Dan Adams, BMO: Why Capital Markets Are Indigenous Finance's Next Phase

Dan Adams, BMO: Why Capital Markets Are Indigenous Finance's Next Phase

Author: Canadian Indigenous Investment Summit April 9, 2026 Duration: 39:12

In 2025, the Bank of Montreal elevated its Indigenous banking operation from a specialist unit into a dedicated enterprise-wide function - the BMO Office of Reconciliation. The decision came after more than three decades of building what is now Canada's most established Indigenous financial services programme, and it signals something important: Indigenous participation in Canadian capital markets is no longer a niche consideration for institutional investors. It is the next structural phase of the market.

Dan Adams, Head of the BMO Office of Reconciliation, joined Drumbeats to explain how this translates into practice. Dan has spent his career in northern Ontario working directly with Indigenous governments and communities and has watched BMO's Indigenous portfolio grow by over four hundred per cent, with assets under administration now exceeding twenty billion Canadian dollars. This reflects the current economic reality that Indigenous communities are generating meaningful own-source revenue, building sophisticated financial strategies, and increasingly seeking equity positions in the major projects crossing their territories.

In this episode, Dan covers:

  • The origin of BMO's Indigenous banking mandate in 1992, led by the pioneering Ron Jamieson, and how the creation of the Office of Reconciliation in 2025 represents a fundamental expansion of that mandate across capital markets, wealth management, and investment banking.
  • Canada's first Indigenous bond how BMO structured it from existing term loans already deployed in community infrastructure, and why it was purchased by institutional investors almost immediately.
  • The shift from consultation to ownership why Indigenous governments are now at the ownership table on major Canadian infrastructure projects, and what government guarantees mean for the bankability of those transactions.
  • What foreign investors get wrong and Dan's three-point framework for approaching Indigenous partnerships: community support, long-term project viability, and genuine relationship investment.
  • Why capital markets represent the next chapter of Indigenous economic participation and what bank capital market teams need to understand to play a meaningful role.

For UK and European institutional investors evaluating Canadian infrastructure, energy, mining, and natural resource projects, this episode provides the commercial and structural context that no due diligence process can afford to overlook.


Tune into Drumbeats-Canadian Indigenous Investment Podcast for a direct line to the evolving landscape of Indigenous-led business and finance in Canada. This isn't about abstract theory; it's a grounded conversation driven by the real-world experience of hosts Mark Magnacca and Rob Brant, who bring their roles as co-chairs of the Canadian Indigenous Investment Summit directly to the microphone. Each episode delves into the practical intersection where community-driven economic strategies meet tangible investment opportunities. You'll hear candid interviews with leaders, entrepreneurs, and analysts who are shaping this dynamic sector. The discussions go beyond surface-level trends to explore how partnerships and capital are actively fostering sustainable development and self-determination. For anyone-investors, business professionals, or simply the curious-seeking to understand the forces reshaping the Canadian economy, this podcast offers essential context and forward-looking insight. Listen for nuanced analyses that connect financial decisions to broader community impacts, all framed within a crucial national conversation. The Drumbeats podcast is your source for authentic dialogue on the people and ideas building a more inclusive and prosperous economic future.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 75

Drumbeats - Canadian Indigenous Investment Podcast
Podcast Episodes
The Port of Churchill: Why Rotterdam and Antwerp Are Paying Attention [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 39:59
The Port of Rotterdam is the largest port in the European Union. The Port of Antwerp is the second largest. Both are now formally partnered with The Port of Churchill in northern Canada. The Port of Churchill is Canada’s…
The Traditional Playbook Is Not Working: CIIS 2026 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 37:46
The old investment rules are no longer enough to protect capital in this new market with greater macro volatility. With the oil crisis ongoing, the global economy continues to face rising pressure and uncertainty. Crude…
Jon Davey: Why Scotiabank Bet on Canada's Indigenous Economy [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:38
For senior investment bankers, infrastructure fund managers, and institutional investors building a picture of Canada's Indigenous economy, understanding who is driving change inside the country's major financial institu…