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Angel industry group established

1 July 2008

Angel investor groups have formed a new industry body - the Angel Association New Zealand - to advocate for and to promote best practice within the fast-growing investment sector.

The association’s members consist of 15 angel groups from around New Zealand. Andy Hamilton, CEO of business growth centre The ICEHOUSE, is the inaugural chairperson of the association’s council.

"Angel investing - individuals and groups investing in early stage businesses - is an emerging industry which has the potential to be a key asset class and a very influential player in commercialising New Zealand innovations," says Andy Hamilton.

"Overseas, we have seen national angel bodies formed once the sector reaches a critical mass. Establishing a national body in New Zealand is a sign of the recent growth of angel investing in our local market.

"The Angel Association New Zealand will set a national vision for the sector, and help to raise the capability and knowledge of angel groups, many of which are at relatively early stages in their maturity and mainly focused on their own issues and challenges."

Clyde Rogers, from Auckland regional economic development agency AucklandPlus and a member of the establishment board, says a key role for the Association will be to advocate for initiatives which will assist the sector’s growth and development.

"To date, in New Zealand, much of the growth in early stage investing and the formation of angel investor groups has been organic and informal, rather than market-led.

"As an investment class looking to attract more investors, it is important that newcomers to angel investing have confidence in the practices and methods which make this type of investing unique from others. The Association will develop ‘best practice’ models and training for business angels and entrepreneurs.

"It will also provide greater visibility and promotion of the sector, so that entrepreneurs with innovative ideas can more easily find potential investors."

Andy Hamilton says the United States is the most developed and advanced angel investment market, and may of the current trends there bode well for the sector’s development in New Zealand. In the US, for example:

  • The number of accredited investors who are entering the angel world is increasing each year by over ten percent.
  • There is an increase in the number of investors per deal with an average of four to five investors joining together to fund an entrepreneurial venture.
  • The number of angel groups has grown, as have the number of ventures receiving investment from angel groups.
  • Angel groups fund over thirty times as many entrepreneurial companies as the formal venture capital industry, investing three to five times more money in total.
  • Angels continue to be the largest source of seed and start-up capital, and there has been a dramatic increase in post-seed funding by angels.

"While angel investing in the US has been a feature of its economy for a considerable period, it is the significant formalisation of the asset class over the last ten years - and the subsequent significant growth - which is most striking.

"The trends occurring in the US are also occurring in Europe and the Asia-Pacific, which are more advanced than New Zealand in terms of the maturity of their angel sectors, and in having established national angel associations.

"The establishment of a national body will provide fresh impetus to the growth of angel investing in New Zealand," Andy Hamilton said.

Contact:
Andy Hamilton
Cell 0274 960101
a.hamilton@theicehouse.co.nz




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