I do not care too much about listing but it is just a standard way to raise capital in some European countries. There are a few exchanges where it is standard to raise up to about $1-2m (but not much more) with listing costs of maybe $30-50k. I am not talking NYSE here. For some reason it is common practice to list a company even though this listing does not help much if an investor wants to exit due to lack of liquidity. Just an odd way things are in some European countries. I do not understand why it is like that but without listing it would be really hard to raise capital.
Creating a fund for $30k is certainly possible but raising enough assets for 2/20% to make sense is impossible for me, in my opinion. I do not believe "money will find you" with good results. There are many examples of CTAs that have great stats, have been in business for 10+ years, yet manage only $1m. That is why I thought of a company with all the pros and cons it entails.
I could then focus on trading, reporting to investors only once a quarter, without too much paperwork, admin costs, dealing with regulations, without the risk of being left with no capital due to redemptions, without having to answer investors' calls/messages about why we are down 0.1% or why we are up only 2% although the market (equity index which we have zero correlation with) is up 3%. Trading, compounding, paying out 10% of profits as dividends and that is it - my idea of how this would work.
I am open to suggestions - you have $300k, you can get $1-2m of investors' money but not more. What business model would you choose to make it most beneficial for yourself and the investors? Or perhaps you would trade your own money only?