Is It As Risky As It Seems? a Short Note on How Tax Policy Impacts Informal Venture Capital Investing (Manuscripts)
Academy of Entrepreneurship Journal 2006, Jan, 12, 1
-
- $5.99
-
- $5.99
Publisher Description
ABSTRACT The purpose of this study is to answer the question, "are informal venture capital investors rational?" If angel investing is rational, then it should have a competitive rate of return (adjusted for risk, liquidity, and investment efforts) compared to more passive market-based investments such as index fund investing. If these adjusted rates of return are not competitive and do not compensate for the additional costs of informal venture investing, then the nonfinancial motives must be the most important criteria driving informal venture capital investments. The following analysis illustrates how tax policy can be used to make seemingly economically irrational informal venture investments an economically rational decision.
The Access to Capital for Entrepreneurs Act of 2007: an Extension of the Impact of Tax Policy on Informal Venture Investing.
2009
Why Do Venture Capital Funds Burn Research and Development Deductions?
2009
Angels and Capitalists
2013
Business Angels: The Smartest Money for Starters? Plea for a Renewed Policy Focus on Business Angels.
2005
Private Equity and Venture Capital in Europe
2021
Who Wins the Variable Annuity Versus Mutual Fund Battle?
2010
The Big-Five Personality Model: Comparing Male and Female Entrepreneurs.
2003
Organizational Attributes of Nonprofit Intrapreneurship: An Empirical Study (Manuscripts)
2005
Ethics in Small Business: Attitudes and Perceptions of Owners/Managers.
2003
Organizational Environment for Nonprofit Entrepreneurship Development (Manuscripts)
2005
An Investigation of Sociological Influences on the Relationships Between Psychological Traits and Entrepreneurial Orientation of Used Car Entrepreneurs (Manuscripts)
2005
An Investigation of the Psychodynamics Associated with Ethnic Entrepreneurship.
1995