
Tech investors
gain with incentive bills
January 27, 2005
By ROBYN L. LAMB,
Daily Record Business Writer

Credits aim to fuel startups with
cash
A
bill has been introduced, as part of Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.’s
economic development plan, to promote investment in the state’s
biotechnology and information technology industries.
The bill, expected to be joined by similar legislation next week, would
give tax credits to private investors funding small, fledgling
technology companies in the state.
The administration’s proposal would return to investors 45 percent of
their outlay in the form of a credit on their state tax bill. The return
would begin in the third year after the investment and would be spread
out evenly over three years.
Individuals must invest at least $50,000 to be eligible for the credit,
which is capped at $8 million per year, according to
Senate Bill 218, which was filed this week.
“The state’s responsibility is to step up the plate where there is real
need,” said Christopher Foster, deputy secretary at the Maryland
Department of Business and Economic Development. “And that is high risk,
early stage angel investing.”
The administration’s proposal will be joined next week by a revised
version of the Biotechnology Investment Incentive Act, which Del. Brian
J. Feldman, D-Montgomery, introduced in the last legislative session.
Fiscal worry kept the bill from gaining approval last year, but Feldman
has resurrected it in a way that addresses such concerns, he said.
Similar to Ehrlich’s approach, Feldman deferred the tax credit for a
number of years so there is no immediate fiscal hit to the state, but
money still flows to the companies that need it.
But to make up for the deferment, Feldman increased the credit amount
from 33 cents on every dollar invested to 50 cents.
Where the two proposals differ is in their scope.
Feldman’s Biotechnology Investment Incentive Act targets biotechnology
companies specifically. Ehrlich’s bill is broader, encompassing
information technology companies as well.
Unlike Ehrlich’s bill, which limits the credit to angel investors,
Feldman’s bill includes both angel investors and venture capital firms,
which accounted for $34 million of funding to Maryland biotechnology
companies in the fourth quarter of 2004, according to
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
“I
have been persuaded that the real driving force in terms of moving
venture capital and meaningful dollar amounts are venture capital
firms,” said Feldman.
“My bill deals with both venture capital firms and angel investors in
attempting to incentivize both, whereas the governor’s bill deals solely
with individual investors. I think in that sense, it is a pretty
material difference.”
It
is the angel investors, however, who have been more adversely effected
by the economy’s downturn and need the extra encouragement, said Foster
Also different is a provision in Feldman’s bill for the state to receive
a return on the credit if the company or its investors is successful
above a certain level.
While the two bills vary, both Feldman and Foster are optimistic there
is support for the credit that technology advocates around the state
have been demanding for some time now.
“The time has come for us to step up whether it is the governor’s
program or my proposal or some combination of the both,” said Feldman.
“It’s something we need to get done.”
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2005 © The Daily Record. All Rights Reserved.
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