401(K) Plan: A type of qualified retirement plan in which
employees make salary reduced, pre-tax contributions to an employee trust. In
many cases, the employer will match employee contributions up to a specified
level.
"A" Round: A financing event
whereby venture capitalists invest in a company that was previously financed by
founders and/or angels. The "A" is from Series "A" Preferred stock. See "B"
round.
Accredited Investor: Defined by Rule 501 of Regulation D, an individual
(i.e. non-corporate) "accredited investor" is a either a natural person who has
individual net worth, or joint net worth with the person’s spouse, that exceeds
$1 million at the time of the purchase OR a natural person with income exceeding
$200,000 in each of the two most recent years or joint income with a spouse
exceeding $300,000 for those years and a reasonable expectation of the same
income level in the current year.
Accrued Interest: The interest due on preferred stock or a bond since the
last interest payment was made.
Acquisition: The process of gaining control, possession or ownership of a
private portfolio company by an operating company or conglomerate.
ACRS: Accelerated Cost Recovery System. The IRS approved method of
calculating depreciation expense for tax purposes. Also known as Accelerated
Depreciation.
ADR: American Depositary Receipt (ADR's). A security issued by a U.S.
bank in place of the foreign shares held in trust by that bank, thereby
facilitating the trading of foreign shares in U.S. markets.
Advisory Board: A group of external advisors to a private equity
group or portfolio company. Advice provided varies from overall strategy to
portfolio valuation. Less formal than a Board of Directors.
Allocation: The amount of securities assigned to an investor, broker, or
underwriter in an offering. An allocation can be equal to or less than the
amount indicated by the investor during the subscription process depending on
market demand for the securities.
Alternative Assets: This term describes non-traditional asset
classes. They include private equity, venture capital, hedge funds and real
estate. Alternative assets are generally more risky than traditional assets, but
they should, in theory, generate higher returns for investors.
Amortization: An Accounting procedure that gradually reduces the book
value of an intangible asset through periodic charges to income.
AMT: Alternative Minimum Tax. A tax designed to prevent wealthy investors
from using tax shelters to avoid income tax. The calculation of the AMT takes
into account tax preference items.
Angel Financing: Capital raised for a private company from
independently wealthy investors. This capital is generally used as seed
financing.
Angel Investor: A person who provides backing to very early-stage
businesses or business concepts. Angel investors are typically entrepreneurs who
have become wealthy, often in technology-related industries.
Anti-dilution provisions: Contractual measures that allow investors to
keep a constant share of a firm's equity in light of subsequent equity issues.
These may give investors preemptive rights to purchase new stock at the offering
price. [See Full Ratchet and weighted Average]
Archangel : Usually an outsider hired by a syndicate of angel investors
to perform due diligence on investment opportunities and coordinate allotment of
investment duties among members. Archangels typically have no financial
commitment to the syndicate.
Asset-backed loan: Loan, typically from a commercial bank, that is backed
by asset collateral, often belonging to the entrepreneurial firm or the
entrepreneur.
Automatic conversion: Immediate conversion of an investor's priority
shares to ordinary shares at the time of a company's underwriting before an
offering of its stock on an exchange.
Average IRR: The arithmetic mean of the internal rate of return.
"B"
Round: A financing event whereby professional investors such as venture
capitalists are sufficiently interested in a company to provide additional funds
after the "A" round of financing. Subsequent rounds are called "C", "D", and so
on.
Balance Sheet: A condensed financial statement showing the nature
and amount of a company's assets, liabilities, and capital on a given date.
Bankruptcy: An inability to pay debts. Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code
deals with reorganization, which allows the debtor to remain in business and
negotiate for a restructuring of debt.
BATNA (best alternative to a negotiated agreement): A no-agreement
alternative reflecting the course of action a party to a negotiation will take
if the proposed deal is not possible.
Bear Hug: An offer made directly to the Board of Directors of a
target company. Usually made to increase the pressure on the target with the
threat that a tender offer may follow.
Best Efforts: An offering in which the investment banker agrees to
distribute as much of the offering as possible, and return any unsold shares to
the issuer.
Blue Sky Laws: A common term that refers to laws passed by various states
to protect the public against securities fraud. The term originated when a judge
ruled that a stock had as much value as a patch of blue sky.
Board rights: Allowing an investor to take a seat on a firm's board of
directors.
Book Value: Book value of a stock is determined from a company's balance
sheet by adding all current and fixed assets and then deducting all debts, other
liabilities and the liquidation price of any preferred issues. The sum arrived
at is divided by the number of common shares outstanding and the result is book
value per common share.
Bootstrapping: Means of financing a small firm by employing highly
creative ways of using and acquiring resources without raising equity from
traditional sources or borrowing money from the bank.
Bridge Financing: A limited amount of equity or short-term debt
financing typically raised within 6-18 months of an anticipated public offering
or private placement meant to "bridge" a company to the next round of financing.
Broad-Based Weighted Average Ratchet: A type of anti-dilution mechanism.
A weighted average ratchet adjusts downward the price per share of the preferred
stock of investor A due to the issuance of new preferred shares to new investor
B at a price lower than the price investor A originally received. Investor A's
preferred stock is re-priced to a weighed average of investor A's price and
investor B's price. A broad-based ratchet uses all common stock outstanding on a
fully diluted basis (including all convertible securities, warrants and options)
in the denominator of the formula for determining the new weighed average price.
Compare Narrow-Based Weighted Average ratchet and Chapter 2.9.4.d.ii of the
Encyclopedia.
Burn Out / Cram Down: Extraordinary dilution, by reason of a round of
financing, of a non-participating investor's percentage ownership in the issuer.
Burn Rate: The rate at which a company expends net cash over a certain
period, usually a month.
Business Development Company (BDC): A vehicle established by Congress to
allow smaller, retail investors to participate in and benefit from investing in
small private businesses as well as the revitalization of larger private
companies.
Business Judgment Rule: The legal principle that assumes the board of
directors is acting in the best interests of the shareholders unless it can be
clearly established that it is not. If the board was found to violate the
business judgment rule, it would be in violation of its fiduciary duties to the
shareholders.
Business Plan: A document that describes the entrepreneur's idea, the market
problem, proposed solution, business and revenue models, marketing strategy,
technology, company profile, competitive landscape, as well as financial data
for coming years. The business plan opens with a brief executive summary, most
probably the most important element of the document due to the time constraints
of venture capital funds and angels.
CAGR: Compound Annual Growth Rate. The year over year
growth rate applied to an investment or other aspect of a firm using a base
amount.
Call Option: The right to buy a security at a given price (or range)
within a specific time period.
Capital (or Assets) Under Management: The amount of capital available to a
fund management team for venture investments.
Capital Call: Also known as a draw down - When a venture capital firm has
decided where it would like to invest, it will approach its investors in order
to "draw down" the money. The money will already have been pledged to the fund
but this is the actual act of transferring the money so that it reaches the
investment target.
Capital Gains: The difference between an asset's purchase price and
selling price, when the selling price is greater. Long-term capital gains (on
assets held for a year or longer) are taxed at a lower rate than ordinary
income.
Capitalization Table: Also called a "Cap Table", this is a table showing
the total amount of the various securities issued by a firm. This typically
includes the amount of investment obtained from each source and the securities
distributed -- e.g. common and preferred shares, options, warrants, etc. -- and
respective capitalization ratios.
