SAN FRANCISCO: It’s been a year since US rules went into effect enabling anyone — not just the ultra-wealthy — to buy a slice of a start-up.

Turns out, few are interested.

Investors sprinkled about $38 million (Dh139.46 million) across 142 companies since May 2016 when Title III of the JOBS Act allowed equity crowdfunding for non-accredited investors, according to data from industry tracker NextGen Crowdfunding LLC.

The slow start is a rounding error in the larger system — venture investors ploughed more than $69 billion into start-ups during 2016, according to the National Venture Capital Association — and a little surprising, according to Richard Swart, a founding board member of the Crowdfunding Professional Association.

“Everyone in the industry thought there’d be more uptake,” said Swart, who also serves as chief strategy officer at NextGen. “We all expected these numbers to be 2X to 5X what these numbers were.”

Swat said the practice is still in its infancy. Wefunder, StartEngine and SeedInvest are the primary crowdfunding platforms, and many founders aren’t aware that equity fund-raising is an option. Of those who explore it, many decide it’s not worth the hassle and expense.

NextGen data show companies typically spend from $20,000 to $50,000 on legal, accounting and marketing — a serious outlay for a start-up that’s only looking to raise a couple hundred thousand dollars.

Technology start-ups, quite understandably, have largely ignored the new fund-raising option because they benefit more from the existing system. Founders can raise an unlimited amount of money from accredited investors without spending a dime or having to broadly publicise company financial information. Cash from those investors is more valuable, too, because it comes with investors’ expertise and personal networks that founders can tap to hire employees and win customers.

Although the JOBS Act passed in 2012, regulators spent four years massaging details and installing safeguards until they were confident small-time investors would be protected. There may be additional tweaks to the law over the next year or so — the NVCA recently called for additional reforms — but for now the maximum a company can raise via crowdfunding is $1 million.

“We are at year five in a 10-year process,” said Swat, calling the first 12 months of the crowdfunding provisions a learning period. “I’m optimistic the Congress and the SEC will dial back on the regulation.”