About us

Our Philosphy

There is all too often a false dichotomy between the aesthete and the investor, or the environmentalist and the entrepreneur. But it does not have to be so.

Art does not have to be for money, but an artist will struggle to live without a paying audience. And business does not have to be for a good cause, but any decent business-person should strive to fund what is worthy, not just what is profitable.

Ethical Investing dates back to at leat the 1700’s when the Quakers in England found neither investing in slavery, nor selling its produce, to be compatible with their religious belief that we are all equal. While those views seemed, at the time, to be radical, it is now near universally accepted that the Quakers were right. Their ethical investing has now become law: worldwide those who would seek to profit from slavery run the risk of severe punishment. And rightly so.

Today, the contention of many capitalists is that they must invest in firearms, coal, tobacco and all manner of harmful activities in order to drive investment returns. Greed often motivates these people just as, when they invest in art, they often do so for social status rather than the love of it.

A Rich Life stands in opposition to this profanity. We celebrate profit where it causes no major harm (and preferably when it benefits stakeholders). We celebrate art for what it can gift all of us, rich and poor, and we celebrate literature for the knowledge it can give us, as well as the pleasure.

The aesthete need not eschew wealth, and indeed we would prefer see wealth accumulate in the hands of those who care about beauty, not the crass.

And the environmentalist need not eschew profit. Indeed, we would prefer see capital (and the power it brings) accumulate in the hands of those who would act rapidly to reduce the environmental strain our pollution is causing.

Meet The Team

Claude Walker

Claude is the founder of A Rich Life and writes the Ethical Equities column for this publication.

He had the good fortune of starting young as an investor, and was the Research Analyst and then Advisor of Motley Fool Hidden Gems from 2014 – 2018, during which period his recommendations more than doubled the market return. He has a go-anywhere, do-anything approach to investing, but he always considers the impact his investments have on society and the environment, not just the expected financial return.

In the past few years he has enjoyed most success with medium-sized high-growth tech stocks on the ASX, but has continued to invest heavily in smaller, unloved and ignored micro-caps, because the market is much less efficient at the small end.

Christian Tym

Christian Tym is an Arts & Social Sciences PhD from The University of Sydney and a post-doctoral researcher in social anthropology at the University of Marburg. Christian’s academic areas of expertise are qualitative health research, critical public health and Latin American medical anthropology, but he is an appreciator and purveyor of fast, informative, evidence-based journalism of all kinds.

Chloe Mandryk

Chloe Mandryk is the Arts Editor and Writer for ‘A Rich Life’. Chloe has also contributed to the arts as ‘ARTAND Foundation’ Manager, Visual Art Curator for ‘Art, Not Apart’ a public art festival and ‘3:33 Art Projects’ who curate exhibitions in corporate spaces. For several years Chloe was the Editor of Australia’s longest running art guide ‘Art Almanac’. She was also a contributing Editor to ‘Ken Unsworth’, the first monograph on the senior Australian artist and she continues to be a freelance arts writer, published in Art & Australia, Art Asia Pacific, Artist Profile and catalogue essays.

Kirsty Francis

Kirsty Francis is a Sydney-based arts writer and former Deputy Editor of Art Almanac. Recently she collaborated with artist Jenny Bolis on fine art books, ‘Ghost History’ and ‘The Mirror’.

Maddie Reynolds

Maddie Reynolds is a university student studying Global Studies with a focus in East Asia and its languages. Maddie’s academic interests lie in Asian dynamics on the global stage, but she’s also passionate about Australia’s education system and climate policies.

Raymond Jang

Raymond has extensive experience in analysing and investigating businesses from his roles at Rask Australia, ASIC and a national accounting firm.

He is a Chartered Accountant and holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of NSW. His curiosity about the world and drive to find high-quality businesses is what gets him out of bed every morning.

Outside of writing and investing, Raymond loves to play football in a cage (trust him, it’s more fun than it sounds) or at a park.