Capitalize: To record an outlay as an asset (as opposed to an Expense),
which is subject to depreciation or amortization.
Captive funds: A venture capital firm owned by a larger financial
institution, such as a bank.
Carried Interest: The portion of any gains realized by the fund to which
the fund managers are entitled, generally without having to contribute capital
to the fund. Carried interest payments are customary in the venture capital
industry, in order to create a significant economic incentive for venture
capital fund managers to achieve capital gains.
Cash Position: The amount of cash available to a company at a given point
in time. Claim Dilution A reduction in the likelihood that one or more of the
firm's claimants will be fully repaid, including time value of money
considerations.
Catch-up: This is a common term of the private equity partnership
agreement. Once the general partner provides its limited partners with their
preferred return, if any, it then typically enters a catch-up period in which it
receives the majority or all of the profits until the agreed upon profit-split,
as determined by the carried interest, is reached.
Chapter 11: The part of the Bankruptcy Code that provides for
reorganization of a bankrupt company's assets.
Chapter 7: The part of the Bankruptcy Code that provides for liquidation
of a company's assets.
Chinese wall: A barrier against information flows between different
divisions or operating groups within banks and securities firms. Examples
include a policy barrier between the trust department from making investment
decisions based on any substantive inside information that may come into the
possession of other bank departments. The term also refers to barriers against
information flows between corporate finance and equity research and trading
operations.
Clawback: A clawback obligation represents the general partner’s promise
that, over the life of the fund, the managers will not receive a greater share
of the fund’s distributions than they bargained for. Generally, this means that
the general partner may not keep distributions representing more than a
specified percentage (e.g., 20%) of the fund’s cumulative profits, if any. When
triggered, the clawback will require that the general partner return to the
fund’s limited partners an amount equal to what is determined to be "excess"
distributions.
Closed-end Fund: A type of fund that has a fixed number of shares
outstanding, which are offered during an initial subscription period, similar to
an initial public offering. After the subscription period is closed, the shares
are traded on an exchange between investors, like a regular stock. The market
price of a closed-end fund fluctuates in response to investor demand as well as
changes in the values of its holdings or its Net Asset Value. Unlike open-end
mutual funds, closed-end funds do not stand ready to issue and redeem shares on
a continuous basis.
Closing: An investment event occurring after the required legal documents
are implemented between the investor and a company and after the capital is
transferred in exchange for company ownership or debt obligation.
Co-investment: The syndication of a private equity financing round or an
investment by an individuals (usually general partners) alongside a private
equity fund in a financing round.
Collar Agreement: Agreed upon adjustments in the number of shares offered
in a stock-for-stock exchange to account for price fluctuations before the
completion of the deal.
Committed Capital: The total dollar amount of capital pledged to a
private equity fund.
Committed funds or raised funds: Capital committed by investors. Cash to
the maximum of these commitments may be requested or drawn down by the private
equity managers usually on a deal-by-deal basis. This amount is different from
invested funds for three reasons. Firstly, most partnerships will initially
invest only between 80% and 95% of committed funds (possibly even less). Second,
it may be necessary in early years to deduct the annual management fee that is
used to cover the cost of operation of a fund. Third, payback to investors
usually begins before the final draw down of commitments has taken place. To the
extent that capital invested does not equal capital committed, limited partners
will have their private equity returns diluted by the much lower cash returns
earned on the un-invested portion. Avoiding this situation is the main reason
for the Partners Group over-commitment model, which aims to keep Partners Group
products as close 100% invested as possible.
Common Stock: A unit of ownership of a corporation. In the case of a
public company, the stock is traded between investors on various exchanges.
Owners of common stock are typically entitled to vote on the selection of
directors and other important events and in some cases receive dividends on
their holdings. Investors who purchase common stock hope that the stock price
will increase so the value of their investment will appreciate. Common stock
offers no performance guarantees. Additionally, in the event that a corporation
is liquidated, the claims of secured and unsecured creditors and owners of bonds
and preferred stock take precedence over the claims of those who own common
stock.
Company buy-back: The redemption of private or restricted holdings by the
portfolio company itself. In essence the company is buying out the VC's
interest.
Consolidation: Also called a leveraged rollup, this is an investment
strategy in which a leveraged buyout (LBO) firm acquires a series of companies
in the same or complementary fields, with the goal of becoming a dominant
regional or nationwide player in that industry. In some cases, a holding company
will be created to acquire the new companies. In other cases, an initial
acquisition may serve as the platform through which the other acquisitions will
be made.
Conversion Ratio: The number of shares of stock into which a convertible
security may be converted. The conversion ration equals the par value of the
convertible security divided by the conversion price.
Convertible Security: A bond, debenture or preferred stock that is
exchangeable for another type of security (usually common stock) at a pre-stated
price. Convertibles are appropriate for investors who want higher income, or
liquidation preference protection, than is available from common stock, together
with greater appreciation potential than regular bonds offer. (See Common Stock,
Dilution, and Preferred Stock).
Corporate Charter: The document prepared when a corporation is formed. The
Charter sets forth the objectives and goals of the corporation, as well as a
complete statement of what the corporation can and cannot do while pursuing
these goals.
Corporate Resolution: A document stating that the corporation's board of
directors has authorized a particular individual to act on behalf of the
corporation.
Corporate Venturing: Venture capital provided by [in-house investment
funds of] large corporations to further their own strategic interests.
Corporation: A legal, taxable entity chartered by a state or the federal
government. Ownership of a corporation is held by the stockholders.
Covenant: A protective clause in an agreement.
Cumulative Dividends: Dividends that accrue at a fixed rate until paid
are "Cumulative Dividends" which are payments to shareholders made with respect
to an investor's Preferred Stock. Generally, holders of Preferred Shares are
contractually entitled to receive dividends prior to holders of Common Stock.
Dividends can accumulate at a fixed rate (for example 8%) or simply be payable
as and when determined by a company's Board of Directors in such amount as
determined by the board. Because venture backed companies typically need to
conserve cash, the use of Cumulative Dividends is customary with the result that
the Liquidation Preference increases by an amount equal to the Cumulative
Dividends. Cumulative Dividends are often waived if the Preferred Stock converts
to Common Stock prior to an IPO but may be included in the aggregate value of
Preferred Stock applied to the Conversion Ratio for other purposes. Dividends
that are not cumulative are generally called "when, as and if declared
dividends."
Cumulative Preferred Stock: A stock having a provision that if one or
more dividend payments are omitted, the omitted dividends (arrearage) must be
paid before dividends may be paid on the company's common stock.
Cumulative Voting Rights: When shareholders have the right to pool their
votes to concentrate them on an election of one or more directors rather than
apply their votes to the election of all directors. For example, if the company
has 12 openings to the Board of Directors, in statutory voting, a shareholder
with 10 shares casts 10 votes for each opening (10x12= 120 votes). Under the
cumulative voting method however, the shareholder may opt to cast all 120 votes
for one nominee (or any other distribution he might choose). Compare Statutory
Voting.
Deal Flow: The measure of the number of potential
investments that a fund reviews in any given period.
Deficiency Letter: A letter sent by the SEC to the issuer of a new issue
regarding omissions of material fact in the registration statement.
Demand Rights: Contemplate that the company must initiate and pursue the
registration of a public offering including, although not necessarily limited
to, the shares proffered by the requesting shareholder(s).
