Angel in Waiting
Angel investing in early stage companies lags, but are investors latent or just late?
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2006/march/83564.html
If you're up on your VC and angel investor news, you've
heard the reports that funds are flush with cash and ready to
invest. Whether that will pay off for your company may depend on
the stage of your business. As both professional VCs and individual
angel investors try to minimize their risks, they appear to have a
growing preference for later-stage growth investments over seed
stage opportunities.
A new study from the Center for Venture Research at the
University of New Hampshire's Whittemore School of Business and
Economics offers some proof. Although the dollar amount invested by
angels appears to be holding steady, the report showed an 11
percent shift in angel investments away from seed and startup stage
ventures during the first half of 2005 compared to the same period
of 2004.
The report also acknowledges the growing popularity of angel
groups. What is not clear is whether the trend toward organized
group investing is leading to more angel activity or less. The CVR
report indicates that groupthink may be making some individuals
more conservative. CVR categorized 66 percent of angel group
members as latent, or inactive, during 2005. That's a sharp
increase from 56 percent in 2004 and 48 percent in 2003.
On the other hand, the rapid growth in angel groups may be
skewing the results, says James Geshwiler, managing director of
Lexington, Massachusetts, angel group CommonAngels and co-founder
of the Angel Capital Association. Geshwiler says the growing
membership base makes the percentages less relevant.
"Some [angels] may be taking a little time to learn the
process, but that's a transitory issue--it's not market
driven," says Geshwiler. "I've seen nothing this year
except activity picking up. Our group is on a near-record pace for
the year."
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