/s
You have not replied to my wall of text analysis or the question I raised. You aren't really setting yourself up for success with an attitude like that.
Your analysis was not warranted. My questions are basic.
Fine, here you go:
1) What would a "fair" valuation of a company that is pulling in $1m/mo. One of the problems I have with finding value is the volatility of the coin prices. Our mining will be strictly alt-coin, which is considerably more unstable than bitcoin.
If that company were already pulling in $1m/month in net profit (not EBIT or EBITDA, and I assume you're not retarded and quoting a gross revenue figure for valuation) would be in the same region as companies such as a mid-sized bank. Given proper information and long-term confidence I would value the company using a discounted cash-flow analysis. Given the information scarcity in this post, it's probably just easier to find a profitable, publicly listed company and use them for a thumb suck. By my calculations a company showing long-term growth and that is that profitable would be worth around $115 million. Given the short-term profitability normally associated within mining, however, you probably won't feasibly be able to price the company beyond $20 million.
If you don't currently net $1m/month in profit then you can ignore the entire paragraph above. Ideas are worthless, execution is everything.
2) What is a fair ROI for investors?
Because most of the companies seeking funding here are startups, investors would be looking for rapid profitability and ~40% or greater annualised ROI.
3) Considering the lack of trust in the securities exchanges, would a direct-share offering deter investors from buying shares?
Yes, it would very much deter them. Many investors go short on