08 Mar 2008 12:28:06 | William Cate
Raising Money for Your Company By William Cate September 2004
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/]
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinves
tmentclubwelcome/]
It's never been easy to find risk capital for any business
venture. Even during the heyday of the DotCom frenzy, only one
business plan in two thousand five hundred was funded by venture
capitalists. "Angel" investors funded about one business plan in
three hundred. Wealthy private investors are called "Angel"
investors. Some of these Angel investors are members of Venture
Capital Clubs. Often, the road to their money has been giving a
presentation of your business plan at the local Venture Capital
Club's monthly meeting.
When the DotCom Bubble burst, a few venture capital firms
disappeared. Many Angel Investors became extinct. At least
fifteen percent of the Venture Capital Clubs no longer exist.
There are no longer any National Associations of Venture Capital
Clubs. Your chances of finding risk capital from a venture
capital firm are less than one in ten thousand. Your chances of
raising money from Angels are less than one in one thousand.
If you're spending time and money to raise money for your
private business, you're betting on a long shot. The odds are
overwhelmingly against you. To even those odds, you must offer
potential investors a better risk/reward ratio. The emphasis
should be on lower risk of financial loss and not greater reward.
The simplest way to reduce risk and leverage reward is to take
your company public. The investors can sell their shares and
recover their risk capital. In most public companies the share
price outperforms the company's balance sheet. Thus, your
investors will earn more from the sale of their shares in your
public company than they would make from the sale of their
equity in your private company. And, there are far more stock
buyers than buyers of equity in private companies.
Costs are one prohibitive factor in taking any company public.
If your plan is to do an Initial Public Offering (IPO), your SEC
registration costs will average about $1.5 million. Your odds of
getting a "No Action" letter from the SEC are about even. It
will take over a year to complete the registration process. The
underwriter must be paid and usually gets at least eighteen
percent of the money raised.
You can buy a public shell trading on the Over-the-Counter
Bulletin Board (OTCBB). Assuming you get at least ninety percent
control of the issued shares, the cost will be about $1.5
million. NEUP (Net 1 Ueps Technologies Inc.) was a trading OTCBB
shell. It recently sold for $52 million and to my knowledge has
been the highest priced shell sale on record. Shells aren't
cheap.
You can do a reverse merger with an existing OTCBB shell. The
cash costs are usually less than $200,000. However, the shell
insiders retain their shares in your company. They will sell
their shares into any effort you make to try to create a strong
and sustainable share price. In the end, your investor relations
costs of a reverse merger shell are a multiple of your costs of
simply buying the shell. If you decide upon a shell solution,
buy the shell. Never do a reverse merger.
Beowulf Investments
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] offers a
program that will take your company public for about fifty
thousand dollars. It takes a few months and not a year to
complete the process. Unfortunately, this merchant bank limits
its services to operating, non-U.S. companies seeking to become
multinational corporations. They require that the public company
use its shares to buy cash-producing assets in the tradition of
Cisco Systems. They require that the insiders pool and vault
their shares for years. It's anything but a get-rich-quick
scheme, but it does offer Private Placement financing for its
clients.
If you don't do an IPO, you must raise money through a Private
Placement. This means that you must find a venture capital firm,
angel investors or a merchant bank willing to risk money in your
public company. While being public makes this process easier and
surer than seeking funds for a private company, you have less
than an even chance of securing a Private Placement for your
public company.
If you are seeking risk capital for a startup company or simply
don't like the regulatory risks involved in being a public
company, you need to write a business plan that limits investor
risk. If you are a group of Angel investors and don't want to
lose all of your risk capital in a failed venture, you need to
require some insurance against business failure. I can help you
develop a limited risk, startup speculative investment insurance
plan.
Go public, if possible. If impossible, offer insurance against
total business failure. In either case, you are more likely to
find investors, if you are an entrepreneur. And, if you are an
investor, you are less likely to lose all of your risk capital.
To contact the author: Visit the Beowulf Investments website:
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] Or, visit the
Global Village Investment Club Website:
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinves
tmentclubwelcome/]
About Author :
He has been the Managing Director of Beowulf Investments
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/] since 1981 and
is the Executive Director of the Global Village Investment Club
[http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/globalvillageinves
tmentclubwelcome/]