Skip to main content
me and my money

Angel investor Mike Volker has built up a portfolio of several dozen early-stage companies through involvements in a number of business entities.cacaroot/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Mike Volker

Occupation

Angel investor and lecturer at Simon Fraser University

The portfolio

Holdings include Timia Capital Corp., Alterra Power Corp., Northland Power Inc., Telus Corp., Fortis Inc., CIBC and National Bank of Canada.

The investor

Angel investor Mike Volker has built up a portfolio of several dozen early-stage companies through involvements in a number of business entities. They include the VANTEC Angel Network, WUTIF Capital (a private angel fund) and Timia Capital Corp. (which finances small technology companies in return for a percentage of their future revenues).

How he invests

As mentioned in his Me and My Money profile of 2010, Mr. Volker likes investing in start-up companies because he gets information through direct communication with those who run the business. He can also become directly involved as a mentor or steward. With larger companies, he is removed from the action. Furthermore, information is usually only available with a lag and through the filter of analysts' reports and company documents.

However, now in his mid-sixties, he is shifting more toward conservative "large-cap equities that people depend on, such as utilities and banks that grow steadily and pay dividends." Since 2010, his weighting in early-stage ventures has dropped from 70 per cent to 50 per cent.

He is also lowering risk by investing more in young companies that are less risky. In particular, he prefers those that are "growing revenues substantially and able to pay a royalty on sales."

His returns have been good. He reports better than 10-per-cent annual returns on his "mainstream TSX companies" and better than 15 per cent on his early-stage companies. The higher returns on the latter are "nice, but they take a great deal more time and attention."

Best move since 2010

It was buying Premium Brands Holdings Co., a specialty food manufacturing and distribution businesses. "It went from $18 in 2012 to almost $72 in 2017," Mr. Volker says.

Worst move since 2010

"The worst was GoPro Inc. [a maker of action cameras]," he discloses. "It was on a roll. I bought at just over $30 and it's now under $10. Fortunately, it's just one [stock] in a larger portfolio."

Advice

Mr. Volker notes that studies have shown investors in early-stage companies can earn annualized returns greater than 20 per cent if they have more than 20 deals in place. A smaller, less diversified portfolio can be torpedoed by the firms that go out of business, so "build a large portfolio or invest in an angel fund," Mr. Volker recommends.

Want to be in Me and My Money? Contact Larry MacDonald at mccolumn@yahoo.com.

Investment reporter, David Berman discusses what investors should know about the Dow's historic 20,000 mark and highs on the TSX

Report an editorial error

Report a technical issue

Editorial code of conduct

Tickers mentioned in this story

Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 24/04/24 4:00pm EDT.

SymbolName% changeLast
PBH-T
Premium Brands Holdings Corp
+0.6%89.28
GPRO-Q
Gopro Inc Cl A
-1.12%1.77
NPI-T
Northland Power Inc
-0.23%21.46
T-T
Telus Corp
-0.59%22.01
TU-N
Telus Corp
-0.8%16.08
FTS-T
Fortis Inc
+0.52%53.65
FTS-N
Fortis Inc
+0.15%39.16
CM-T
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
-0.69%65.16
CM-N
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
-1%47.54
NA-T
National Bank of Canada
+0.2%111.8

Interact with The Globe