Crowdfunding's Time Still Hasn't Come, at Least Not for Equity Investments

If you’re hoping to raise capital for your business by selling small stakes to investors over the Internet, you better be patient — there’s no telling when this form of crowdfunding will become a reality.

Congress legalized the use of crowdfunding for equity investments a year ago, when it passed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act. But the Securities and Exchange Commission still has not issued the regulations needed to implement the law.

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New Studies Show 81% Jump in Crowdfunding

(c) Crestock.com under license.

(c) Crestock.com under license.

April 8, 2013 – New studies show that funds raised through crowdfunding jumped 81% from 2011 to 2012, and that the equity and debt based crowdfunding could be a $3.98 Billion market per year.

Today, massolution, a research firm specializing in the crowdsourcing and crowdfunding industires, released its annual Crowdfunding Industry Report, finding that crowdfunding platforms raised $2.7 Billion worldwide for more than one million campaigns. These numbers show an 81% jump in funds raised through crowdfunding from 2011 to 2012.

The report discloses that North America and Europe accounted for over 95% of the total crowdfunding market. “Consistent with our 2012 forecast, total crowdfunding volume nearly doubled last year, and with regulatory bodies continuing to pave the way, we expect global crowdfunding volumes to exceed $5 billion in 2013,” said CEO of massolution, Carl Esposti. The study estimates that total global corwdfunding may reach $5.1 Billion in 2013.

Although crowdfunding offers a growing number of countries opportunities to access funds, North America and Europe raised much more capital than platforms in other regions.

  • North America: crowdfunding volumes grew 105% to $1.6 billion

  • Europe: crowdfunding volumes grew 65% to $945 million

  • In total, all other markets grew close to 125%

On April 2, 2013, the University of California, Berkeley’s Fung Institute for Engineering Leadership released a study estimating the size of the equity and debt based crowdfunding market to hit $3.98 Billion per year. The Program for Innovation in Entrepreneurial and Social Finance, part of the Fung Institute, co-authored the study.

“While estimating the size of the future and currently non-existent market is a hazardous endeavor at best, we have presented a set of data, assumptions, and estimations that may prove useful,” said Lee Fleming, Faculty Director of the Fung Institute and a contributing author of the study. “From the lenses of Angels, VCs and Small business lending we believe a market as large as $3.98B per year could rapidly evolve.”

President Obama signed into law on April 5, 2012 the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, which will enable small businesses to raise up to $ 1 Million per year from small investors through crowdfunding. The Securities and Exchange Commission is expected to release for public review regulations to govern crowdfund investing by the end of 2013.

The JOBS Act One Year Later: Where Equity Crowdfunding Stands

April 5 marks the one year anniversary of the JOBS Act being signed into law by President Obama. The JOBS Act legalized equity-based crowdfunding in the U.S., which would allow ordinary Americans to invest in newly forming and established small businesses they believe in, while realizing a return on their contribution. The law gave the SEC a firm deadline for releasing its rules governing this new asset class — yet one year later, the agency has yet to release them. When the president signed the legislation into law, he said, “The last few years have been pretty tough on entrepreneurs… for business owners who want to take their companies to the next level, this bill will make it easier for you to go public, and that’s a big deal.” Yet for the entrepreneurs and business owners who desperately need capital — and a break — equity crowdfunding is not yet a reality.

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New Crowdfund Investing Book Prepares Start-ups

9781118449691.pdfApril 5, 2013 – Although regulations permitting equity crowdfunding are months away, now is the time for investors and start-ups to prepare for equity crowdfunding, according to Sherwood Neiss, co-author of the new book  “Crowdfund Investing for Dummies. ”  “I think the book’s timing is perfect,” said  Neiss said. “This gives entrepreneurs ample time to read and prepare.”  John Wiley & Sons released the new paperback on March 15, 2013 as part of its popular “Dummies” series.

Exactly one year ago, President Obama signed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act (JOBS Act) into law. The act paves the way for small businesses to raise up to $ 1 Million per year from small investors through online crowdfunding portals.   Under the Act, the Securities and Exchange Commission must formulate rules to regulate crowdfund investing. The SEC is expected to propose rules for public comment later this year.  The crowdfund investing market could reach $3.8 Billion per year, according to a study by UC Berkeley’s Fung Institute for Engineering Leadership.

