VentureCrowd

VentureCrowd is an Australian multi asset class crowdfunding platform, headquartered in Sydney, including equity crowdfunding, property crowdfunding and debt-based crowdfunding. VentureCrowd completed the largest Australian equity crowdfunding raise, $4.2 million, for taxi-booking and payment software company Ingogo in May 2015.[1] This deal is ranked 8th on the List of highest funded equity crowdfunding projects. This deal is ranked 8th on the List of highest funded equity crowdfunding projects. In June 2016, VentureCrowd raised more than $900,000 for a Western Sydney residential project[2] - a 35-lot development in Riverstone East, in partnership with the property developer ClearState. In August 2016, a second project raised $1,700,000[3] for a 44-lot development project in Austral.

VentureCrowd
Private
Headquarters,
Websiteventurecrowd.com.au

History

VentureCrowd was founded in October 2013 in Sydney by Australian alternative investment management company Artesian.[4] VentureCrowd launched its first startup equity crowdfunding deals in October 2014.[5] and property crowdfunding deals in partnership with Mirvac in April 2015.[6][7]

Equity Crowdfunding in Australia

Currently Australia does not allow equity crowdfunding for the general public but only for wholesale (sophisticated) investors (whom are defined as investors holding net assets in the amount of $2.5M or achieve a gross income of $250,000 in the last 2 financial years).[8]

The Australian federal government's now dissolved Corporations and Markets Advisory Committee (CAMAC)[9] released its report on equity crowdfunding in May 2014.[10] The report proposed a regulatory regime specifically designed for and to facilitate crowd sourced equity funding (CSEF) in Australia.[11] The CAMAC report recommended Australia introduce legislation allowing retail investors to invest up to $10,000 a year in start-ups via equity crowdfunding, with a maximum of $2,500 in each company. It suggested companies be allowed to raise up to $2 million per year on such platforms.

In the 2015 Federal Budget, as part of its small business package, the government announced that it would make it easier for small businesses to access capital by allowing crowd-sourced equity funding and by simplifying related reporting and disclosure requirements.[12] Although details on the specific model have not yet been released, Treasury has set aside $7.8 million in funding over four years to enable the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) to implement and monitor the regulatory framework to facilitate the use of crowd-sourced equity funding when it is unveiled before the end of 2015.

gollark: That would just be a brain but stupider.
gollark: Apiaristic power generation is an entirely orthogonal idea though. I don't think you know how this works.
gollark: Internally we haven't seen the need since we just have one arbitrarily fast core.
gollark: Intel go to 28 * 8 and AMD to 128 * 2.
gollark: 364? Can you *get* 364 cores outside POWER and such?

See also

References


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