Canada Canada is reportedly home to the most sophisticated and advanced network of angel investors in the world. Incorporated in 2002, the
National Angel Capital Organization (NACO) pioneered the angel investing movement and supported the formation of regional angel networks in Canada. According to both NACO and the
Business Development Bank of Canada, there are 20,000–50,000 active angel investors in Canada. Over 4,000 are members of 45 angel groups that are NACO members.
China Before 2000, it was difficult for startups in China to find local angel investors. Entrepreneurs needed to raise funds from
Softbank Group,
Goldman Sachs,
Fidelity Investments, and other institutions. However, by 2015, several Chinese Angel groups had been in operation.
Russia In 2012, the International Business Angels Assembly took place in the
Russian Federation. This was an exclusive event devoted to private investing into innovative projects in
Eastern Europe. In 2022, following the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, investors from Russia and abroad reduced their activity; this was noticeable in private funds, which reduced the volume of investments by 4 times compared to 2021.
United Kingdom A study by
NESTA in 2009 estimated there were between 4,000 and 6,000 angel investors in the
United Kingdom with an average investment size of £42,000 per investment. Furthermore, each angel investor on average acquired 8 percent of the venture in the deal, with 10 percent of investments accounting for more than 20 percent of the venture. In terms of returns, 35 percent of investments produced returns of between one and five times the initial investment, while 9 percent produced returns of multiples of ten times or more. The mean return, however, was 2.2 times the investment in 3.6 years and an approximate internal rate of return of 22 percent gross. The UK Business Angel market grew in 2009 through 2010 and, despite recessionary concerns, continues to show signs of growth. In 2013, this dynamic kept going on in the UK as angel investors were named by two-thirds of technology entrepreneurs as a means of funding.
United States Geographically,
Silicon Valley has dominated United States angel investing for decades, receiving 39% of the $7.5 billion invested in US-based companies throughout Q2 2011, between three and four times as much as the total amount invested within
New England. In 2013, 41% of tech sector executives named angel investors as a means of funding.
Saudi Arabia Saudi Vision 2030 was launched in 2016; since then, the entrepreneurship ecosystem has been built from scratch. The number of angel investor groups reached eight in 2022.
India The Indian Government introduced Atal Incubation centers and Technology Incubation and Development of Entrepreneurs, a program to solely support ICT startups in building emerging technologies, including
AI,
IoT, and
blockchain. ==See also==