Neiss, along with co-authors Jason W. Best and Zak Cassady-Dorion are founders of of Startup Exemption (developers of the crowdfund investing framework used in the 2012 Jobs Act) and startupexemption.com.  Neiss explained that the primary goal of the book is to educate investors or entrepreneurs about the “newest big thing on Wall Street.”  The book walks investors and entrepreneurs through the new crowdfund investing experience.

“For entrepreneurs it explains everything one needs to know about crowdfund investing including how to present a solid business plan, define your financial needs, and prepare for a crowdfund investing campaign,” Neiss pointed out.  The book’s pointers include how to market a pitch, tap into social networks, prepare for potential problems related to a campaign, and successfully complete a crowdfund investing campaign and how to manage the crowd after a campaign is successful. For investors, the book provides guidance on the risks and rewards of crowdfunding, how to review offerings through “crowd diligence” and the role investors play in preventing fraud.

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Jason Best, Zak Cassady-Dorion and Sherwood Neiss, co-authors of Crowdfund Investing for Dummies.

“I believe that it is equally weighed between what entrepreneurs need to know to get started and investors need to know about investing in this new asset class,” Neiss said.  “I think the biggest selling point is, this is written by entrepreneurs who have raised over $80 Million in the private capital markets and hence understand things from the point of view of the entrepreneur, investor and regulator.  We also wrote the framework so are intimately close to the way it which it can operate.”

Although regulations for crowdfund equity are months away, Neiss said the timing of the book is perfect.  “If it were to come out after the rule then people would be rushing to catch up,” Neiss said.  “This gives them ample time to read and prepare.  Prepare is the most important thing and it won’t happen overnight.  The book explains just all the work that needs to be done so getting it now will allow entrepreneurs to have the time they need to put the best fundable pitch together.”

The book is available through online resources such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble.  Book cover courtesy of John Wiley & Sons.

Article By A. Brian Dengler, CfPA.org blog editor.

White Promises Priority for JOBS Act

Washington, DC – Mary Jo White, President Obama’s nominee to chair the Securities and Exchange Commission, promised the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee to meet the mandate for rules under the JOBS Act. The SEC missed a deadline last December 2012 to formulate rules that would regulate rules to implement equity crowdfunding under the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act.

President Obama nominates Mary Jo White to SEC. White House video.

President Obama nominates Mary Jo White to SEC. White House video.

The New York Times reported that the Senate Committee cleared Ms. White’s appointment 21 to 1 on March 19, 2012. “First, I would work with the staff and my fellow Commissioners to finish, in as timely and smart a way as possible, the rulemaking mandates contained in theDodd-Frank Act and JOBS Act,” Ms. White testified before the committee. “The SEC needs to get the rules right, but it also needs to get them done. To complete these legislative mandates expeditiously must be an immediate imperative for the SEC.”

“If confirmed, I will vigorously embrace and carry out the SEC’s mission to protect investors, maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitate capital formation,” Ms. White added. “The SEC’s mission has a tri-partite mandate, but the component parts should not be viewed as in conflict with each other.”

“This is a critical time in the SEC’s history, as it works on a range of rules and policy issues,” Senator Tim Johnson (D-SD) said at Ms. White’s confirmation hearing. “These include the Volcker Rule, derivatives, credit rating agencies, hedge funds, standards for broker-dealers and investment advisers, corporate disclosures, market structure, the JOBS Act and money market funds, to name just a few. “

Article by A. Brian Dengler

 

Crowdfunding Professional Association Hosts Key Industry Event

Expert insights unlock new markets through finance, technology and social media

NEW YORK (March 20, 2013) – The Crowdfunding Professional Association (CfPA) will host its 2nd Annual Crowdfund Investing Innovation Forum on August 8-9, 2013 in Orlando, FL.  The forum has established itself as the must-attend conference for leaders, entrepreneurs, investors and policy makers who are committed to fostering capital formation and job creation. Presented by top crowdfunding pioneers, expert financial services professionals, and innovative services providers, current issues will be addressed through intimate discussions and breakout sessions.