Depreciation: An expense recorded to reduce the value of a long-term
tangible asset. Since it is a non-cash expense, it increases free cash flow
while decreasing the amount of a company's reported earnings.
Dilution: A reduction in the percentage ownership of a given shareholder
in a company caused by the issuance of new shares.
Dilution Protection: Mainly applies to convertible securities. Standard
provision whereby the conversion ratio is changed accordingly in the case of a
stock dividend or extraordinary distribution to avoid dilution of a convertible
bondholder's potential equity position. Adjustment usually requires a split or
stock dividend in excess of 5% or issuance of stock below book value. Share
Purchase Agreements also typically contain anti-dilution provisions to protect
investors in the event that a future round of financing occurs at a valuation
that is below the valuation of the current round.
Director: Person elected by shareholders to serve on the board of
directors. The directors appoint the president, vice president and all other
operating officers, and decide when dividends should be paid (among other
matters).
Disbursement: The investments by funds into their portfolio companies.
Disclosure Document: A booklet outlining the risk factors associated with
an investment.
Distressed debt: Corporate bonds of companies that have either filed for
bankruptcy or appear likely to do so in the near future. The strategy of
distressed debt firms involves first becoming a major creditor of the target
company by snapping up the company's bonds at pennies on the dollar. This gives
them the leverage they need to call most of the shots during either the
reorganization, or the liquidation, of the company. In the event of a
liquidation, distressed debt firms, by standing ahead of the equity holders in
the line to be repaid, often recover all of their money, if not a healthy return
on their investment. Usually, however, the more desirable outcome is a
re-organization that allows the company to emerge from bankruptcy protection. As
part of these reorganizations, distressed debt firms often forgive the debt
obligations of the company, in return for enough equity in the company to
compensate them. (This strategy explains why distressed debt firms are
considered to be private equity firms.)
Distribution: Disbursement of realized cash or stock to a venture capital
fund's limited partners upon termination of the fund.
Diversification: The process of spreading investments among various
different types of securities and various companies in different fields.
Dividend: The payments designated by the Board of Directors to be
distributed pro-rata among the shares outstanding. On preferred shares, it is
generally a fixed amount. On common shares, the dividend varies with the fortune
of the company and the amount of cash on hand and may be omitted if business is
poor or if the Directors determine to withhold earnings to invest in capital
expenditures or research and development.
Down Round: Issuance of shares at a later date and a lower price than
previous investment rounds.
Drag-Along Rights: A majority shareholders' right, obligating shareholders
whose shares are bound into the shareholders' agreement to sell their shares
into an offer the majority wishes to execute.
Due Diligence: A process undertaken by potential investors -- individuals
or institutions -- to analyze and assess the desirability, value, and potential
of an investment opportunity.
Early Stage: A state of a company that typically has completed its seed
stage and has a founding or core senior management team, has proven its concept
or completed its beta test, has minimal revenues, and no positive earnings or
cash flows.
EBITDA: "Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization":
A measure of cash flow calculated as: Revenue - Expenses (excluding tax,
interest, depreciation and amortization). EBITDA looks at the cash flow of a
company. By not including interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, we can
clearly see the amount of money a company brings in. This is especially useful
when one company is considering a takeover of another because the EBITDA would
cover any loan payments needed to finance the takeover.
Economies of Scale: Economic principle that as the volume of production
increases, the cost of producing each unit decreases.
Elevator Pitch: An extremely concise presentation of an entrepreneur's
idea, business model, company solution, marketing strategy, and competition
delivered to potential investors. Should not last more than a few minutes, or
the duration of an elevator ride.
Employee Stock Option Plan (ESOP): A plan established by a company
whereby a certain number of shares is reserved for purchase and issuance to key
employees. Such shares usually vest over a certain period of time to serve as an
incentive for employees to build long term value for the company.
Employee Stock Ownership Plan: A trust fund established by a company to
purchase stock on behalf of employees.
Equity Kicker: Option for private equity investors to purchase shares at
a discount. Typically associated with mezzanine financings where a small number
of shares or warrants are added to what is primarily a debt financing.
ERISA: ERISA shall mean the United States Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, as amended, including the regulations promulgated
thereunder.
ERISA Significant Participation Test: A test that is satisfied if the
General Partner determines in its reasonable discretion that Persons that are
"benefit plan investors" within the meaning of Section (f)(2) of the Final
Regulation constitute or are expected to constitute at least 25 percent in
interest of the Limited Partners. Note that the test is 25% of the interests
of all the limited partners, which means 20% (+/-) in the partnership as a
whole, taking into account the general partner's interest.
Evergreen Promise: This occurs when the company agrees to pay an
employee's salary for a number of years, regardless of when termination occurs,
the day after he or she is employed or 10 years after.
Exercise price: The price at which an option or warrant can be exercised.
Exit Strategy: A fund's intended method for liquidating its holdings
while achieving the maximum possible return. These strategies depend on the exit
climates including market conditions and industry trends. Exit strategies can
include selling or distributing the portfolio company's shares after an initial
public offering (IPO), a sale of the portfolio company or a re-capitalization.
Exiting climates: The conditions that influence the viability and
attractiveness of various exit strategies.
Exits (AKA divestments or realizations): The means by which a private equity
firm realizes a return on its investment. Private equity investors generally
receive their principal returns via a capital gain on the sale or flotation of
investments. Exit methods include a trade sale (most common), flotation on a
stock exchange (common), a share repurchase by the company or its management or
a refinancing of the business (least common). A Secondary purchase of the
company by another private equity firm is becoming an increasingly common
phenomenon. Within Partners Group, secondary purchases are often used to quickly
reach a high investment level in a new product.
Factoring: A procedure in which a firm can sell its
accounts receivable invoices to a factoring firm, which pays a percentage of the
invoices immediately, and the remainder (minus a service fee) when the accounts
receivable are actually paid off by the firm's customers.
Final Regulation: An ERISA term, it is the United States Department of
Labor's Final Regulation relating to the definition of "plan assets" in (29
C.F.R. §2510.3-101).
Finder: A person who helps to arrange a transaction.
Flipping: The act of buying shares in an IPO and selling them immediately
for a profit. Brokerage firms underwriting new stock issues tend to discourage
flipping, and will often try to allocate shares to investors who intend to hold
on to the shares for some time. However, the temptation to flip a new issue once
it has risen in price sharply is too irresistible for many investors who have
been allocated shares in a hot issue.
Flotation: When a firm's shares start trading on a formal stock exchange,
such as the NASDAQ or the NYSE. This is probably the most profitable exit route
for entrepreneurs and their financial backers.
Follow-on funding: Companies often require several rounds of funding. If
a private equity firm has invested in a particular company in the past, and then
provides additional funding at a later stage, this is known as 'follow-on
funding'.
Form 10-K: This is the annual report that most reporting companies file
with the Commission. It provides a comprehensive overview of the registrant's
business. The report must be filed within 90 days after the end of the company's
fiscal year.
Form 10-KSB: This is the annual report filed by reporting "small business
issuers." It provides a comprehensive overview of the company's business,
although its requirements call for slightly less detailed information than
required by Form 10-K. The report must be filed within 90 days after the end of
the company's fiscal year.
Form S-1: The form can be used to register securities for which no other
form is authorized or prescribed, except securities of foreign governments or
political sub-divisions thereof.
