Edvin Pauza No Comments

Seedrs Venture Fund

I made my first investment on Seedrs in February 2019, it was WeGaw a mobile app startup using Satellite data from the European Space Agency, based in Lausanne, Switzerland.

My next investment was the Seedrs EIS 100 fund, to those that follow me on social media, I started referring to it as Seedrs Venture Fund. EIS 100, which stands for Enterprise Investment Scheme, set out to disperse the total investment over a 100 companies fundraising on Seedrs that qualify for the EIS.  The main benefits of EIS is that you can claim back 30% from the investment upon the completion of you self-assessment tax submission.

With more than a year passed since my first investment and with Coronavirus in full swing not just in the UK but the rest of the world, the question I ask how is my Seedrs Venture Fund performing?

The Seedrs investment porftolio dashboard indicates that 100% of all my investments, which currently stand at 92 companies are currently active, none of them have IPO-ed, were sold or acquired, but most importantly did not go bankrupt.

Currently there are three companies fundraising again; which are:

Crua Outdoors

Crua Outdoors based in Tralee, Ireland who did manage to qualify for EIS, even as a foreign company. They specialise in outdoor, camping tents, who have raised £70,005 for 8.8% as early as 2015, with shares priced in at the time at £2.60, but my round came in 2019 August, the value per share was already at £14.51, and with the current fundraiser overfunding by 187%, this means that the initial investors back in 2015 have seen their shares rise over 458%. The company’s valuation has increased from £720,200 to £5.99 million but already nearly 41% in equity has been sold and another 5% up for grabs.

Smarterly

Smarterly is an online service which aims to help people save and invest directly from their payroll, by integrating with employers is also currently fundraising. However, their pitch is not available on Seedrs, they are either preparing their new pitch or fundraising privately or off Seedrs platform. This would be their third fundraiser, the first happened in 2018, £1,625,570 raised for 13.15% equity valued at £10,735,000 with the price per share at £10. While my turn came again with the EIS fund on the second round, which meant an increase in price per share of 23% priced at £12.30, with £2,572,422 raised for another 13.3% in equity valued at £16,723,855, with 762 investors participating.

Goodbox

The last of my investments which is again currently fundraising is Goodbox, a contactless payments provider for charities and NGOs to collect money on the high-street from passers by. Again I only participated in the second round, the first one took place in 2018, raised £2,641,925 for 24.9% of equity, valued at £7,968,277 from 687 investors, with share price at £18.21. While my turn took in 2020, the price per share increased to £28.53 by 56.7%, the company raised £1,272,894, from 747 investors, only for 6.34% of equity this time, valuing the company at £18,797,675.

The reason I have focused on these three companies in such a detail, is because startups go bust most often then failing to raise money to keep going, and they are raising money because most often they are running out of cash to keep going. We could further find out about their financial well being by looking at the company house account submissions, that this blog is only meant to be an update for my overall Seedrs Venture Fund.

What were my top five investments by company?

I am not going to disclose how much I have invested in Seedrs, at least for now. Further, I would like to add that I have a strong view and investment philosophy about having a balanced and responsible approach to investing and having a diversified portfolio of companies. However, my top companies are as follows:

Hectare

Hectare, an online market place for agricultural businesses and farming commodities, e.g. crops and livestock trading. I participated in the round with price per share set at £5 in late 2019, raising the total of £1,317,975, for 7.6% with the valuation of £16,005,500. While the first round took place in 2016, raising £150,000 for 15% equity, which meant you could own 1% of the company for £10,000, which three years later would have now been worth £50,000, with the price per share increasing from £1 to £5, over six fundraising rounds which gave up over 50% of the total equity.

The House Crowd

The House Crowd, a P2P investment platform in property. Raised £746,011 in their first round on Seedrs, offered 2.5% of the equity, with £28,920,388 valuation, share price at £6.86 from 469 investors.

CreditSpring

CreditSpring, a monthly subscription based service that provides 0% interest loans. Raised £1,566,032 for 13.8% from 303 investors, valuing the company at £9,780,000, with share price at £9.78 which I participated in. This company had a second fundraiser again in March 2020, but in a private Seedrs fundraiser, as another £1,020,925 was raised from only 34 investors, and for only 7.28% equity, share price at £11.20, valuing the company for £12,993,792. This investment has almost instantly put me in the green, with £1.42 profit per share, or 14.5% increase.

Brickowner

Brickowner, a P2P investment platform in property for a medium to long-term. Raised £267,572 for 2.74%, share price £5.77, valuing the company at  £9,504,690. However, this was their 7th fundraiser on Seers, with the first one taking place in early 2016, raising £102,055 for 14.3% equity, valuation of £607,000 from 92 investors, and share price at £0.61, which has given the first investors an over 850% increase in share price over four years. The Brickowner has sold nearly 39% of its equity in the seven different fundraisers over the four years.

It is also interesting to compare the the valuation of Brickowner and The House Crowd and to see which why two such similar online businesses, P2P property investment platforms, are valuing share prices differently, and if there is an arbitrage for the same type of business.

Yielders

Yielders, a P2P investment platform in property that yields rent payments until the property is sold and investments are returned to investors after a set of years. Raised £669,861 in late 2019, for 6.28% equity in the business from 479 investors, with the total valuation of £10,004,118, share priced at £7.89, which was their first round.

What is my Seedrs Venture Fund allocation according to sectors?

