Venture Capital Math
I've found that even sophisticated
entrepreneurs didn't necessarily grasp how valuation math (or "deal
algebra") worked. VCs talk about pre-money, post-money, and share price
as though these were universally defined terms that the average
American voter would understand. To insure everyone is talking about
the same thing, I started passing out this document. Recognize that
this is about the math behind the calculations, not the philosophy of
valuation (which Fred's blog addresses).
In a venture capital investment, the terminology and mathematics can
seem confusing at first, particularly given that the investors are able
to calculate the relevant numbers in their heads. The concepts are
actually not complicated, and with a few simple algebraic tips you will
be able to do the math in your head as well, leading to more effective
negotiation.
The essence of a venture capital transaction is that the investor puts
cash in the company in return for newly-issued shares in the company.
The state of affairs immediately prior to the transaction is referred
to as “pre-money,” and immediately after the transaction “post-money.”
The value of the whole company before the transaction, called the
“pre-money valuation” (and similar to a market capitalization) is just
the share price times the number of shares outstanding before the
transaction:
Pre-money Valuation = Share Price * Pre-money Shares
The total amount invested is just the share price times the number of
shares purchased:
Investment = Share Price * Shares Issued
Unlike when you buy publicly traded shares, however, the shares
purchased in a venture capital investment are new shares, leading to a
change in the number of shares outstanding:
Post-money Shares = Pre-money Shares + Shares Issued
And because the only immediate effect of the transaction on the value
of the company is to increase the amount of cash it has, the valuation
after the transaction is just increased by the amount of that cash:
Post-money Valuation = Pre-money Valuation + Investment
The portion of the company owned by the investors after the deal will
just be the number of shares they purchased divided by the total shares
outstanding:
Fraction Owned = Shares Issued /Post-money Shares
Using some simple algebra (substitute from the earlier equations), we
find out that there is another way to view this:
Fraction Owned = Investment / Post-money Valuation =
Investment / (Pre-money Valuation + Investment)
So when an investor proposes an investment of $2 million at $3 million
“pre” (short for premoney valuation), this means that the investors
will own 40% of the company after the transaction:
$2m / ($3m + $2m) = 2/5 = 40%
And if you have 1.5 million shares outstanding prior to the investment,
you can calculate the price per share:
Share Price = Pre-money Valuation / Pre-money Shares = $3m
/ 1.5m = $2.00
As well as the number of shares issued:
Shares Issued = Investment /Share Price = $2m / $2.00 = 1m
The key trick to remember is that share price is easier to calculate
with pre-money numbers, and fraction of ownership is easier to
calculate with post-money numbers; you switch back and forth by adding
or subtracting the amount of the investment. It is also important to
note that the share price is the same before and after the deal, which
can also be shown with some simple algebraic manipulations.
A few other points to note
-Investors will almost always require that the company set aside
additional shares for a stock option plan for employees. Investors will
assume and require that these shares are set aside prior to the
investment, thus diluting the founders.
-If there are multiple
investors, they must be treated as one in the calculations above.
-To determine an individual ownership
fraction, divide the individual investment by the post-money valuation
for the entire deal.
-For a subsequent financing, to keep the share price flat the pre-money
valuation of the new investment must
be the same as the post-money
valuation of the prior investment.
-For early-stage companies, venture investors are normally interested
in owning a particular fraction of the company for an appropriate
investment. The valuation is actually a derived number and does not
really mean anything about what the business is “worth.”
Author Brad Feld
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-
Keep in mind that you can
still get
loans with bad credit so do some
research before choosing venture
capitalism.
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