In its co-investment structure, in order to increase flexibility and maximum support for the production year: knowledge-based: employment-creating the country and institutional capacity building in this ecosystem, it has designed a model that, in addition to providing significant financing, has minimal involvement in the entrepreneurship and administrative affairs of the partnership issues. In this model, licensed financial institutions can submit a co-investment application to the Plant Phenomenon Technology Development Center. After the application is approved by this center and the agent's participation ceiling is determined, applicants can submit their plans to the co-investment agents. Then, if the agent approves the plan and agrees with the applicant, he can use the investment credit with the approval of the Plant Phenomenon Technology Development Center in two-part and three-part partnerships.
Co-investment factor: The Padideh Giyah has a legal license to be the Fund's contracting party in the co-investment agreement and is responsible for initial screening, submitting a feasibility study to the Fund, valuation, concluding an investment agreement with the partnership issues, and management, executive, and supervisory responsibilities for the partnership issues. The subject of the partnership is the same as the capitalizable subject. Partnerships may also be formed with the presence of other partners such as cooperating institutions (growth centers, research institutes, etc.).
Two-part participation:
As is clear, this method of partnership will be between the Plant Phenomenon Technology Development Center and the agent as the pillars of the partnership. In this format, the center will provide a maximum of 80 percent of the required liquidity, and the agent will also be committed to providing at least 20 percent of the required liquidity for each issue of the partnership from its own resources.
Three-part participation:
The pillars of partnership in this model include the center, the agent, and a third component called the partner institution. In this format, the total financing of the agent and the partner institution must be at least 20 percent, and a maximum of 80 percent of the required liquidity is provided by the fund. An important point is that the cash contribution of neither party can be less than 5 percent. The purpose of creating this partnership model is to enable cooperation with other institutions such as universities, research institutes, research centers, science and technology parks, accelerators, etc. Accordingly, in this model, all interactions between the center and the agent are again the same, and the implementation processes are no different from the two-part model.