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For a more detailed analysis of the Angel Market Trends reports, please go to our Analysis Reports page.

Q1Q2 2009 Angel Market Trends

Angel Investors, VCs Look at IPOs Differently

Initial Public Offerings and Pre-IPO Shareholders - Working Paper

Full Year 2008 Angel Market Trends

Q1Q2 2008 Angel Market Trends

Full Year 2007 Angel Market Trends

Q1Q2 2007 Angel Market Trends

Full Year 2006 Angel Market Trends

Q1Q2 2006 Angel Market Trends

Full Year 2005 Angel Market Trends

Q1Q2 2005 Angel Market Trends

Full Year 2004 Angel Market Trends

Q1Q2 2004 Angel Market Trends

Full Year 2003 Angel Market Trends 

News
Start-Ups Will Keep Struggling in 2010

Funding from angel investors, or high-net-worth individuals who provide capital to young companies, fell 30% to $9.1 billion in the first half of 2009 compared with the same period a year earlier. That figure is expected to remain flat for 2010, according to Jeffrey Sohl, director of University of New Hampshire's Center for Venture Research, which tracks the data.

Angel Investment Forum: Practical Advice for Seeking

If you're exploring the idea of raising angel investment capital in 2010, join us on January 21st for an angel forum targeting the key information you'll need to be successful. You'll hear from Jeff Sohl, Director of the Center for Venture Research at UNH, and two leading New England angel investors, Mike Marsh and Jean Hammond.

More entrepreneurs use the Web to attract lenders and investors

Countless small businesses face a similar struggle - worthy opportunities missed for lack of funding, even relatively small sums...Only 9% of all investment opportunities brought to the attention of investors get funded, said Jeffrey Sohl, director of the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

Investing in NH's Future

Total U.S. angel investments in 2008 reached $19.2 billion, a 26.2 percent drop from 2007, according to the Center for Venture Research at the University of NH in Durham.

Funding shortfall stymies tech-transfer capabilities

Nationwide, angels invested $9.1 billion in the first half of the year, down 27 percent from the amount they invested in the first half of 2008, according to the University of New Hampshire Center for Venture Research.

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The New Rules of Angel Investing

Angels still have wings, but they aren’t flying quite so high. The rules of the game of angel investing have changed in the post-crisis world, Kermit Pattison writes in The New York Times. The average deal size shrank by 31 percent in the first half of this year, according to a recent study by the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

Study: Angel investors spend less on more

Angel investors across the country spent fewer dollars but backed more companies during the first half of 2009 compared to last year, according to a study released by the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

Angel Investor Market Declines in First Half of 2009

Angel investors pulled back in the first half of 2009, although the overall market experienced a slight increase in the number of investments, according to the Angel Market Analysis for the first and second quarters of 2009 released by the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

Investor summit is no blind date

The New Hampshire High Tech Council has grown its popular Speed Venture Summit, drawing in $20,000 in corporate sponsorship, 50 participating companies and a groundswell of support, according to its producer, Tim Platt...

Jeffrey Sohl, head of the Center for Venture Research Institute at the Whittemore School of Business at the University of New Hampshire, released a year-end report citing a 26.2 percent decline in angel investment in the United States in 2008, down from $26 billion to $19.2 billion.

It takes one for the money

The Speed Venture Summit is kind of a speed-dating event that brings together early stage companies and potential investors.

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