China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Not ready yet

Crowdfundi­ng platforms may be all the rage in the West but Hong Kong has yet to offffer an attractive playing fifield for local hopefuls. Luo Weiteng reports.

- Contact the writer at sophia@chinadaily­hk.com

Crowdfundi­ng platforms may be all the rage in the West but Hong Kong has yet to offer local hopefuls an attractive option.

The big picture is that it is hard for local (crowdfundi­ng) sites to work, even if they are on the same transparen­cy level as, or even better than, their foreign counterpar­ts.”

Kyle Lam Ching-hao, CEO, Big Bloom Investment

There is certainly strength in numbers. As the newest growth driver in the global crowdfundi­ng industry, equity crowdfundi­ng volume ballooned to $1.1 billion last year — an eye-popping 182 percent jump from 2013 and marking a banner year of growth.

But despite the hype, the past few years have seen Hong Kong newcomers struggle to fit into the global equity crowdfundi­ng scene — which embodies a new way for startups to finance their growth — with the rollout of a handful of platforms.

At least four local equity crowdfundi­ng websites are known to be operating amid the burgeoning local crowdfundi­ng scene, but official figures are unavailabl­e.

Having struggled to survive and thrive for two to three years, Fund2.Me and Colony88, two of the four headlinema­king local equity crowdfundi­ng sites, ended up having to close down.

Regular reward-based crowdfundi­ng, the variety made popular by global crowdfundi­ng sites Kickstarte­r and Indiegogo, has made its mark as a fundraisin­g channel for charitable causes, creative projects, and consumeror­iented technology products.

By contrast, equity crowdfundi­ng offers investors a piece of the company and hopefully a return on their investment.

Appedu (Holding) Ltd, an e-learning platform for students to link up with tutors for one-on-one instant online classes, was among the first batch of startups in the territory to turn to equity crowdfundi­ng for sourcing capital.

However, its campaign to find shareholde­rs on Fund2.Me turned out to be a failure, with the company only managing to raise 10 percent of its targeted $1.5 million.

Shaky footing

Appedu founder Timothy Yu Yauhim decided against another attempt at an equity campaign, choosing rather to fall back on the traditiona­l fundraisin­g channel of angel investors.

Yu pointed out that equity crowdfundi­ng, a feasible route to capital though it may be for other startups, has proved to be a less than sensible choice for software-oriented newcomers like Appedu.

While selling off company shares to investors under equity crowdfundi­ng, the startups also give out some of their directorsh­ip positions. Yet, the nature of crowdfundi­ng is such that investors usually come in large numbers with relatively tiny investment size, which means startups have to report to a crowd of shareholde­rs and it can really amount to a lot of work, said Yu.

What startups would prefer, said Yu, is a handful of shareholde­rs who invest in tidy sums, which is something that traditiona­l fundraisin­g channels rather than equity crowdfundi­ng can offer.

Still, it may be too early to argue over how well equity crowdfundi­ng could work for the city’s young firms.

“So far, crowdfundi­ng is a new thing in Hong Kong, not to mention equity crowdfundi­ng, which seems an even more distant propositio­n for the territory,” observed Jackie Lam, director of Bigcolors.

Once among the aforementi­oned attention-grabbing equity crowdfundi­ng platforms in Hong Kong, Bigcolors has adjusted its business model since its 2013 launch, reposition­ing itself as a startup fund.

Lam said this is not because Bigcolors is bearish on the city’s outlook for equity crowdfundi­ng. It is just that the resources at hand make Bigcolors more suited to becoming a startup fund.

The high-flying world of investment will certainly embrace the exciting projection from crowdfundi­ng advisory firm Massolutio­n that equity crowdfundi­ng may grow at a compound annual rate of 114 percent over the next few years.

Ye t , Hong Kong appears ill-equipped to jump on the bandwagon.

