ARC Announces Support for Creation of Five New Angel Investment Funds in the Appalachian RegionSeptember 2012 |
WASHINGTON, September 27, 2012—Five applicants have been selected by the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) to receive funding and technical assistance to create new angel investment funds that will invest in small businesses in the Appalachian Region.
ARC is providing $235,000 in grants to stimulate capital formation by the selected applicants, which, along with the technical assistance underwritten by ARC, is projected to result in $5 million in new angel fund capital available for business investment.
The selected applicants were formally announced by ARC Federal Co-Chair Earl F. Gohl at the Ohio State University South Centers, in Piketon, Ohio, on September 27. "This is an opportunity for folks who have 'made it' to capitalize on the opportunity to invest in their own communities, in their own region, to ultimately help their own children and grandchildren as well as others," said Gohl.
The selected applicants include:
In welcoming the grant to Queen City Angels, chairman and founder Tony Shipley said, "Beyond the initial three F's—friends, family, and founders—this group can help fill the next level of investment needed to really help get great businesses going."
ARC has determined that access to capital and credit is one of the major factors limiting business creation, expansion, and growth in the Appalachian Region. This has been an historic problem in the Region relative to many other parts of the country.
Angel funds represent one antidote to this problem. Angel investors are an important source of capital for growing firms: The Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire estimates that in 2011, U.S. angel investors provided $22.5 billion to more than 66,000 ventures. Many of the investments were in start-up or very-early-stage companies. The number of active investors in 2011 was estimated to be 318,480 individuals. Many more people could become angel investors; the potential number of "angels" is 4 million, based on a net worth of $1 million or more.
Between 10,000 and 15,000 angels are believed to belong to angel groups in the United States. The average angel group has 42 investor members and invested a total of $1.9 million in seven deals in 2007. According to the Angel Capital Association and the National Association of Seed and Venture Funds, the Appalachian Region has 15 angel funds, leaving significant areas underserved by this important source of capital.
The funding and assistance announced by ARC on September 27 represent an important step in addressing the needs of these underserved areas. These activities are part of ARC's Appalachian Capital Policy Initiative, which has four objectives: