Moneybox

Angel Investors Love Wisconsin

Not just the land of cheese

Photo by Tim Sloan/AFP/Getty Images

This article originally appeared in Inc.

Where are angel investors putting their money? Wisconsin.

No joke. According to a new report issued by Silicon Valley Bank, the Angel Resource Institute, and CB Insights, the Great Lakes region was the most active U.S. geography for angel investors in the first quarter of 2014.

Together, the states of Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio accounted for 17 percent of angel deals. That compares with about 18 percent in California but just 13 percent in New England and 12 percent in New York.

Robert Wiltbank, a contributing associate professor at Willamette University, who worked on the report, says it’s too soon to tell if the spike in Great Lakes deals is a one-time phenomenon or the beginning of a trend. But he does say some angels in the region did some “really solid, co-invested deals” with early-stage venture capitalists this time around, in both the medical devices and the technology industries.

Wisconsin Investment Partners showed up on the list of the 10 most active angel investing groups, but then again so did Sand Hill Angels and Tech Coast Angels, both based in California.

Angels’ preference for the Great Lakes is certainly not mirrored at the next stage of funding—venture capital-—where investors also prefer to stick close to home. Data from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association show that only 5 percent of venture capital makes its way to the Midwest, with California eating up 54 percent.

Other stats from the report will no doubt fuel the are-we-in-a-bubble argument:

  • Valuations are up. The median premoney valuation for a company receiving angel financing jumped 10 percent.
  • Rounds are bigger. The amount of investment a company is likely to receive in its angel round has also grown: the average is now $1.23 million, up 12 percent from last quarter and up 29 percent from a year ago.

Angel investors are also increasingly content to invest alone, without micro-VCs or others as co-investors. About 41 percent of deals are done by angels working on their own, compared with just 26 percent a year ago.

See also: Taking the Crowd Out of Crowdfunding