Form S-2: This is a simplified optional registration form that may be
used by companies that have been required to report under the '34 Act for a
minimum of three years and have timely filed all required reports during the 12
calendar months and any portion of the month immediately preceding the filing of
the registration statement. Unlike Form S-1, it permits incorporation by
reference from the company's annual report to stockholders (or annual report on
Form 10-K) and periodic reports. Delivery of these incorporated documents as
well as the prospectus to investors may be required.
Form SB-2: This form may be used by "small business issuers" to register
securities to be sold for cash. This form requires less detailed information
about the issuer's business than Form S-1.
Founders' Shares: Shares owned by a company's founders upon its
establishment.
Free cash flow: The cash flow of a company available to service the
capital structure of the firm. Typically measured as operating cash flow less
capital expenditures and tax obligations.
Full Ratchet Anti-dilution: The sale of a single share at a price less
than the favored investors paid reduces the conversion price of the favored
investors' convertible preferred stock "to the penny". For example, from $1.00
to 50 cents, regardless of the number of lower priced shares sold.
Fully Diluted Earnings Per Share: Earnings per share expressed as if all
outstanding convertible securities and warrants have been exercised.
Fully Diluted Outstanding Shares: The number of shares representing total
company ownership, including common shares and current conversion or exercised
value of the preferred shares, options, warrants, and other convertible
securities.
Fund age: The age of a fund (in years) from its first takedown to the
time an IRR is calculated.
Fund Focus: The indicated area of specialization of a venture capital
fund usually expressed as Balanced, Seed and Early Stage, Later Stage, Mezzanine
or Leveraged Buyout (LBO).
Fund of funds: A fund set up to distribute investments among a selection
of private equity fund managers, who in turn invest the capital directly. Fund
of funds are specialist private equity investors and have existing relationships
with firms. They may be able to provide investors with a route to investing in
particular funds that would otherwise be closed to them. Investing in fund of
funds can also help spread the risk of investing in private equity because they
invest the capital in a variety of funds.
Fund Size: The total amount of capital committed by the investors of a
venture capital fund.
GAAP: Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. The common
set of accounting principles, standards and procedures. GAAP is a combination of
authoritative standards set by standard-setting bodies as well as accepted ways
of doing accounting.
Gatekeeper : Specialist advisers who assist institutional investors in
their private equity allocation decisions. Institutional investors with little
experience of the asset class or those with limited resources often use them to
help manage their private equity allocation. Gatekeepers usually offer tailored
services according to their clients' needs, including private equity fund
sourcing and due diligence through to complete discretionary mandates.
GDR's: Global Depositary Receipt (GDR's). Receipts for shares in a
foreign based corporation traded in capital markets around the world. While
ADR's permit foreign corporations to offer shares to American citizens, GDR's
allow companies in Europe, Asia and the US to offer shares in many markets
around the world.
General Partner (GP): The partner in a limited partnership responsible for
all management decisions of the partnership. The GP has a fiduciary
responsibility to act for the benefit of the limited partners (LPs), and is
fully liable for its actions.
General partner clawback: This is a common term of the private equity
partnership agreement. To the extent that the general partner receives more than
its fair share of profits, as determined by the carried interest, the general
partner clawback holds the individual partners responsible for paying back the
limited partners what they are owed.
General partner contribution: The amount of capital that the fund manager
contributes to its own fund in the same way that a limited partner does. This is
an important way in which limited partners can ensure that their interests are
aligned with those of the general partner. The U.S. Department of Treasury
recently removed the legal requirement of the general partner to contribute at
least 1 percent of fund capital. However, a 1 percent general partner
contribution remains common, particularly among venture capital funds.
Golden Handcuffs: This occurs when an employee is required to relinquish
unvested stock when terminating his employment contract early.
Golden Parachute: Employment contract of upper management that provides a
large payout upon the occurrence of certain control transactions, such as a
certain percentage share purchase by an outside entity or when there is a tender
offer for a certain percentage of a company's shares.
Hedge of hedging: The practice of reducing price
fluctuation risk by taking a position in futures equal and opposite to an
existing or anticipated cash position, or by shorting a security similar to one
in which the long position is established. It is used by banks, corporations and
individuals by buying (long) or selling (short) in the financial futures market,
and it is also used in covering long or short positions in foreign currencies.
Hockey stick projections: The general shape and form of a chart showing
revenue, customers, cash, or some other financial or operational measure that
increases dramatically at some point in the future. Entrepreneurs often develop
business plans with hockey stick charts to impress potential investors.
Holding Company: A corporation that owns the securities of another, in
most cases with voting control.
Holding Period: The amount of time an investor has held an investment.
The period begins on the date of purchase and ends on the date of sale, and
determines whether a gain or loss is considered short-term or long-term, for
capital gains tax purposes.
Hot Issue: A newly issued stock that is in great public demand.
Technically, it is when the secondary market price on the effective date is
above the new issue offering price. Hot issues usually experience a dramatic
rise in price at their initial public offering because the market demand
outweighs the supply.
Hurdle Rate: The internal rate of return that a fund must achieve before
its general partners or managers may receive an increased interest in the
proceeds of the fund. Often, if the expected rate of return on an investment is
below the hurdle rate, the project is not undertaken.
Incubator : An entity designed to nurture business
concepts or new technologies to the point that they become attractive to venture
capitalists. An incubator typically provides both physical space and some or all
of the services-legal, managerial, and/or technical-needed for a business
concept to be developed. Incubators often are backed by venture firms, which use
them to generate early-stage investment opportunities.
Initial Public Offering (IPO): The sale or distribution of a stock of a
portfolio company to the public for the first time. IPOs are often an
opportunity for the existing investors (often venture capitalists) to receive
significant returns on their original investment. During periods of market
downturns or corrections the opposite is true.
Institutional Investors: Organizations that professionally invest,
including insurance companies, depository institutions, pension funds,
investment companies, mutual funds, and endowment funds.
Intellectual property: A venture's intangible assets, such as patents,
copyrights, trademarks, and brand name.
Investment Company Act of 1940: Investment Company Act shall mean the as
amended, including the rules and regulations promulgated there-under.
Investment Letter: A letter signed by an investor purchasing unregistered
long securities under Regulation D, in which the investor attests to the
long-term investment nature of the purchase. These securities must be held
for a minimum of 1 year before they can be sold.
IRA Rollover: The reinvestment of assets received as a lump-sum distribution
from a qualified tax-deferred retirement plan. Reinvestment may be the entire
lump sum or a portion thereof. If reinvestment is done within 60 days, there are
no tax consequences.
IRR: Internal Rate of Return. A typical measure of how VC Funds measure
performance. IRR is a technically a discount rate: the rate at which the present
value of a series of investments is equal to the present value of the returns on
those investments.
ISO: Incentive Stock Option. Plan that qualifying options are free of tax
at the date of grant and the date of exercise. Profits on shares sold after
being held at least 2 years from the date of grant or 1 year from the date of
exercise are subject to favorable capital gains tax rate.
Issue Price: The price per share deemed to have been paid for a series of
Preferred Stock. This number is important because Cumulative Dividends, the
Liquidation Preference and Conversion Ratios are all based on Issue Price. In
some cases, it is not the actual price paid. The most common example is where a
company does a bridge financing (a common way for investors to provide capital
without having to value the Company as a whole) and sells debt that is
convertible into the next series of Preferred Stock sold by the Company at a
discount to the Issue Price.
