Business angels and love money investors: segments of the informal market for risk capital
This empirical study reports that returns on informal investments made by business angels are significantly higher than those made by non-angels. However, rates of return on informal investments made by friends and family members of business founders are, on average, dismal. This finding reinforces warnings that it may be counterproductive for public policy to encourage ‘amateur’ informal investors, yet stimulation of value-adding business angel investment seems well advised. The relative sizes, in terms of the annual flow of investment funds, in the main segments comprising the informal market were estimated. Love money accounts for more than three times as much annual investment as business angels, who in turn invest more than twice as much annually -- and in many more firms -- as institutional venture capitalists.
Year of publication: |
2008
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Authors: | Riding, Allan L. |
Published in: |
Venture Capital. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 1369-1066. - Vol. 10.2008, 4, p. 355-369
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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