article thumbnail

Iridius Capital Is Headed Back To The Office ? Founder And CIO G.S. Jaggi Shares How And Why

CEO Insider

Jaggi, known as “Jaggi”, is the founder and Chief Investment Officer of Iridius Capital, a real estate firm based in Tucson, Arizona. Jaggi and Iridius Capital invests in real estate across all major real estate asset classes and has acquired or developed $1.5B

CIO 83
article thumbnail

To Get People Back To The Workplace We Need To Create Healthy Buildings

The Horizons Tracker

With data from Moody’s Analytics suggesting that as many as 20% of offices in America will be empty by 2022, there is clearly a demand among organizations for their real estate to do more than was previously the case. Attractive places to work. Attractive places to work.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Retain Talent Through a Concrete Corporate Culture

Coaching Tip

At Cascade Asset Management , an environmentally minded recycler of computer components, sustainability reigns supreme, from a wholly green headquarters to employee nameplates personally made from recycled computer pieces.

Armstrong 108
article thumbnail

What’s Driving Superstar Companies, Industries, and Cities

Harvard Business Review

These “superstar” sectors include financial services such as banking, insurance, and asset management, professional services, internet and software, real estate, and pharmaceuticals and medical products.

article thumbnail

Universities Are Missing Out on an Explosive Growth Sector: Their Own

Harvard Business Review

Meanwhile, trustees control universities’ sometimes-giant endowments, and most often delegate this control to asset managers who treat the endowments as pools of money with the sole purpose of creating more money. Harvard notoriously owns (and manages) much of Cambridge, Mass., They’re quite good at it, on the whole.

article thumbnail

Spain Is Now Making Ireland's Mistakes

Harvard Business Review

And yet in the run up to the collapse in 2007, the combined asset footprint of the three main Irish banks was around 400 percent of GDP. One of those banks, Anglo-Irish Bank, lent 67 billion euros to the non-financial sector (real estate) in 2007 alone. In Spain, really only the scale is different.

article thumbnail

Why Is Capital Afraid of Cities?

Harvard Business Review

It's easier to meet Community Reinvestment Act targets with housing and real estate than with business loans. Tim Ferguson is the Founder, Chair, and Managing Partner of Next Street , a merchant bank for the urban enterprise. America's great foundations, with $600 billion to invest, invest it much as they always have.