Issued Shares: The amount of common shares that a corporation has sold
(issued).
Issuer: Refers to the organization issuing or proposing to issue a
security.
J-Curve Effect: The curve realized by plotting the returns
generated by a private equity fund against time (from inception to termination).
The common practice of paying the management fee and start-up costs out of the
first draw-down does not produce an equivalent book value. As a result, a
private equity fund will initially show a negative return. When the first
realizations are made, the fund returns start to rise quite steeply. After about
three to five years, the interim IRR will give a reasonable indication of the
definitive IRR. This period is generally shorter for buyout funds than for
early-stage and expansion funds.
Key Employees: Professional management attracted by the founder to run
the company. Key employees are typically retained with warrants and ownership of
the company.
Later Stage: A fund investment strategy involving
financing for the expansion of a company that is producing, shipping and
increasing its sales volume. Later stage funds often provide the financing to
help a company achieve critical mass in order to position its
Lead Investor: Also known as a bell cow investor. Member of a syndicate
of private equity investors holding the largest stake, in charge of arranging
the financing and most actively involved in the overall project
Lemon: An investment that has a poor or negative rate of return. An old
venture capital adage claims that "lemons ripen before plums."
Leveraged Buyout (LBO): A takeover of a company, using a combination of
equity and borrowed funds. Generally, the target company's assets act as the
collateral for the loans taken out by the acquiring group. The acquiring group
then repays the loan from the cash flow of the acquired company. For example, a
group of investors may borrow funds, using the assets of the company as
collateral, in order to take over a company. Or the management of the company
may use this vehicle as a means to regain control of the company by converting a
company from public to private. In most LBOs, public shareholders receive a
premium to the market price of the shares.
Lifestyle firms: Category comprising around 90 percent of all start-ups.
These firms merely afford a reasonable living for their founders, rather than
incurring the risks associated with high growth. These ventures typically have
growth rates below 20 percent annually, have five-year revenue projections below
$10 million, and are primarily funded internally and only very rarely with
outside equity funds.
Limited Partner (LP): An investor in a limited partnership who has no
voice in the management of the partnership. LP's have limited liability and
usually have priority over GP's upon liquidation of the partnership.
Limited partner clawback: This is a common term of the private equity
partnership agreement. It is intended to protect the general partner against
future claims, should the general partner of the limited partnership become the
subject of a lawsuit. Under this provision, a fund's limited partners commit to
pay for any legal judgment imposed upon the limited partnership or the general
partner. Typically, this clause includes limitations in the timing or amount of
the judgment, such as that it cannot exceed the limited partners' committed
capital to the fund.
Limited Partnerships: An organization comprised of a general partner, who
manages a fund, and limited partners, who invest money but have limited
liability and are not involved with the day-to-day management of the fund. In
the typical venture capital fund, the general partner receives a management fee
and a percentage of the profits (or carried interest). The limited partners
receive income, capital gains, and tax benefits.
Liquidation: 1) The process of converting securities into cash. 2) The
sale of the assets of a company to one or more acquirers in order to pay off
debts. In the event that a corporation is liquidated, the claims of secured and
unsecured creditors and owners of bonds and preferred stock take precedence over
the claims of those who own common stock.
Liquidation Preference: The amount per share that a holder of a given series
of Preferred Stock will receive prior to distribution of amounts to holders of
other series of Preferred Stock of Common Stock. This is usually designated as a
multiple of the Issue Price, for example 2X or 3X, and there may be multiple
layers of Liquidation Preferences as different groups of investors buy shares in
different series. For example, holders of Series B Preferred Stock may be
entitled to receive 3X their Issue Price, and then if any money is left, holders
of Series A Preferred Stock may be entitled to receive 2X their Issue Price and
then holders of Common Stock receive whatever is left. The trigger for the
payment of the Liquidation Preference is a sale or liquidation of the company,
such as a merger or other transaction where the company stockholders end up with
less than half of the ownership of the new entity or a liquidation of the
company.
Liquidity Event: An event that allows a VC to realize a gain or loss on
an investment. The ending of a private equity provider’s involvement in a
business venture with a view to realizing an internal return on investment. Most
common exit routes include Initial Public Offerings [IPOs], buy backs, trade
sales and secondary buy outs. See also: Exit strategy
Lock-up Period: The period of time that certain stockholders have agreed
to waive their right to sell their shares of a public company. Investment banks
that underwrite initial public offerings generally insist upon lockups of at
least 180 days from large shareholders (1% ownership or more) in order to allow
an orderly market to develop in the shares. The shareholders that are subject to
lockup usually include the management and directors of the company, strategic
partners and such large investors. These shareholders have typically invested
prior to the IPO at a significantly lower price to that offered to the public
and therefore stand to gain considerable profits. If a shareholder attempts to
sell shares that are subject to lockup during the lockup period, the transfer
agent will not permit the sale to be completed.
Lower quartile: The point at which 75% of all returns in a group are
greater and 25% are lower.
Management buy-out (MBO): A private equity firm will often
provide financing to enable current operating management to acquire or to buy at
least 50 per cent of the business they manage. In return, the private equity
firm usually receives a stake in the business. This is one of the least risky
types of private equity investment because the company is already established
and the managers running it know the business - and the market it operates in -
extremely well.
Management Fee: Compensation for the management of a venture fund's
activities, paid from the fund to the general partner or investment advisor.
This compensation generally includes an annual management fee.
Management Team: The persons who oversee the activities of a venture
capital fund.
Mandatory Redemption: is a right of an investor to require the company to
repurchase some or all of an investor's shares at a stated price at a given time
in the future. The purchase price is usually the Issue Price, increased by
Cumulative Dividends, if any. Mandatory Redemption may be automatic or may
require a vote of the series of Preferred Stock having the redemption right.
Market Capitalization: The total dollar value of all outstanding shares.
Computed as shares multiplied by current price per share. Prior to an IPO,
market capitalization is arrived at by estimating a company's future growth and
by comparing a company with similar public or private corporations. (See also
Pre-Money Valuation)
Merchant banking: An activity that includes corporate finance activities,
such as advice on complex financings, merger and acquisition advice
(international or domestic), and at times direct equity investments in
corporations by the banks.
Merger: Combination of two or more corporations in which greater
efficiency is supposed to be achieved by the elimination of duplicate plant,
equipment, and staff, and the reallocation of capital assets to increase sales
and profits in the enlarged company.
Mezzanine Financing: Refers to the stage of venture financing for a
company immediately prior to its IPO. Investors entering in this round have
lower risk of loss than those investors who have invested in an earlier round.
Mezzanine level financing can take the structure of preferred stock, convertible
bonds or subordinated debt.
Middle-market firms: Firms with growth prospects of more than 20 percent
annually and five-year revenue projections between $10 million and $50 million.
Less than 10 percent of all start-ups annually, these entrepreneurial firms are
the backbone of the U.S. economy and attractive to business angel investors.
Mutual Fund: A mutual fund, or an open-end fund, sells as many shares as
investor demand requires. As money flows in, the fund grows. If money flows out
of the fund the number of the fund's outstanding shares drops. Open-end funds
are sometimes closed to new investors, but existing investors can still continue
to invest money in the fund. In order to sell shares an investor usually sells
the shares back to the fund. If an investor wishes to buy additional shares in a
mutual fund, the investor must buy newly issued shares directly from the fund.
