Frank Demmler's Site
By Frank Demmler
Let’s
start with a few basics about how corporations work from a structure
perspective, and the mechanics of investments. [Note: the same concepts apply
to LLCs, but the vocabulary is different.]
When
you form your company, you will issue the initial shares of stock to the
founding team. For the sake of
simplicity, let’s say that you are the sole founder and you issue 400,000
shares of common stock to yourself. [Note: the number of initial shares is
essentially arbitrary, but it establishes a baseline from which lots of future
actions will be calculated, as you will see later in this article.]
Upon launch, the capitalization table would
look like this:
There
are no values provided for the dollar entries, because there are none.
The
division of the founder pie is established based upon the overall contributions
and value (past, current and future) of the founding team. While the cash contributed and wages foregone
will enter into this process, many other elements need to be considered. The net is that the founder pie does not have
a specific value that can be stated in dollars.
As we learned in last week’s column, the value can be whatever the
founder(s) wants to say it is.
In
this case, since you’re the only member of the founding team, you own 100% of
the company.
With
this as a starting point, it is important for you to understand that investors will buy new shares from the
company, not from the founder. Once
the corporation is established, it is a separate legal entity. Once
you have sold shares to an outsider, it is no longer “your company.” It is the shareholder’s company.
Let’s
take a look at how this plays out in an investment.
First, we need to
establish a definition:
Pre-financing
Value + Investment = Post-financing Value
Therefore, in the given
example, in order to determine the pre- and post- financing values, some simple
algebra will yield the following information:
If a person invests
$600,000 for 60% of the company, then the founder’s equity would be 40%. Since
400,000 shares represent 40% of the company, we can use division to determine
that the company has a total of 1,000,000 shares.
With that information we can fill in the
blanks, determining that the investor will buy 600,000 shares (1,000,000 –
400,000) for $1.00 per share ($600,000 invested divided by 600,000 shares
purchased).
On a post-financing basis,
the company would be worth $1,000,000 (1,000,000 shares outstanding multiplied
by the transaction share price of $1.00).
The pre-financing value
(the founder’s stake) would then be calculated as follows:
Post-financing
Value - Investment = Pre-financing Value
$1,000,000 -
$600,000 = $400,000
So far, so
good.
Let’s take a little
quiz. In the previous scenario, an
investor offered to buy 60% of a company for $600,000. How much would he buy
for $300,000?
Since $300,000 is one-half
of $600,000, you are likely to have answered 30%, one-half of 60%, and you’d be
wrong. The answer is almost 43%!
Deals are negotiated with
percentages, but they are structured with shares.
This appears to be a very
simple concept, and it is, but it can be very complex in its application. The results are often counterintuitive. That’s why an entrepreneur must recognize
that and be very facile at performing the necessary arithmetic.
It is not unusual for an
investor to do milestone investing, breaking an investment into more than one
piece. This way, it is possible to limit
the amount of the investment exposed at one time by tying subsequent portions
of the investment to specific accomplishments.
In this scenario, we have
broken the investment in half so that there are two rounds of $300,000
each. At the end of the two rounds, a
total of $600,000 will have been invested for 60% of the equity of the
company.
Let’s look at the
company’s capitalization table after the first $300,000 investment has been
made.
Contrary to the intuition
that might tell you that half of the investment amount should buy half of the
equity position of the full investment, the arithmetic works out differently.
$300,000 at $1 per share purchased 300,000 shares that represent 42.9% of the equity
of the company, not 30%.
How can this be?
When an investor purchases
equity from a company, he is purchasing shares and, therefore, the share base
of the company increases. In our
example, before financing, the founder owned 400,000 shares, which represented
100% of the outstanding equity. On
completion of a round of $300,000, the total outstanding shares of the company
increased from 400,000 shares to 700,000 shares, thereby yielding an equity
position for the investor of 42.9% of the equity at that time.
Then, if the funding is completed as scheduled,
an additional $300,000 buys the investor an additional 300,000 shares that are
also added to the share base of the company.
At the completion of this financing, 1 million shares of the company are
outstanding, of which the investor owns 60% or 600,000 shares, just like in the
first scenario.
Learning how to do the
Arithmetic of Deals is critical for all entrepreneurs.
·
Remember:
Investors are buying new shares from the company.
·
Remember: When
someone in addition to you owns shares in your company, it is no long “your
company.”
·
Remember: Deals
are negotiated with percentages, but they are structured with shares.
·
Open up your
spreadsheet and try a few different scenarios for your company.
Next week we’ll look at
some of the other issues that can arise around this concept.