The big story
Picking winners
Investing can be a crapshoot, especially when it comes to early-stage companies.
It’s one thing to back a company with years of financial statements and proven products. It’s another to give money to a couple of founders with an idea and not much else.
Such a high degree of difficulty means angel investing can often be a numbers game. Seed as many smart ideas as you can stomach. With any luck, one will return enough to cover the losses from the rest (and then some).
But for a select group, successfully investing in young companies is the norm. TRAC, a San Francisco-based early-stage venture firm, set out to find these investors, dubbing them “SuperForecasters.”
The group of 287 investors helps inform TRAC’s investing model, which predicts startups likely to grow to become unicorns (a valuation above $1 billion).
After highlighting 30 startups TRAC’s model predicts will take off, the venture firm took things a step further, sharing with Business Insider the names of 30 SuperForecasters.
The investors, profiled by BI’s Ben Bergman, Samantha Stokes, Rebecca Torrence, and Leena Rao, have an incredible track record for early-stage investing. SuperForecasters make a profit on two-thirds of their bets, and 20% of their investments return over 10X, Joseph Aaron, one of TRAC’s cofounders, told BI.
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