(See Closed-end Funds)
Narrow-based weighted average ratchet: A type of
anti-dilution mechanism. A weighted average ratchet adjusts downward the price
per share of the preferred stock of investor A due to the issuance of new
preferred shares to new investor B at a price lower than the price investor A
originally received. Investor A's preferred stock is re-priced to a weighed
average of investor A's price and investor B's price. A narrow-based ratchet
uses only common stock outstanding in the denominator of the formula for
determining the new weighed average price. Compare Broad-Based Weighted Average
Ratchet and Chapter 2.9.4.d.ii of the Encyclopedia for specific examples.
NASD: The National Association of Securities Dealers. An mandatory
association of brokers and dealers in the over the counter securities business.
Created by the Maloney Act of 1938, an amendment to the Securities Act of
1934.
NASDAQ: An automated information network which provides brokers and
dealers with price quotations on securities traded over the counter.
NDA (Non-disclosure agreement): An agreement issued by entrepreneurs to
potential investors to protect the privacy of their ideas when disclosing those
ideas to third parties.
Net Asset Value (NAV): NAV is calculated by adding the value of all of
the investments in the fund and dividing by the number of shares of the fund
that are outstanding. NAV calculations are required for all mutual funds (or
open-end funds) and closed-end funds. The price per share of a closed-end fund
will trade at either a premium or a discount to the NAV of that fund, based on
market demand. Closed-end funds generally trade at a discount to NAV.
Net Financing Cost: Also called the cost of carry or, simply, carry, the
difference between the cost of financing the purchase of an asset and the
asset's cash yield. Positive carry means that the yield earned is greater than
the financing cost; negative carry means that the financing cost exceeds the
yield earned.
Net income: The net earnings of a corporation after deducting all costs
of selling, depreciation, interest expense and taxes.
Net Present Value: An approach used in capital budgeting where the
present value of cash inflow is subtracted from the present value of cash
outflows. NPV compares the value of a dollar today versus the value of that same
dollar in the future after taking inflation and return into account.
Net present value (NPV): A firm or project's net contribution to wealth.
This is the present value of current and future income streams, minus initial
investment.
New Issue: A stock or bond offered to the public for the first time. New
issues may be initial public offerings by previously private companies or
additional stock or bond issues by companies already public. New public
offerings are registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. (See
Securities and Exchange Commission and Registration).
Newco: The typical label for any newly organized company, particularly in
the context of a leveraged buyout.
No Shop, No Solicitation Clauses: A no shop, no solicitation, or
exclusivity, clause requires the company to negotiate exclusively with the
investor, and not solicit an investment proposal from anyone else for a set
period of time after the term sheet is signed. The key provision is the length
of time set for the exclusivity period.
Non-Compete Clause: An agreement often signed by employees and management
whereby they agree not to work for competitor companies or form a new competitor
company within a certain time period after termination of employment. Governed
by state law.
Non-accredited: An investor not considered accredited for a Regulation D
offering. (Accredited Investor)
NYSE: The New York Stock Exchange. Founded in 1792, the largest organized
securities market in the United States. The Exchange itself does not buy, sell,
own or set prices of stocks traded there. The prices are determined by public
supply and demand. Also known as the Big Board.
Open-end Fund: An open-end fund, or a mutual fund,
generally sells as many shares as investor demand requires. As money flows in,
the fund grows. If money flows out of the fund the number of the fund's
outstanding shares drops. Open-end funds are sometimes closed to new investors,
but existing investors can still continue to invest money in the fund. In order
to sell shares an investor generally sells the shares back to the fund. If an
investor wishes to buy additional shares in a mutual fund, the investor
generally buys newly issued shares directly from the fund.
Option Pool: The number of shares set aside for future issuance to
employees of a private company.
Original Issue Discount: OID. A discount from par value of a bond or
debt-like instrument. In structuring a private equity transaction, the use of a
preferred stock with liquidation preference or other clauses that guarantee a
fixed payment in the future can potentially create adverse tax consequences. The
IRS views this cash flow stream as, in essence, a zero coupon bond upon which
tax payments are due yearly based on "phantom income" imputed from the
difference between the original investment and "guaranteed" eventual payout.
Although complex, the solution is to include enough clauses in the investment
agreements to create the possibility of a material change in the cash flows of
owners of the preferred stock under different scenarios of events such as a
buyout, dissolution or IPO.
OTC: Over-the-Counter. A market for securities made up of dealers who may
or may not be members of a formal securities exchange. The over-the-counter
market is conducted over the telephone and is a negotiated market rather than an
auction market such as the NYSE.
Outstanding Stock: The amount of common shares of a corporation that are
in the hands of investors. It is equal to the amount of issued shares less
treasury stock.
Over-subscription: Occurs when demand for shares exceeds the supply or
number of shares offered for sale. As a result, the underwriters or investment
bankers must allocate the shares among investors. In private placements, this
occurs when a deal is in great demand because of the company's growth prospects.
Over-subscription Privilege: In a rights issue, arrangement by which
shareholders are given the right to apply for any shares that are not purchased.
Paid-in Capital: The amount of committed capital a limited
partner has actually transferred to a venture fund. Also known as the cumulative
takedown amount.
Pari Passu: At an equal rate or pace, without preference.
Participating Preferred: A preferred stock in which the holder is
entitled to the stated dividend, and also to additional dividends on a specified
basis upon payment of dividends to the common stockholders. The preferred stock
entitles the owner to receive a predetermined sum of cash (usually the original
investment plus accrued dividends) if the company is sold or has an IPO. The
common stock represents additional continued ownership in the company.
Participation: Describes a right of a holder of Preferred Stock to enjoy
both the rights associated with the Preferred Stock and also participate in any
benefit available to Common Stock, without converting to Common Stock. This may
occur with Liquidation Preferences, for example, a series of Preferred Stock may
have the right to receive its Liquidation Preference and then also share in
whatever money is left to be distributed to the holders of Common Stock.
Dividends may also be "Participating" where after a holder of Preferred Stock
receives its Cumulative Dividend it also receives any dividend paid on the
Common Stock.
Partnership: A nontaxable entity in which each partner shares in the
profits, loses and liabilities of the partnership. Each partner is responsible
for the taxes on its share of profits and loses.
Partnership agreement: The contract that specifies the compensation and
conditions governing the relationship between investors (LP's) and the venture
capitalists (GP's) for the duration of a private equity fund's life.
Pay to Play: A "Pay to Play" provision is a requirement for an existing
investor to participate in a subsequent investment round, especially a Down
Round. Where Pay to Play provisions exist, an investor's failure to purchase its
rata portion of a subsequent investment round will result in conversion of that
investor's Preferred Stock into Common Stock or another less valuable series of
Preferred Stock.
Penny Stocks: Low priced issues, often highly speculative, selling at
less than $5/share.
Piggyback Registration: A situation when a securities underwriter allows
existing holdings of shares in a corporation to be sold in combination with an
offering of new public shares.
PIK Debt Securities: (Payment in Kind) PIK Debt are bonds that may pay
bondholders compensation in a form other than cash.
PIV: Pooled Investment Vehicle. A legal entity that pools various
investor's capital and deploys it according to a specific investment strategy.
Placement Agent: A company that specializes in finding institutional
investors that are willing and able to invest in a private equity fund or
company issuing securities. Sometimes the "issuer" will hire a placement agent
so the fund partners can focus on management issues rather than on raising
capital. In the U.S., and these companies are regulated by the NASD and SEC.
