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Posts Tagged: green IPO


1
Jul 08

Types of Green Investment Products

When most people think of investment products, they think of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds they can buy from a stock broker. For people interested in the green economy, it is crucial to understand that these “retail” products represent only a small fragment of the range of investment types.

This chart shows the full range of equity type investment products that match the stage of development of a green business, or most any business for that matter:

Stage
Risk to Investor
Potential for Financial Gain
Potential to Change Paradigm
Available to General Public
Seed Extremely High Extremely
High
Extremely High No
Expansion Very High Very High Very High No
IPO High High High Limited Access
Public Stock Moderate Moderate Moderate Yes
Mutual Fund Lowest Lowest Lowest Yes

More and more people are interested in green investing for its potential to shift today’s environmentally destructive paradigms, and to produce the kinds of enormous gains possible in a rapidly expanding new sector. However, as you can see, the earliest-stage investments most likely to create this paradigm shift and produce super-sized profits also hold the most financial risk. Or do they?

When financial risk is defined in conventional terms, early stage investing is indeed too risky for most people. Those of us who think environmentally, however, tend to consider a wider range of risks. To us, destruction of the biosphere is a risk that makes traditional financial risk seem small by comparison.

Yet, in our daily actions, we are also bound by today’s societal norms. Try as we may, we continue to adhere to “the system” in one way or another. Most of us can’t afford to risk our financial status in society to invest for a better future. This has left the field of funding green startups to a small group of super-rich venture capital investors (see article from Jul-Aug Fast Company). Unfortunately, as wealthy as they are, the combined assets of these new “green angels” are quite small compared to the billions and billions of investment dollars needed to address today’s most pressing challenges in a timely fashion.

What is the answer?

Fortunately, there are many ways to reduce the risk of early-stage green investing to make it more suitable for the vast numbers of potential green-minded investors in the general market. This opens the possibility of mobilizing far more money for early-stage environmental business strategies. U.S. green consumers alone control an estimated $2 trillion to $4 trillion of investment assets. A lot of that can be brought into play if the public can be presented with properly-designed, early-stage green investment products.

Unfortunately, thanks to financial laws designed to make markets safe for average investors, creating these mass-market early-stage green investment products is a complex and expensive process. Today, no such investment products exist in the marketplace. Earlier this year, Iron Leaf Capital canceled their initial public offering after spending nearly $1 million to develop what would have been the first green start-up fund for the general public.

Green Economy Action Guide

How We Can Put Billions of Dollars To Work Solving Our Eco-Challenges Without Waiting for Big Governments to Act

  • Why Can't Governments Protect the Environment?
  • How Can the Green Economy Solve Large-Scale Eco-Challenges?
  • What is Limiting Growth of the Green Economy?
  • What Can I Do?