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First equity crowdfunding deal in Australia for 2016 raises more than $675,000

A global student support platform started in Sydney has raised more than $675,000 through VentureCrowd in the first equity crowdfunding deal in Australia for 2016. It comes at the start of a year which will see equity crowdfunding reforms scrutinised and a parliamentary inquest return its findings. Zookal, founded in Sydney and now based in […]
Denham Sadler
Denham Sadler
growth

A global student support platform started in Sydney has raised more than $675,000 through VentureCrowd in the first equity crowdfunding deal in Australia for 2016.

It comes at the start of a year which will see equity crowdfunding reforms scrutinised and a parliamentary inquest return its findings.

Zookal, founded in Sydney and now based in Singapore, has raised well over its $500,000 goal on the crowdfunding platform. The startup provides a platform offering a range of services and products for university students.

With three days still remaining, it has raised $675,000 from 15 wholesale investors, valuing the company at $US20 million.

VentureCrowdโ€™s Luke Fay says this demonstrates a strong appetite within Australia for this form of fund raising.

โ€œIt shows the interest in these quality deals,โ€ Fay tells StartupSmart.

โ€œFor the right transaction the appetite is high. People want to see companies with big growth potential and a good potential exit story. If youโ€™ve got those the deals tend to grow.โ€

Reform on the agenda

In Australia equity crowdfunding is currently restricted to โ€˜sophisticatedโ€™ investors with net assets of $2.5 million or aggregated gross income for each of the last two years of at least $250,000.

The federal government revealed its legislation to loosen these restrictions at the end of last year, placing a cap of $5 million on companies using the avenue and a $10,000 cap on the amount a retail investor can pledge.

But the reforms were labelled as โ€œabsolute nonsenseโ€ and a โ€œdead duckโ€ because they restricted equity crowdfunding to public companies.

Despite having bipartisan support for most of 2015, Labor then withdrew its support for the bill and called for a parliamentary inquest, saying the startup community had been dealt a โ€œgreat disserviceโ€ by it.

Fay says that although he hopes the government will further consult with those impacted by the reforms, successful campaigns wonโ€™t stop in the meantime.

โ€œWeโ€™ll wait on the proposed government regulations to be passed โ€“ whilst that will hopefully open things up it doesnโ€™t stop quality deals from happening,โ€ he says.

โ€œI hope that at some stage the legislators actually talk to the practitioners, the people actually doing the trades, and get their opinions.โ€

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