unsubsidized operating profit or have plans to do so within the next 12 to 18 months. As a minority shareholder, SCM seeks financial institutions with a strong, experienced management team and a committed set of local development-minded investors. They look to exit its investments within five to seven years through such means as a share put option, recapitalization by local investors, sale of company to strategic buyers or an IPO. In most cases, investments take the form of common or preferred stock along with convertible debt tied to performance milestones and a minimum capital-asset ratio. SCM generally invests in the local currency of the investee institution, although they often look for hedging mechanisms to protect against currency devaluation. | Finance |
The New School for Social Research
The New School for Social Research Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
The University of North Carolina at Charlotte
The University of North Carolina at Charlotte Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
The Boma Project, Inc. |
















