The parent company of a Madison-based investment group that claims to solicit money for UW-Madison alumni-connected ventures even though it isn’t affiliated with the university was indicted by the Securities and Exchange Commission late last week for allegedly misleading investors, among other charges.
New Hampshire-based Alumni Ventures Group that has affiliate firms all over the U.S. has agreed to repay $4.7 million to affected funds, as well as a $700,000 penalty per the charges. The Group’s CEO, Mike Collins, is also to pay a $100,000 penalty, according to the SEC’s March 4 order.
The regulator found that the Group’s website and “other marketing communications” told investors that they would be charged the “industry standard” of management fees, which is typically at a rate of 2% annually over 10 years with 20% carried interest.
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Instead, Alumni Ventures charged 20% up front — which several local investors that the Wisconsin State Journal interviewed over the past week say is unconventional.
Management fees are what keep a venture capital fund operational, and help pay salaries and other costs, explained John Neis, managing director of Madison-based Venture Investors who has 38 years of experience in the venture capital sector.
The SEC also found that the Group allegedly comingled funds without informing investors.
On Page 10 of the order are listed the three funds under the name Bascom Ventures, a Madison-based affiliate of the Group. Bascom, according to its website, operates a total of four venture capital funds that appear to have invested in businesses both in Madison and across the nation for at least the last half decade. It’s unclear how many of those ventures indeed have connections to university alumni.
Bascom’s Twitter biography reads “UW-Madison alumni making smart, simple investments in UW alumni-connected ventures,” and its LinkedIn bio similarly states “Bascom Ventures is a community of accredited UW-Madison alums who pool money into a VC fund to invest in UW-connected companies.”
A Wisconsin Alumni Association web page does say the firm is “not affiliated with the UW.” Both the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation and Wisconsin Foundation and Alumni Association said in separate email statements earlier this week they, too, have no affiliation with Bascom, declining to comment further.
But the firm’s name can be likened to one of UW-Madison’s departments — Bascom Hall on Lincoln Drive, which houses the college’s law and education schools, and is named after former UW President John Bascom.
Spokesperson John Lucas wrote in an email statement Wednesday that “upon its launch, UW-Madison did work with Bascom Ventures to make its separation from campus more clear.”
“It was conversations with (Bascom’s) team to ensure their logo and imagery on their website didn’t lead people to assume a campus affiliation,” Lucas wrote, declining to comment on why UW-Madison didn’t go farther than that.
The group “may be using publicly available email lists to solicit (on) campus,” and “the ability to requests these lists is open to anyone under state public records law,” Lucas wrote.
The company’s investment portfolio includes a few Madison businesses (that it denotes as being from the “Midwest” on its website) such as Quiver Quantitative, a Madison-based alternative data startup launched by two UW-Madison graduates.
Other investments include cultivated seafood startup Cultured Decadence (now UPSIDE Foods) as well as Janesville-based nuclear technology company SHINE Medical Technologies and recently closed music streaming startup Live Undiscovered Music, or LÜM. Even more appear to be from Texas, California, New York and other U.S. locations. No UW-Madison affiliation is mentioned.
“AV is a different kind of venture capital firm built for bringing individual investors a simple way to access great … investments — which historically had been an exclusive, hard-to-access asset built for technical, institutional investors,” Alumni Ventures said in an email statement Wednesday in response to the SEC order, and on behalf of Bascom. “More than two year’s ago, AV quickly made its marketing materials more clear when regulators reached out with these disclosure questions.”
“Since updating all operations to be compliant with this agreement in early 2020, more then 4,188 well-informed new investors have joined AV because they love the access we bring them to great … deals and the simplicity of how we do it,” the Group added.
‘That is pretty unusual’
Carry Thome, who is the managing director for Madison-based NVNG Investment Advisors and the former WARF chief investment officer, said that in her years-long career, she’s not seen an investment fund be indicted by the SEC often.
Also a WARF alumni and managing director of Madsion-based Kegonsa Capital Partners, among many other venture capital involvements and entrepreneurial pursuits, Ken Johnson voiced a similar view to Thome’s, calling the SEC’s $700,000 fine “substantial.”
Of a firm charging 20% up front for management fees, Thome said “that is pretty unusual.”
“The typical structure is that you pay on the committed amount while the investments are being made, she explained, adding “I hope (the order) doesn’t set back the ecosystem that we have growing in Wisconsin” and that ensuring trust is important for the venture capital sphere.
“I want to make sure that my investor understands what we are,” Johnson said.
Photos: Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW

Residents at the Zoe Bayliss Women’s Cooperative, a student housing co-op on the UW-Madison campus, chat after sharing a meal together. From left are: Melissa Schmidt-Landin, a third-year graduate student from Baldwin; Kyi Khaing, a junior from Myanmar; Bernadette Maurice, a junior from Oregon; Isha Srivastava, a freshman from Saudi Arabia; and Ishita Arora, a sophomore from Carver, Minn.

The UW-Madison-owned building that the Zoe Bayliss cooperative leases annually is slated for demolition in 2023.

“People feel a sense of ownership,” co-op president Angela Maloney said about the democratically-elected way in which the cooperative runs.

A hallway to student’s rooms at Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW, on West Johnson Street in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, March 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Angela Maloney, a junior from Madison and president of the Zoe Bayliss Women’s Cooperative, examines paintings on the wall left behind by former residents of the cooperative that began in 1955.

Molly Nortman, a first-year graduate student from Beaver Dam, cleans out the fridge in the dining and kitchen area at Zoe Bayliss. Co-op residents are responsible for one hour of kitchen duty per week.

“People feel a sense of ownership,” co-op president Angela Maloney said about the democratic way in which the cooperative runs.

Angela Maloney, a junior from Madison and president of Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW on West Johnson Street, shows off her room she shares with another resident in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, March 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Angela Maloney, a junior from Madison and president of Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW on West Johnson Street, displays a bottle in her room in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, March 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

The Zoe Bayliss co-op has a commercial kitchen, which may be tough to keep if the cooperative moves to the floor or wing of a dorm.

The lounge area at Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW, on West Johnson Street in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, March 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

The laundry room at Zoe Bayliss Co-op, a women’s student housing cooperative at UW, on West Johnson Street in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, March 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL
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