National Post

New fund to accept cryptocurr­encies as payment

Offers means for investors to diversify

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE gzochodne@nationalpo­st.com Twitter: GeoffZocho­dne

A new fund launched Thursday is offering to accept digital currencies such as bitcoin and translate them into investment­s in pre- IPO companies.

Vancouver- based InvestX Master GP1, a wholly owned subsidiary of InvestX Capital, said in a release that its “first- of- its kind” global growth equity fund will provide access to investment­s in “late-stage” private companies to investors who are holding on to cryptocurr­encies. The fund will accept traditiona­l currency as well.

The fund is being l aunched amid a major drop in the price of bitcoin, fuelled in part by regulatory rumblings in China and South Korea.

Marcus New, chief execu- tive officer and founder of InvestX, said the fund offered a means for investors to diversify away from cryptocurr­encies, likening the current situation to the dot-com era.

“And we all know the tragedy that happened for everyone that had all their money in dot-coms, and how little of it they kept,” New said. “What we’re saying is that cryptocurr­ency investors need to take at least 20 per cent of their profits and diversify it.”

InvestX’s four- year fund will be open to accredited investors in Canada, the United States and abroad. Investors can buy in with the cryptocurr­ency of their choice, New said, and be paid back in a digital coin, if they so desire.

InvestX says the criteria for its typical investment­s in private companies is that they have a minimum $1-billion valuation, an average growth rate of at least 40 per cent, and proof of a possible liquidity event, such as an IPO, coming up in a year to three years.

There aren’ t many of those, New noted, saying that the fund will offer investors an opportunit­y to invest in around 12 to 16 of those companies, of which he estimated there are likely less than 50.

“You can’t find a billiondol­lar company growing at 40 per cent in the public markets ... there aren’t any,” New said, adding that a biotech company may do so once in a while for a few years.

Investors will be able to transfer their cryptocurr­encies directly from their digital “wallet” to that of InvestX, the firm said, “with crypto converted to fiat at the spot rate using i nstitution­al crypto FX pricing.” The digital wallet informatio­n is encrypted and kept on a “secure offline database.”

New said his firm has found a “sweetspot” by buying “odd lots” of companies in the private markets. Those blocks can offer a discount in price, he said, because large institutio­nal investors won’t bother with lots worth less than $25 million apiece, eliminatin­g competitio­n for them.

“People that were insightful should benefit for that for the rest of their lives,” New said. “They shouldn’t lose it all if there’s a big correction.”

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE / BLOOMBERG ?? Investors can transfer their cryptocurr­encies from their digital “wallet” to that of InvestX, the firm says.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE / BLOOMBERG Investors can transfer their cryptocurr­encies from their digital “wallet” to that of InvestX, the firm says.

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