Asset Manager

Updated:

Invest Mons-Borinage-Centre

Invest Mons-Borinage-Centre is a asset manager based in Mons; the Altss profile covers its classification, headquarters, registration, AUM band, and key...

Invest Mons-Borinage-Centre

General information

Firm type

Generalist

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

Europe

Country

Belgium

City

Mons

Corporate office

Rue des Quatre Fils Aymon 12-14, 7000 Mons, Belgium

Principals

Serge Roland

Chair of the Board of Directors

Damien De Dorlodot

Vice-Chair

Sylvie Creteur

Director

Sector focus

Enterprise SoftwareIndustrial TechDigital HealthEnergy Transition & Renewables

Frequently asked questions

Who controls Invest Mons-Borinage-Centre, and how does its governance work?

The firm's ownership is split between two shareholders. H.F.D.P, a private holding company, owns 54.55% of IMBC S.A., while Wallonie Entreprendre, the public investment arm of the Walloon Region, holds 45.45% and also owns 44.20% of the IMBC Capital Risque venture vehicle. Chairman Serge Roland and Vice-Chair Damien De Dorlodot represent the private majority, while the Wallonie Entreprendre stake ensures public-interest oversight. This hybrid structure means investment decisions must serve both financial returns and regional economic-development objectives.

What is the difference between IMBC S.A. and IMBC Capital Risque?

IMBC S.A. is the main investment company serving Mons-Borinage-Centre across multiple stages — start-up, growth, and corporate spin-offs — plus real estate project finance through its subsidiary IMBC Immo Lease. IMBC Capital Risque is a dedicated venture-capital vehicle with a nearly identical ownership structure (Wallonie Entreprendre holds 44.20%) but a narrower mandate focused on early-stage equity risk. Both operate within the same geographic territory but target different points on the maturity spectrum.

Who co-invests alongside IMBC in the region?

Deal flow often materializes through the region's family-owned industrial groups. Two named co-investors are Wanty, a construction and civil-engineering employer group, and Decube, a diversified family holding company. These relationships are characteristic of a territorial investment model where patient capital from local industrial families supplements IMBC's own balance sheet, creating club-style transactions without the formal fund-cycle constraints of traditional private equity.

Is IMBC a single-family office or a regionally mandated investment company?

IMBC is a regionally mandated investment company, not a family office. Its founding purpose is economic regeneration of the Mons-Borinage-Centre territory — a former coal-mining and steel basin in Hainaut province. The dual public-private shareholding structure and the territorial investment mandate distinguish it from a family office, which would serve the wealth-management needs of a single family.

Does IMBC invest outside the Mons-Borinage-Centre region?

No. IMBC's mandate is explicitly territorial, focused on the economic zone spanning Mons, La Louvière, and the Centre region of Hainaut. While this limits scalability, it gives the firm near-monopolistic access to local proprietary deal flow — particularly university spin-offs, corporate divestitures, and regional infrastructure projects — that generalist funds rarely see early enough to price competitively.

Who chairs investment decision-making at the firm?

Serge Roland serves as Chair of the Board of Directors and is the named investment lead for IMBC. Damien De Dorlodot, as Vice-Chair, is the other senior governance figure. Sylvie Creteur appears in the directorate with an executive function, likely handling day-to-day portfolio management. Investment-committee composition beyond these named principals has not been publicly disclosed.

How does IMBC relate to the Digital Wallonia ecosystem?

IMBC participates in Digital Wallonia, the regional digital-strategy platform that coordinates public and private actors across Wallonia's technology sector. This affiliation provides deal-flow visibility into software and digital startups emerging from the region and aligns IMBC's investment activity with broader government digital-transformation priorities. The firm also supports 1890.be, a regional entrepreneurship-information service that funnels early-stage company intelligence.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

Need institutional-grade insight on asset managers?

Altss delivers:

Principals with verified direct contactsAllocation history by asset classOSINT-derived deal signals
Book a demo

Prefer a guided tour?

We’ll walk you through:

Interactive funding timelinesCustom mandate & allocation filters
Book a demo

More Mons Generalist profiles