They counted publicly recorded investments and exits to make their ranking. Admittedly they are not
the best metrics. Number of investments only shows how prolific I am, not how good an investor I am.
Likewise many of those exits might be unsuccessful. That said, actual performance is hard to figure out
from Crunchbase and Angelist data, so this is a reasonable proxy. Besides if you are an entrepreneur
looking for money, you probably want to approach a prolific investor 🙂
This is giving me an incentive to keep my Crunchbase and Angelist profiles up to date because the data
they have is completely out of date. I have now made around 400 investments, with 150 exits. Of those
150 exits, I made money on around half and my realized IRR (on actual cash on cash exits) is 67%
(including all the investments on which I lost money).
It’s good to be the king! Now if only my ego and I could still fit in the same room 🙂
You can read the article at:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/alejandrocremades/2018/08/05/top-50-angel-investors-based-on-investment-volume-and-successful-exits/#72fc2dca7748
Ohlala! Felicidades!
Inspiring to see you among the list of the heavy hitters. Your realized IRR is an impressive sucesuc rate
Congratulations. Fabulous mother. Fabulous son.
Very impressive……
Congratulation ….
Congratulation Fabrice! And keep going forward. Your investments makes things happen, even not succsefull start-ups gave a ton of experience to those who made them, and new ideas, new jobs etc.