As we can see above from my investments, there is a heavy focus on finance and property, especially combined with technology, or what could be summed as Peer-to-Peer platforms, P2P for short. The main reason is my investment philosophy that the future is decentralized, a bit like Seedrs, venture funding democratised to allow people to invest in property backed loans who might not had ability to do so before the convergence of finance, property and online technology. Therefore, from the following Seedrs shareholding by sector we can see my total investments over 92 companies are spread as follows:

  1. 27% Property – part of this would include such companies as Brickowner and Yielders. I have also made investments in nHouse,
  2. 24% Finance & Payments – CreditSpring is the best example but also GoodBox would be included in this sector.
  3. 12.6% Saas/Paas (Software as a Service) – We Build Bots, Paperclip and already mentioned WeGaw.
  4. 11.9% Food & Beverage – Skinny Tonic, Drinkly, TheVeganKind, Quinola Mothergrain, Coconuts Organic, DryGro and The British Snack Co.
  5. 10% Energy – invested in companies such as Ripple, DeciWatt and Zeigo Energy.

Seedrs Venture Fund allocation according to countries

I am not going to list the countries here, as 95.7% investments were in companies based in the UK, this is mostly to do with the EIS100 fund, as it’s much easier for the UK based companies to quality for the Enterprise Investment Scheme, while many European companies who could quality for EIS, further information here, do not know or are not prepared to pay for the UK lawyer feeds and other admin costs.

As mentioned the WeGaw was the Swiss company, Crua Outdoors was the only odd one out to be based in Ireland and qualify for the EIS tax relief, as well not being part of the top five sectors. While the other company based in Spain, was The EU Startups publisher, this was made partially due to my interest in the publishing business, I am an owner of The EU Bubble online magazine. Plus Seedrs founder himself made an investment in the EU Startups, of £10,000, who have raised €73,001 for 5.58% from 81 investors, valued at €1,235,000 with €12.35 price per share. Shame about the startup conference in Barcelona that never happened due to COVID-19.

So how is my Seedrs Venture Fund looking after a year?

Well Seedrs portfolio overview is giving me the following:

IRR (Internal Rate of Return shows the annualised performance of your investments net of any fees (taking into account the impact of any shares bought or sold on the Seedrs Secondary Market as well as any other distributions received). Is currently at 0.08% – therefore not much of a gain after a year.

IRR (tax adjusted –  This is the IRR, as adjusted to take account of S/EIS tax reliefs.) aka this is the 30% return on the Enterprise Investment Scheme qualifying startups, is up by 18% once they are accounted and submitted in the self-assessment tax submission, and that is not difficult to do.

Jeff Mwaura No Comments

How To Invest In Property With Brickowner

Founded in January 2017, Brickowner is a newcomer in the UK property crowdfunding market. As an aggregator, Brickowner can combine several investors investing smaller amounts, and pool a substantial amount to invest with an institutional asset manager. In simple terms, Brickowner gathers money from different investors and collaborating with established UK property asset managers, they use the funds to buy the physical property.

How Does Brickowner Work?

For every property Brickowner advertises on its website, there’s a set amount to raise which includes the acquisition cost and any other associated costs such as stamp duty and surveyors fees. After researching each property, the forecasted financials including rental yields estimates and projected returns for the 2 to 3 years it holds the property are given. This will allow you to gauge different properties against each other.

The beauty of crowdfunding is you can buy property without any bank help. Brickowner takes care of your investment once the property is fully funded. The company buys shares in the investment via a property manager and takes care of any investment maintenance including legal paperwork.

If you wish to exit the investment after the minimum period lapses, Brickowner will do it on your behalf. This function is ideal for investors with little understanding of property management. Another good thing about Brickowner is that you can sell your stake in a property before the investment period lapses.

Brickowner Fees

Brickowner charges two fees:

  • 3% Fundraising Fee – Fundraising fee is a one-off fee at the point of investment. It covers the use of Brickowner technology. The fee applies to investors buying newly listed properties as well as those that buy shares on the secondary market.
  • 1% annual management fee – This a monthly fee paid from the SPV.

Is it Safe to Invest in Brickowner?

In general, no crowdfunding investment is 100% safe. In Brickowner’s case, they give investors peace of mind by ring-fencing investments for added protection. The Financial Conduct Authority also regulates Brickowner.

By using Single Purpose Vehicle for each property purchase, you cannot lose your investment in case Brickowner goes bankrupt for whatever reason. This is because your investment is in the actual physical property and is separate from the website or other properties Brickowner has bought.

There’s further protection incase Brickowner were to go bust after raising funds but have not yet purchased a property. This is because investors’ money doesn’t go to Brickowner’s bank account but to a solicitor’s ‘ring-fenced’ account.

Pros

One of the main advantages of investing in Brickowner is that small investors get the opportunity to invest in big building projects with forecasted higher returns. Other benefits include:

  • Investments can start with as little as £100
  • Investments are ring-fenced in a separate UK limited company
  • The platform is easy to use for beginners
  • No exit fees when investment term ends
  • No rising interest rates associated with banks or building societies

Cons

  • Your cash is locked in a fixed term and no opportunity to resell your shares
  • Whether an investment is profitable or not, you have to pay the fees.

As the positives far outweigh the negatives, Brickowner seems like a decent platform to invest in. They offer a great option to diversify your investments once you join the bandwagon of property investors.