Plain English Handbook: The Securities and Exchange Commission online
version of Plain English Handbook: How to Create Clear SEC Disclosure Documents
Plum: An investment that has a very healthy rate of return. The inverse
of an old venture capital adage (see Lemons) claims that "plums ripen later than
lemons."
Poison Pill: A right issued by a corporation as a preventative
anti-takeover measure. It allows right holders to purchase shares in either
their company or in the combined target and bidder entity at a substantial
discount, usually 50%. This discount may make the takeover prohibitively
expensive.
Pooled IRR: A method of calculating an aggregate IRR by summing cash
flows together to create a portfolio cash flow. The IRR is subsequently
calculated on this portfolio cash flow.
Portfolio Companies: Companies in which a given fund has invested.
Post-Money Valuation: The valuation of a company immediately after the most
recent round of financing. For example, a venture capitalist may invest $3.5
million in a company valued at $2 million "pre-money" (before the investment was
made). As a result, the startup will have a post-money valuation of $5.5
million.
Pre-Money Valuation: The valuation of a company prior to a round of
investment. This amount is determined by using various calculation models, such
as discounted P/E ratios multiplied by periodic earnings or a multiple times a
future cash flow discounted to a present cash value and a comparative analysis
to comparable public and private companies.
Preemptive Right: A shareholder's right to acquire an amount of shares in
a future offering at current prices per share paid by new investors, whereby
his/her percentage ownership remains the same as before the offering.
Preference shares: Shares of a firm that encompass preferential rights
over ordinary common shares, such as the first right to dividends and any
capital payments.
Preferred Dividend: A dividend ordinarily accruing on preferred shares
payable where declared and superior in right of payment to common dividends.
Preferred return (AKA Hurdle Rate): The minimum return to investors to be
achieved before a carry is permitted. A hurdle rate of 10% means that the
private equity fund needs to achieve a return of at least 10% per annum before
the profits are shared according to the carried interest arrangement.
Preferred Stock: A class of capital stock that may pay dividends at a
specified rate and that has priority over common stock in the payment of
dividends and the liquidation of assets. Many venture capital investments use
preferred stock as their investment vehicle. This preferred stock is convertible
into common stock at the time of an IPO.
Private Equity: Equity securities of companies that have not "gone
public" (are not listed on a public exchange). Private equities are generally
illiquid and thought of as a long-term investment. As they are not listed on an
exchange, any investor wishing to sell securities in private companies must find
a buyer in the absence of a marketplace. In addition, there are many transfer
restrictions on private securities. Investors in private securities generally
receive their return through one of three ways: an initial public offering, a
sale or merger, or a re-capitalization.
Private investment in public equities (PIPES): Investments by a private
equity fund in a publicly traded company, usually at a discount.
Private Placement: Also known as a Reg. D offering. The sale of a
security (or in some cases, a bond) directly to a limited number of investors.
Avoids the need for S.E.C. registration if the securities are purchased for
investment as opposed to being resold. The size of the issue is not
limited, but its sale is limited to a maximum of thirty-five non-accredited
investors.
Private Placement Memorandum: Also known as an Offering Memorandum. A
document that outlines the terms of securities to be offered in a private
placement. Resembles a business plan in content and structure.
Private Securities: Private securities are securities that are not
registered and do not trade on an exchange. The price per share is set through
negotiation between the buyer and the seller or issuer.
Prospectus: A formal written offer to sell securities that provides an
investor with the necessary information to make an informed decision. A
prospectus explains a proposed or existing business enterprise and must disclose
any material risks and information according to the securities laws. A
prospectus must be filed with the SEC and be given to all potential investors.
Companies offering securities, mutual funds, and offerings of other investment
companies including Business Development Companies are required to issue
prospectuses describing their history, investment philosophy or objectives, risk
factors and financial statements. Investors should carefully read them prior to
investing.
Put option: The right to sell a security at a given price (or range)
within a given time period.
QPAM: Qualified professional asset manager as defined by
ERISA.
Re-capitalization: The reorganization of a company's
capital structure. A company may seek to save on taxes by replacing preferred
stock with bonds in order to gain interest deductibility. Re-capitalization can
be an alternative exit strategy for venture capitalists and leveraged buyout
sponsors. (See Exit Strategy and Leveraged Buyout)
Reconfirmation: The act a broker/dealer makes with an investor to confirm
a transaction.
Red Herring: The common name for a preliminary prospectus, due to the red
SEC required legend on the cover. (See Prospectus)
Redeemable Preferred Stock: Redeemable preferred stock, also known as
exploding preferred, at the holder's option after (typically) five years, which
in turn gives the holders (potentially converting to creditors) leverage to
induce the company to arrange a liquidity event. The threat of creditor status
can move the founders off the dime if a liquidity event is not occurring with
sufficient rapidity.
Redemption: The right or obligation of a company to repurchase its own
shares.
Registration: The SEC's review process of all securities intended to be
sold to the public. The SEC requires that a registration statement be filed in
conjunction with any public securities offering. This document includes
operational and financial information about the company, the management and the
purpose of the offering. The registration statement and the prospectus are often
referred to interchangeably. Technically, the SEC does not "approve" the
disclosures in prospectuses.
Registration Rights: The right to require that a company register
restricted shares. Demand Registered Rights enable the shareholder to request
registration at any time, while Piggy Back Registration Rights enable the
shareholder to request that the company register his or her shares when the
company files a registration statement (for a public offering with the SEC).
Regulation A: SEC provision for simplified registration for small issues
of securities. A Reg. A issue may require a shorter prospectus and carries
lesser liability for directors and officers for misleading statements. The
conditional small issues securities exemption of the Securities Act of 1933 is
allowed if the offering is a maximum of $5,000,000 U.S. Dollars.
Regulation C: The regulation that outlines registration requirements for
Securities Act of 1933.
Regulation D: Regulation D is the rule (Reg. D is a "regulation"
comprising a series of "rules") that allow for the issuance and sale of
securities to purchasers if they qualify as accredited investors.
Regulation D Offering: (See Private Placement)
Regulation S: The rules relating to Offers and Sales made outside the US
without SEC Registration.
Regulation S-B: Reg. S-B of the Securities Act of 1933 governs the
Integrated Disclosure System for Small Business Issuers.
Regulation S-K: The Standard Instructions for Filing Forms Under
Securities Act of 1933, Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Energy Policy and
Conservation Act of 1975.
Regulation S-X: The regulation that governs the requirements for
financial statements under the Securities Act of 1933, and the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.
Reorganization or Corporate Reorganization: Reorganizations are significant
changes in the equity base of a company such as converting all outstanding
shares to Common Stock, or combining outstanding shares into a smaller number of
shares (a reverse split). A Reorganization is frequently done when a company has
already had a few rounds of venture financing but has not been able to
successfully increase the value of the company and therefore is doing a Down
Round that is essentially a restart of the company.
Restricted Securities: Public securities that are not freely tradable due
to SEC regulations. (See Securities and Exchange Commission)
Restricted Shares: Shares acquired in a private placement are considered
restricted shares and may not be sold in a public offering absent registration,
or after an appropriate holding period has expired. Non-affiliates must wait one
year after purchasing the shares, after which time they may sell less than 1% of
their outstanding shares each quarter. For affiliates, there is a two-year
holding period.
