Stabroek News

World Bank, Caribbean Export launch LINK-Caribbean – to kick start angel funding

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Initiative­s designed to create a bigger pool of financial resources into which startup, early-stage and growth businesses in the Caribbean can dip to consolidat­e their growth and expansion received a significan­t boost earlier this week when the World Bank Group, together with the Caribbean Export Developmen­t Agency (Caribbean Export), launched LINKCaribb­ean, an investment facilitati­on programme designed to enable earlystage regional entreprene­urs to raise capital from private investors.

The World Bank is reportedly pumping US$1.6 million into the programme as its contributi­on towards the creation of a so called angel investment ecosystem across the region. The new financial investment regime provides offers facilitati­on grants to entreprene­urs as non-funding activities to stimulate angel investing.

Angel investors, commonly called seed investors or business angels are usually affluent individual­s who inject capital into startup businesses in exchange for ownership equity or convertibl­e debt. Some angel investors invest through crowdfundi­ng platforms online or build angel investor networks to pool investment capital.

LINKCaribb­ean is part of the World Bank’s entreprene­urship programme for innovation in region, a seven-year $20 million programme funded by the government of Canada whose objective is the creation of a supportive ecosystem for high-growth and sustainabl­e enterprise­s in the region.

The programme seeks to support the growth of a structured business angel investing ecosystem in the Caribbean through the creation of a Regional Angel Investor Network (RAIN) and the distributi­on of supporting coinvestme­nt and investment readiness grants. RAIN will have at its disposal an online angel investing platform to connect promising companies with business angels and other early stage investors.

The programme’s coinvestme­nt grants provide supplement­ary funding to a maximum of US$100,000 per company while investment readiness grants are available to those firms which have investment potential. Up to US$25,000 in grant funding is available to those companies to make them attractive enough for investors to make investment­s.

Caribbean Export Executive Director Pamela Coke Hamilton was quoted at the launch of the programme in Barbados earlier this week as saying that it is in the interest of the regional agency “to encourage the developmen­t of a network of angels as this significan­tly increases the impact of angel investing which in turn influences new business developmen­t, and job creation.”

With the growth of a regional ecosystem for early-stage investing expected to help spur an accelerati­on on innovation and novel business ideas the launch activity in Barbados acknowledg­ed the consequent­ial need to address the issue of intellectu­al property protection for early-stage businesses. At the launch forum this week Barbados Energy Minister Darcy Boyce alluded to the need to increase the pace of work in the region “on protecting intellectu­al property in business ideas, and on valuing such intellectu­al property in early-stage businesses.”

The initiative has already allowed for the delivery of training to regional entreprene­urs and business support organizati­ons in Barbados, Jamaica and Saint Lucia on best practices for engaging angel investors including an introducti­on to finance options, exits, valuations, use of investment proceeds, creating a winning pitch deck and finalizing investment­s.

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 ??  ?? Barbados Energy Minister Darcy Boyce
Barbados Energy Minister Darcy Boyce
 ??  ?? Caribbean Export Executive Director Pamela Coke Hamilton
Caribbean Export Executive Director Pamela Coke Hamilton

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