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Does It Cost Anything To Register Your Investment Profile?
Confidential &
Privacy Protection.
Can An
Investment Profile Be Amended?
Who Is Private Equity
Match?
What Is Angel Investing?
Who are Angel Investors?
What Is Venture Capital?
What Are The
Investments Stages?
What Do Private Investors Find Attractive In An Investment?
What Hedging Strategies Do Investors Use To Limit Their Downside
Risk?
Does It Cost Anything To Register Your Investment Profile?
There is a small annual fee of $99.00, which provides Investors with
numerous benefits resulting in large savings over traditional
methods:
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Investors benefit from the traffic generated
from high profile advertising campaigns for pre-IPO
opportunities.
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Avoid the high fees charged by traditional
investment bankers and lawyers to conduct investment searches.
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Immediate notification of investment
criteria matches.
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Allows Investors to confidentially screen
and review deals.
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Forces Entrepreneurs to provide information
that Investors want.
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Investors receive the Private Equity
Preview e-Magazine, which profiles promising pre-IPO opportunities and
articles dealing with Private Equity and Angel Investing topics.
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Screens out “tire-kickers” and/or hobbyists
and verifies that the registered Investors are serious about
investing.
Confidential &
Privacy Protection.
This site is our proprietary database and is not offered to
any third party for other purposes. You personally enter your
information and your contact information is only released to
those projects that you approve.
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Can An
Investment Profile Be Amended?
Yes – Simply login and Edit your Profile. The system will
notify you that the changes have been made and it will
automatically search the database for projects that match the
new criteria.
Who Is Private Equity
Match?
The founder and principal of Private Equity Match was the
founding partner of a boutique investment banking and financial
consulting firm. In 1999 the firm became associated with an
international angel investment network that is responsible for
investing over $250 million in early and expansion-stage
companies. During the last few years it became quite evident
that the firm did not have the human resources to assist all of
the worthy entrepreneurial projects that it was presented. In
order to assist more of these very deserving early and expansion
stage projects, we have developed this confidential matching service.
The system confidentially matches investor profiles with
entrepreneurial projects, allowing the exchange of information
and contact information to facilitate discussion between
investors and entrepreneurs.
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What Is Angel Investing?
When
Entrepreneurs with start-ups and expansion-stage companies have
used up their own money, spent money from family and friends,
and cannot qualify for any or additional bank loans or funds
from venture capital firms. They need funding from private
individuals or equity firms (Angels) to remain in business. The
angel investor market is approximately $40 billion a year.
Who are Angel Investors?
Angel investors are wealthy individuals and families willing to
invest in high-risk deals offered by people they admire and with
whom they seek to be associated. Angels are also financially
sophisticated private investors willing to provide seed,
start-up and expansion capital for the higher-risk ventures.
Angel investors possess the discretionary income needed for such
risky ventures. In fact, a portion of their private equity
portfolio is often set-aside for this purpose. Angel investors
also possess a healthy appetite for self-arranged private deals.
Such direct investment serves to maintain the self-confidence of
these high-net-worth investors and demonstrates their continuing
ability to make money. These investors have amassed wealth
precisely because they know how to invest.
Currently there are about 300,000 active angel investors, but
the potential pool is much larger. About 2 million individuals
possess the discretionary net worth to make angel investments.
The private investor typically has a postgraduate education and
extensive previous management experience. They probably owned
their own companies. They are very interested in earlier-stage
and expansion companies because they can aggressively negotiate
strong discounts, and they find the potential for high returns
through capital appreciation is best realized through these
pre-IPO deals.
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What Is Venture Capital?
Financial capital supplied to young, innovative and expansive
ventures, where both the risk and the potential returns are
high. The Venture Capital offered by Angels tends to be more
speculative and early-stage than that traditionally provided by
the formal venture capital industry. Venture Capital firms have
become more like money management firms and tend to gather
larger pools of money. As a result, the size of their
investments has increased, leaving seed and start-up stage
companies to be funded by private equity.
What Are The
Investments Stages?
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Seed - means that a company is in the idea
stage when the process is being organized;
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R&D - is typical of the financing of product
development for early stage or more developed companies.
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Start-up - designates a venture completing
its product development, initial marketing and in business less
than 2 years.
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First Stage – Working prototype, which has
gone through beta testing and is beginning commercialization.
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Expansion Stage – Expanding
commercialization and is in need of growth capital.
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Mezzanine – Increasing sales volume and is
breaking even or is profitable. Funds are to be used for further
expansion, marketing or working capital.
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Bridge - designates a venture requiring
short-term capital to reach stability.
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Acquisition/Merger - refers to a company in
need of capital to finance an acquisition or merger.
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Turnaround - denotes a venture in need of
capital to change from unprofitable to profitability.
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What Do Private Investors Find Attractive In An Investment?
A recent study of investors tells us that they are looking for
something they can identify with. They are looking for something
that provides fun. Everyone seems to imagine that these
investors are looking only at a return on investment. Return on
investment is important, but these investors are looking for
much more. Having already displayed their ability to make
money–which has positioned them to be able to invest again–they
are looking for something they can get involved in, something
that excites them, something they can understand, and identify
with. And, as we have said, it is fun to make money.
Real excitement occurs with what we call the pre-IPO
(pre-initial public offering of stock). The only way to make $1
million to $5 million with $100,000 is to get involved in a
pre-IPO project. A lot of people do not because they worry about
the risk, but there are ways to manage and hedge against the
risk to about 25 percent. And if you hit a home run two out of
ten times, the returns can be significant and more than enough
to make up for those risks.
In addition,
investors are looking for deals that have a proprietary
advantage or unique technology that positions that venture ahead
of any competition. Investors are looking at recipients of
capital who can articulate that competitive advantage in their
documentation. The financial statements must spell out the
potential and promise for ROI and must offer multiple scenarios
supporting the figures. The argument and potential for return on
investment must be strong. And where there is no history of
profitability, entrepreneurs need to have a track record
elsewhere in the industry.
The key to
investment are the people. Business plans do not get funded,
people get funded. Investors prefer a superior management team
with a mediocre product over a superior product and a mediocre
management team.
What Hedging Strategies Do Investors Use To Limit Their Downside
Risk?
Hedging strategies begin by conducting thorough due
diligence and by being thorough in all investigation related to
due diligence. It is much more important to avoid a bad
investment than to try to hit a home run. After all, angel
investors are making an average of between one and three
investments per year. So their ability to diversify risk becomes
limited. They can manage only so many value-added investments,
which take huge chunks of time to administer.
Hedging strategies begin with due diligence, but they continue
by negotiating steep discounts very early on in the negotiating
process for the risk being taken by these early stage investors.
These investors rarely invest at the price valuation suggested
by the entrepreneur.
Another way to hedge is by syndicating as early as possible.
Bring other investors into the deal, backing off what you might
have planned as your investment amount. Say an investor plans to
put in $250,000. The investor backs off to $125,000 and attracts
other investors who come in and do a couple of things. One, they
carry on due diligence. Two, they confirm–or fail to confirm–the
original investor's opinion. And three, if the additional
investors do confirm, they share the financial risk.
Another strategy involves individuals using other people's money
as soon as possible in the transaction. For example, rather than
investing in the venture directly, an individual may provide a
guaranteed line of credit as a part of the transaction. This
saves the investor from touching current cash flow but
guarantees his or her participation while using other financial
capabilities that he or she possesses.
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