Introduction to Investment Clubs
Sep 15, 2025
Investment Clubs are groups of people who come together to pool capital, share ideas, and invest collaboratively across various asset classes. Investment clubs provide a simple, cost effective vehicle for investor communities and new fund managers to build and activate networks.
Unknown to many average investors, Investment Clubs have existed for centuries. The most popular investment club that most people will recognize is Jim Cramer on CNBC1.
In summary, there are two types of investment clubs that the SEC recognizes2, and the difference lies in how the capital is deployed.
Capital Pooling Clubs - Investors pool their capital together into a central location which enables collective decision making opportunities
This allows investors to deploy “wisdom of the crowd3” strategies, rather than relying on 1-2 General Partners or Managers to make decisions on behalf of the investors. Investors maintain partial decision control over their capital on a capital-weighted basis.
Obvious Web3 Use Case - it’s possible to tokenize the profit interests of the investment club entity to create liquidity
Non-Capital Pooling Clubs - The club is typically managed by a gatekeeper (typically with an annual subscription or one-time membership fee).
Investors in these types of clubs directly make their own capital decisions, and typically join the club for access to higher quality investment opportunities. Investors maintain full decision control over their capital.
Obvious Web3 Use Case - NFTs generally make sense to gate access to the community.
Most investment clubs are member-driven, invite-only, and operated democratically. In the U.S., they’re generally unregulated by the SEC if they stay under 100 members, don’t charge carried interest, and require all members to participate in decision-making. Investment clubs are hard to set up, legally ambiguous, and built with either legacy systems or untested open source code.
Access is gated: Venture opportunities are often reserved for insiders. Emerging investors and operators are locked out.
Structures are outdated: Most emerging managers use traditional SPVs which are slow, costly, and not designed for technology-native communities.
Liquidity is non-existent: Early-stage VC locks capital for years with little to no flexibility or secondary market.
Coordination is messy: Founders, investors, and operators lack efficient tools to collaborate, track investments, and scale networks.
Transparency is missing: Critical investment data is siloed or opaque, leaving members with little visibility into how decisions are made.
To continue, please click here