Ellie and David Rubeinstein speak to Yahoo Finance

David and Ellie Rubenstein discuss Manna Tree Partners, which invests in companies that improve human health through better nutrition.

Video Transcript

- Co-founded the Carlyle Group in 1987 and built it to become one of the world's largest and most successful private equity firms. It operates close to 400 investment vehicles across 32 locations around the world, with over $200 billion in assets under management. Rubenstein is an active philanthropist and one of the original signatories of the Giving Pledge.

David's daughter, Ellie Rubenstein, is also in the private equity business, and is the CEO and co-founder of Manna Tree. One of its missions, to invest in companies that produce healthy and sustainable food. Her company is mostly women-led, and in April of 2020, announced it had raised $141 million for its first fund.

SEANA SMITH: Welcome back to Yahoo Finance's "All Markets Summit-- Road to Recovery." I'm Seana Smith, and I am joined by David Rubenstein, co-founder of the Carlyle Group, and his daughter Ellie Rubenstein, co-founder and CEO of Manna Tree. And, David and Ellie, thanks so much for taking the time to join us this afternoon. We're very excited to have the unique privilege of interviewing you both here together today on Yahoo Finance.

DAVID RUBENSTEIN: Thank you for inviting us.

ELLIE RUBENSTEIN: Thank you for having us.

SEANA SMITH: Ellie, I'm going to start with you first, because when we spoke a couple of days ago ahead of this interview, I was asking you about your relationship with your dad. And the first thing you said to me was, "I've worshipped my dad since I was a little girl. I've always mimicked him." What did you learn about investing just by being around your dad and leveraging that knowledge with your own investment career?

ELLIE RUBENSTEIN: Well, I'm sitting in my childhood home. I just drove here 20 minutes ago. It's the first time I've been here, I guess, since my father has become the quarantine king. And I have memories of going to Freshfields, which was a company that my-- that Carlyle actually bought. And I remember the most exciting thing about my dad's job was when they bought a grocery store, we got to go into it the day before.

So for me, it was always about learning and understanding and going with him and seeing the innovation. And in that case, what I remember was that was one of the first grocery stores that actually had a-- a sushi chef in it so you could get sushi, like a-- you know, the takeaway sushi.

So what I would say is, I think the people that are-- that are children of-- of famous people, instead of looking at it, you know, how did they make their money, try to figure out what it is that makes them tick, and then take it and make it your own. And then that's what I've done in my own case. I've always been very focused on health and nutrition and improving human health.