Investor Relations - IR

  

The outreach arm of a given (usually public) company.

It's someone who serves as the communications intermediary between the company's CFO and the rest of the investing world, i.e. more or less the owners of the company.

The IR person hosts the quarterly conference calls, files the proper filings, and answers generally inconsequential questions from investors which aren't so telling that they'd pierce the Regulation FD veil.

Think of the IR person as a kind of role like the Vice President of the U.S. Lots of good coffee and nice seats at the table, but little say in what actually happens.

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Finance: What is an Accredited Investor?9 Views

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Finance a la Shmoop. What is an accredited investor. Well the difference

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between an accredited college and an unaccredited college, can be like you

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know the difference between Princeton, and the school of Feel Good Energy, that

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your great Aunt Bertha, set up in her garage last year. Yeah different kind of [woman dancing in garage with disco ball]

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college. Well accredited investors work on a

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similar idea. A bunch of someone's have come along and agreed that accredited

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investors, have a bunch of qualifications. In other words they're legit. So

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accredited investors are simply investors, who qualify to do a certain

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investment. Usually accredited means, that they have credit, or assets, or wampum, or

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knowledge, like intellectual capital, instead of financial capital, or along with

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both. Which means that they're big boys and big girls, who are able to invest a

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large amount of money, in a risky venture. Officially they're investors who have an

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income of at least $200,000 for the past two years, three hundred thousand for [checklist for investors on chalkboard]

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joint accredited investors, like married people or partners, or have a net worth

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of at least a million bucks individually, or jointly, or our executives, partners, or

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directors of the entity issuing those securities. Meaning raising the dough

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itself. Institutional investors, such as mutual funds, hedge funds, and pension

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funds, also fit the bill. Additionally entities can be considered

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accredited, but their threshold is 5 million bucks in assets. By the way if [man talking on lawn]

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all the owners of an entity, like a law firm or something like that, are

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accredited, well then the entity is considered accredited

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as well. So yeah they're accredited investors. Not to be confused with a

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credited investor, who is really excited to have a small part in a movie. [guy in movie theater]

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