The CfPA is the industry’s pioneering, nonprofit trade organization established by the thought leaders who founded the crowdfund investing movement in the United States, those who wrote the framework for President Obama’s Jumpstart Our Business Startup Act (JOBS Act) and the dedicated individuals who lobbied for its passage, which was signed into law on April 5th, 2012.

The Forum, sponsored by CrowdClear and Ellenoff Grossman & Schole LLP, will address key topics through a unique and interactive format, including crowd investing and Wall Street, the legal and regulatory environment and the crowdfunding ecosystem and innovative technologies. Luan Cox, CfPA Governing Board Member and Founder of Crowdnetic, states, “Our vision is simple, yet ambitious—we want to educate the crowd on how to raise capital, spurring job growth for startup and emerging companies. We are committed to redefining success for businesses and the economy through a dynamic crowdfunding community that flourishes globally.”

CfPA’s 2nd Annual Crowdfund Investing Innovation Forum will spark change, challenge and debate conventional thinking and unleash new perspectives in the pursuit of real solutions. A full list of presenters can be seen at http://events.cfpa.org/.

Location:            

Caribe Royale Orlando

Orlando, Florida

Date:                          

August 8 – 9, 2013

Price:               

$395 – Early Bird Special for the first 200 attendees

$489 – Post Early Bird

About the Crowdfunding Professional Association

The Crowdfunding Professional Association (CfPA) is dedicated to facilitating a vibrant, credible and growing Crowdfunding community while advocating for an industry view versus a single company perspective. Uniting a broad-based coalition of industry participants, the association is committed to ensuring the credible development of the industry, including a commitment to the highest ethical standards. To learn more visit www.cfpa.org.

# # #

Attention Media:

To Schedule on-site or phone interviews with forum presenters, contact:

Doreen Clark

(763) 458-9923 or DoreenClarkPR@hotmail.com

Introduction to Crowdfunding for Entrepreneurs

SBA’s Office of Entrepreneurship Education provides this self-paced training exercise as an overview of crowdfunding (also commonly referred to as ‘crowd financing’ or ‘crowd sourced capital’). The highlighted next steps at the conclusion of the program will help you apply what you have learned and engage you in the process of crowdfunding.

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While Waiting for SEC Regulations, Crowdfunding Leaders Focus on Investor Education

Some crowdfunding industry leaders are using the lull before the fundraising practice is publicly viable to develop educational material for people who may soon be making their first investments.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is currently drafting rules to allow start-ups to sell stakes in their companies to the general public, potentially raising large sums from crowds of small investors.

Until now, selling equity stakes has been limited to so-called accredited investors, people who presumably have the wherewithal and sophistication to know what they are getting into.

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Higher Ed: Crowdfunding Group Launches Global Education Network

In an industry that seems to be growing and changing by the hour—thanks, in part, to the 2012 JOBS (Jumpstart Our Business Startups) Act—a new associations is moving quickly to help crowdfunding professionals, industry partners, investors, and the general public make sense of it all.

The Crowdfunding Professional Association announced that it is rolling out a Global Crowdfunding Education Network that will provide online resources including breaking news alerts, legislative updates, and crowdfunding classes to professionals in the industry and others interested in learning more about it.

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Crowdfunding is About Creating Jobs for the Right People

Jason BestCrowdfunding is not just about creating jobs, it is about creating jobs for the right people. In April of 2012, President Obama signed the JOBS Act into law, authorizing crowdfunding of equity and debt for the sake of creating jobs. The more time I spend studying crowdfunding and working with the leaders in the crowdfund community, the clearer it becomes that not only will crowdfunding create jobs, it will create jobs in the right places.

Recently, I sat down in a hidden valley near Park City, Utah with Candace Klein, CEO of Somolend and founder of the nonprofit Bad Girl Ventures, who explained that overwhelmingly, the people were polled about crowdfunding indicating a desire to raise capital are women, African Americans and Hispanic Americans. In other words, crowdfunded capital will flow to entrepreneurs in the communities that have been most disadvantaged in America.

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