Anyone into tech startup investments?

fmbaba01

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I want to ask, are there credible investment brokers or direct firms who are into futuristic product/services startups that run an IPO that one can invest in?
I know all these ICO's has been bastardized, i would have loved it.

But i will like to focus on REAL firms and or tech startups. willing to invest in between $1,000 or $2,000 or $5,000

Please i will like to know any credible investment broker or direct startup firms.
 
Still waiting to read from people who are into this line.
 
Highly Interested! I Want To Know More About This, I Can Invest But Just Looking For Something Like This.
 
At those check sizes, you're going to be excluded from all but the smallest pre-seed rounds. Angel/pre-seed VC is mainly based on relationships and having access to the best founders. Brokers generally have the worst possible deals. Most funds have an LP minimum of 10k or higher.

You could look at buying secondaries but again you may find your amount to be too low. The other noteworthy thing is that you need to be an accredited investor for most startup investing in the US.

The best bet for you would be RegCF offerings on platforms like WeFunder. Otherwise just look at publicly traded stocks and buy the dip after the IPO.
 
At those check sizes, you're going to be excluded from all but the smallest pre-seed rounds. Angel/pre-seed VC is mainly based on relationships and having access to the best founders. Brokers generally have the worst possible deals. Most funds have an LP minimum of 10k or higher.

You could look at buying secondaries but again you may find your amount to be too low. The other noteworthy thing is that you need to be an accredited investor for most startup investing in the US.

The best bet for you would be RegCF offerings on platforms like WeFunder. Otherwise just look at publicly traded stocks and buy the dip after the IPO.
I really did not know why i ,miss your comment here.
I find it interesting.
I just read now.
But i want to ask, are they still valid for 2025 we are now?
I will like to take a look.
And if there is anything new i will appreciate your kind response here.

Thanks so much Bro !!
 
I'm also keen on this, but finding legit early-stage deals with low entry points is tough—most platforms want accredited investors or higher minimums. If anyone's got leads on smaller, credible opportunities, would love to hear more.
 
I'm also keen on this, but finding legit early-stage deals with low entry points is tough—most platforms want accredited investors or higher minimums. If anyone's got leads on smaller, credible opportunities, would love to hear more.
You'll find better discussions/resources on a more sophisticated platform like reddit.

But for sub 100k investments I would look at accelerators instead. They take a larger percentage, but they give you a network of investors you can tap into with deeper pockets.
 
For investing in legit startups and futuristic products, consider platforms like AngelList, SeedInvest, or Republic. They vet startups and allow investments starting around $1,000. Avoid ICOs if you want real equity and regulatory protection
 
For investing in legit startups and futuristic products, consider platforms like AngelList, SeedInvest, or Republic. They vet startups and allow investments starting around $1,000. Avoid ICOs if you want real equity and regulatory protection
Many thanks about this, i have angelist account. but i haven't been able to have the time to read through and navigate into it deeply. But i will take a deeper look at those you sent to me. And for ICO's, i don't even read up on those.
Thanks once more for the information.
 
If you’re in the US, most direct investments into early-stage startups are limited to accredited investors by SEC rules. That usually means over $200K a year income ($300K joint) or over $1M net worth excluding your home, or certain financial licenses. If you’re not accredited, you can still look at Reg CF crowdfunding sites like Republic, StartEngine, or Wefunder, and sometimes Reg A+ offerings. Those are open to everyone but have limits on how much you can invest based on your income and net worth, because apparently the nanny state thinks small investors need protecting from themselves :rolleyes: and as a result gatekeeps real wealth-building opportunities from the masses.

Another option is to go through a stockbroker and buy into publicly traded ETFs or mutual funds that invest in startups, so you can still get indirect exposure without having to be accredited.
 
Wealthyloop is a fintech platform bridging European/American retail investors to African SMEs with a beta launch underway. Unlike traditional pre-IPO investments, Wealthyloop offers a unique gateway starting at €10 ($10-$12 USD), channeling funds directly to licensed partners like AskPadi (Zambian-regulated) via secure payments—no funds held by Wealthyloop.


Their model targets 16-20% historical ROIs (disclosed as at-risk, per EU RIS), focusing on sustainable African startups—think micro-innovations with global potential. Currently raising $50K via an Indiegogo campaign (launching Sept 25, 2025) to expand this beta, with plans for a formal raise in 2026.


Given your interest in [e.g., pre-IPO marketplaces/futuristic tech investments], I believe Wealthyloop could complement your offerings for clients seeking diversified, impact-driven opportunities. Check out the platform, it might fit—perhaps as a secondary investment option or a featured deal for your $1,000-$5,000 investor base.
 
i’m interested too. investing small in tech startups sounds exciting but risky. anyone here done it with $1-5k and got results? what firms or direct deals would you trust right now?
 
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