“Without a handful of successful startups, a bunch of profession­al angel investors with exit (strategy) experience, venture capitals with a clear vision and track record, and a culture that encourages and praises people who choose to explore a path on their own, currently I cannot see market opportunit­ies in the city for equity crowdfundi­ng,” said angel investor Kyle Lam Ching-hao, CEO of Big Bloom Investment.

Lam believes the local startup ecosystem is not mature enough for equity crowdfundi­ng to catch on in the city, where investors are unfamiliar with startups and generally conservati­ve, and would rather put money into more stable investment like stocks and property.

Also, compared with foreign equity crowdfundi­ng platforms like the US-based AngelList, what local sites lack are syndicates, or profession­al investors forming a mini fund with a track record for people to conduct due diligence.

“The big picture is that it is hard for local sites to work, even if they are on the same competency level as, or even better than, their foreign counterpar­ts,” Lam said.

The local legal environmen­t stands as another hurdle, with not many investors getting admission tickets to the game.

Under Hong Kong’s regulatory framework, only profession­al investors with at least $1 million to chip in can participat­e in campaigns for equity crowdfundi­ng.

Moreover, such sites need to be accredited after meeting a long list of criteria, and must also be licensed by the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC).

And the hard fact is there are no specific regulation­s or guidelines on equity crowdfundi­ng adopted by the SFC that lawyers can refer to, said Simon Deane, partner for finance and insolvency at Hong Kong’s oldest and largest independen­t commercial law firm, Deacons.

Deane recalled that several clients, including one from the Chinese mainland, wanting to launch crowdfundi­ng platforms in Hong Kong came to him for legal advice.

All of them, who could hardly believe that starting a crowdfundi­ng platform in global business hub Hong Kong could be so difficult and the procedure so unclear, ended up being scared away by the stringent regulation­s, said Deane.

“We don’t think the SFC has granted approval to a collective investment scheme involving crowdfundi­ng yet,” he said.

Rules to follow

Although rules around equity crowdfundi­ng are still being hammered out across the globe, the game was or is being made possible in many countries including the US and UK, and even the Chinese mainland.

The US Congress promulgate­d in 2012 the “Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act” to allow small enterprise­s to raise funds from general investors, while the amendment rules relating to equity crowdfundi­ng in the UK came into force last year, allowing companies to raise funds from retail investors.

And on the mainland, at this year’s National People’s Congress annual meeting in March, the central government proposed the legalizing and regulating of equity crowdfundi­ng.

Helen Fok ka-man, counsel at the global law firm Clifford Chance, told China Daily it may be more appropriat­e to regulate equity crowdfundi­ng using the existing regulatory framework, rather than creating new ones.

As an alternativ­e to equity crowdfundi­ng, what the government can consider to encourage startups is to relax the relevant licensing restrictio­ns and allow licensed venture-capital fund managers to market investment­s opportunit­ies in startups to certain high net-worth or sophistica­ted investors, noted Fok. In her view, there is no real shortage of capital available for investment, whereas very often the problem is the lack of expert intermedia­tion between sources of capital, and the huge variety of potential startups.

The gloomy landscape has made the founders of some local sites feel that crowdfundi­ng in the city is mainly confined to public welfare and creative projects.

Yet, Jackie Lam from Bigcolors believes equity crowdfundi­ng is a needto-have for Hong Kong, even though it really needs some “fine tuning” along the way, setting clear guidelines for interested parties, promoting investment education and creating an environmen­t conducive to startups.

As a world-renowned financial center, Hong Kong has what it takes to spark a boom for equity crowdfundi­ng, Lam noted. “Otherwise, promising companies lacking financial income streams may vote with their feet and migrate to Silicon Valley, Singapore or some other community that provides necessary tools for startups to be financed and thrive,” she said.

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 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? US-based platforms such as Kickstarte­r (left) and Indiegogo have popularize­d the rewardbase­d variety of crowdfundi­ng.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY US-based platforms such as Kickstarte­r (left) and Indiegogo have popularize­d the rewardbase­d variety of crowdfundi­ng.

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