How it works 

Let’s bring start-up investing into your comfort zone.
Here’s how we help: we mitigate risk in the first year of your investment so that you have a chance to see if the start-up’s idea has traction. We do this by helping you access the full Australian government ESIC tax offset, which covers 20% of your investment. We then pair this with structuring the start-up effectively and managing its finances to give you protection for the other 80% of your investment. So you can support a good idea with minimal risk. Read on to see how it works in detail. 

Let’s step it out

You have a taxable income of $65K or more, so you pay at least $10K in tax each year.

 

You buy 50,000 shares in an ESIC for $50K, using the funding option that suits your finances. This investment entitles you to a $10K tax offset, reducing your tax bill by $10K.

Option 1

$500 Deposit

• You purchase your 50,000 shares with a $500 deposit.

• The remainder is funded through a loan.

• At tax time, you get the $10K tax offset and forward $8000 toward your shares.


Who gets what in the first year?

Start-up: $7500*
You: $1500
Seedchange: $1000

*start-up’s access to money is delayed until after tax offset received.

 

Option 2

$8000 Deposit

You purchase your 50,000 shares with an $8000 deposit.

The remainder is funded through a loan.

At tax time, you get the $10K tax offset.


Who gets what in the first year?

Start-up: $7000*
You: $2000
Seedchange: $1000

*start-up gains immediate access to money

 

Option 3

15% Deposit

• You nominate how many shares, pre-agreed with us.

• Purchase your shares with a 15% cash deposit.

• The remainder is funded through a loan (max $1M).

• At tax time, you get the $10K tax offset.


Who gets what in the first year?

Start-up: $7000*
You: $2000
Seedchange: $1000

*start-up gains immediate access to money

Option 4

Full Payment

You purchase your 50,000 shares with $50,000.

At tax time, you get the $10K tax offset.


Who gets what in the first year?

Start-up: $7000*
You: $2000
Seedchange: $1000

*start-up gains immediate access to money.

 

Option 2 is most common, so we will use it as our example. You retain $2K of the tax benefit for yourself and put $8K into the hands of an eager start-up.

 

We manage the start-up’s finances, and give them $8K of your investment (minus a one-off fee of $1000 for our administration) to use in the first year. The remaining $42K of your investment is held on deposit and protected.

 

In the first year, the start-up uses the first $7K to prove to you that idea has traction.

What happens next?

At the end of Year 1 we’ll see where they end up. Either they’ve:

Failed

We help the start-up wind up efficiently. The start-up still has $42K of your investment on deposit, which clears your loan. You come out financially unscathed, still with a $2K tax benefit, and you’ve helped test an innovative idea. On to the next idea!

Showed promise

The start up continues with their work.

→ You’re content with having encouraged the first growth, you cash out your shares, knowing you got a $2K tax benefit and supported a new idea.

→ You want to stick with this start-up. You keep your investment (at your own risk now) and we release more money to the start-up to apply to research, development and expansion.

Succeeded

The start-up’s shares have increased in value. Either you:

→ Cash out now and realise a tax-free capital gain.

→ Partially sell out to clear your loan and keep the rest of your investment.

→ Keep all your shares (at your own risk now) and continue to pay off your loan.

The choice is yours.

In all cases your investment is risk-managed in the first year, and you’ve supported an ecosystem of ideas and innovation. Brilliant!

 

The five year plan

After Year 1, if you’ve decided to stay invested, a consistent budget is maintained by progressively releasing funding to the start-up over the next four years. Each year, another 20% ($10K) of your initial investment is made available for the start up to spend on their product and business development. The remainder stays on deposit for future years. This measured financial management allows for the unexpected as the start-up develops.

More info

In 2016, Malcolm Turnbull passed the Tax Laws Amendment (Tax Incentives for Innovation) Bill 2016, creating the ESIC offset. This bill fundamentally altered the risk dynamic for investment in companies developing innovative ideas. This is a fabulous incentive and we want to make sure it’s utilised. We also want to go a step further to bring start-up investing into the comfort zone of a new investor.
 
To read more about the theory behind our structure and approach, check out Co-Founder Eric Ranson’s article in Actuaries Digital here. 
 
The Australian Taxation Office also has extensive information on the ESIC tax offset, which you can read here.