Many investors are wary of guidelines that stipulate investment thresholds, exit restrictions and experience criteria, among others. Most do feel the move would give a fillip to creation of angel fund pools, a positive for the nascent system of start-ups.
A general consensus is the move would help wealthy individuals to get more active in setting up angel funds.
However, the commercial viability and effectiveness of such funds would depend on how these rules are interpreted and implemented, say investors. Given the riders in the regulation, sector players are waiting for the rules to get notified before assessing the full impact of the move.
“It is a good start. It recognises the contribution of angel funds in creation of jobs at a time when the manufacturing and services sectors are optimising on personnel costs, and hiring less,” says serial entrepreneur K Ganesh, who has angel-funded many start-ups.
“However the guidelines need to be tweaked to make these more practical.” Sebi basically creates three categories of angel investors – individual, corporate and angel funds.
An individual angel investor must have a net worth of Rs 2 crore (Rs 20 million), along with 10 years of senior management or professional experience. The minimum net worth for corporates and angel funds has been pegged at Rs 10 crore (Rs 100 million) .
The minimum investment of an individual to an angel fund has to be Rs 25 lakh. Angel funds are permitted to invest only in unlisted companies which are not more than three years old, with a turnover not exceeding Rs 25 crore (Rs 250 million).
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