Revlon Duties: The legal principle that actions, such as anti-takeover
measures, that promote the value of an auction process are allowable, whereas
those that thwart the value of an auction process are not allowed. The duty is
triggered when a company is in play as a target acquisition.
Right of First Refusal: The right of first refusal gives the holder the
right to meet any other offer before the proposed contract is accepted.
Rights Offering: Issuance of "rights" to current shareholders allowing
them to purchase additional shares, usually at a discount to market price.
Shareholders who do not exercise these rights are usually diluted by the
offering. Rights are often transferable, allowing the holder to sell them on the
open market to others who may wish to exercise them. Rights offerings are
particularly common to closed-end funds, which cannot otherwise issue additional
ordinary shares.
Risk: The chance of loss on an investment due to many factors including
inflation, interest rates, default, politics, foreign exchange, call provisions,
etc. In Private Equity, risks are outlined in the Risk Factors section of the
Placement Memorandum.
Rule 144: Rule 144 provides for the sale of restricted stock and control
stock. Filing with the SEC is required prior to selling restricted and control
stock, and the number of shares that may be sold is limited.
Rule 144A: A safe harbor exemption from the registration requirements of
Section 5 of the 1933 Act for re-sales of certain restricted securities to
qualified institutional buyers, which are commonly referred to as "QIBs." In
particular, Rule 144A affords safe harbor treatment for re-offers or re-sales to
QIBs - by persons other than issuers - of securities of domestic and foreign
issuers that are not listed on a U.S. securities exchange or quoted on a U.S.
automated inter-dealer quotation system. Rule 144A provides that re-offers and
re-sales in compliance with the rule are not "distributions" and that the
reseller is therefore not an "underwriter" within the meaning of Section
2(a)(11) of the 1933 Act. If the reseller is not the issuer or a dealer, it can
rely on the exemption provided by Section 4(1) of the 1933 Act. If the reseller
is a dealer, it can rely on the exemption provided by Section 4(3) of the 1933
Act.
Rule 147: Provides an exemption from the registration requirements of the
Securities Act of 1933 for intrastate offerings, if certain requirements are
met. One requirement is that 100% of the purchasers must be from within one
state.
Rule 501: Rule 501 of Regulation D defines Accredited Investor.
Rule 505: Rule 505 of Regulation D is an exemption for limited offers and
sales of securities not exceeding $5,000,000.
Rule 506: Rule 506 of Regulation D is considered a "safe harbor" for the
private offering exemption of Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.
Companies using the Rule 506 exemption can raise an unlimited amount of money if
they meet certain exemptions.
S Corporation: A corporation that limits its ownership
structure to 100. An S corporation does not pay taxes, rather, similar to a
partnership, its owners pay taxes on their proportion of the corporation's
profits at their individual tax rates.
SBIC: Small Business Investment Company. A company licensed by the Small
Business Administration to receive government leverage in order to raise capital
to use in venture investing.
SBIR: Small Business Innovation Research Program. See Small Business
Innovation Development Act of 1982.
Secondary funds: Partnerships that specialize in purchasing the
portfolios of investee company invesments of an existing venture firm. This type
of partnership provides some liquidity for the original investors. These
secondary partnerships, expecting a large return, invest in what they consider
to be undervalued companies. The big difference is that they are buying their
interests in a fund after the fund has been at least partially deployed in
underlying portfolio companies. Unlike fund of fund managers, which generally
invest in blind pools, secondary buyers can evaluate the underlying companies
that they are indirectly investing in.
Secondary Market: The market for the sale of partnership interests in
private equity funds. Sometimes limited partners chose to sell their interest in
a partnership, typically to raise cash or because they cannot meet their
obligation to invest more capital according to the takedown schedule. Certain
investment companies specialize in buying these partnership interests at a
discount.
Secondary Sale: The sale of private or restricted holdings in a portfolio
company to other investors. See secondary market definition.
Securities Act of 1933: The federal law covering new issues of securities.
It provides for full disclosure of pertinent information relating to the new
issue and also contains antifraud provisions.
Securities Act of 1934: The federal law that established the Securities
and Exchange Commission. The act outlaws misrepresentation, manipulation and
other abusive practices in the issuance of securities.
Securities and Exchange Commission: The SEC is an independent,
nonpartisan, quasi-judicial regulatory agency that is responsible for
administering the federal securities laws. These laws protect investors in
securities markets and ensure that investors have access to all material
information concerning publicly traded securities. Additionally, the SEC
regulates firms that trade securities, people who provide investment advice, and
investment companies.
Seed Money: The first round of capital for a start-up business. Seed
money usually takes the structure of a loan or an investment in preferred stock
or convertible bonds, although sometimes it is common stock. Seed money provides
startup companies with the capital required for their initial development and
growth. Angel investors and early-stage venture capital funds often provide seed
money.
Seed Stage Financing: An initial state of a company's growth
characterized by a founding management team, business plan development,
prototype development, and beta testing.
Senior Securities: Securities that have a preferential claim over common
stock on a company's earnings and in the case of liquidation. Generally,
preferred stock and bonds are considered senior securities.
Series A Preferred Stock: The first round of stock offered during the
seed or early stage round by a portfolio company to the venture investor or
fund. This stock is convertible into common stock in certain cases such as an
IPO or the sale of the company. Later rounds of preferred stock in a private
company are called Series B, Series C and so on.
Shell Corporation: A corporation with no assets and no business.
Typically, shell corporations are designed for the purpose of going public and
later acquiring existing businesses. Also known as Specified Purpose Acquisition
Companies (SPACs).
Small Business Administration (SBA): Provides loans to small business
investment companies (SBICs) that supply venture capital and financing to small
businesses.
Small Business Innovation Development Act of 1982: The Small Business
Innovation Research (SBIR) program is a set-aside program (2.5% of an agency's
extramural budget) for domestic small business concerns to engage in
Research/Research and Development (R/R&D) that has the potential for
commercialization. The SBIR program was established under the Small Business
Innovation Development Act of 1982 (P.L. 97-219), reauthorized until September
30, 2000 by the Small Business Research and Development Enhancement Act (P.L.
102-564), and reauthorized again until September 30, 2008 by the Small Business
Reauthorization Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-554).
Special purpose vehicle: A special company, usually outside the United
States, established by a company to meet a specific financial problem, often to
pay lower taxes (e.g., a re-invoicing subsidiary or offshore insurance company).
Spin out: A division or subsidiary of a company that becomes an
independent business. Typically, private equity investors will provide the
necessary capital to allow the division to "spin out" on its own; the parent
company may retain a minority stake.
Staggered Board: This is an anti-takeover measure in which the election
of the directors is split in separate periods so that only a percentage (e.g.
one-third) of the total number of directors come up for election in a given
year. It is designed to make taking control of the board of directors more
difficult.
Statutory Voting: A method of voting for members of the Board of Directors
of a corporation. Under this method, a shareholder receives one vote for each
share and may cast those votes for each of the directorships. For example: An
individual owning 100 shares of stock of a corporation that is electing six
directors could cast 100 votes for each of the six candidates. This method tends
to favor the larger shareholders.
Stock Options: 1) The right to purchase or sell a stock at a specified price
within a stated period. Options are a popular investment medium, offering an
opportunity to hedge positions in other securities, to speculate on stocks with
relatively little investment, and to capitalize on changes in the market value
of options contracts themselves through a variety of options strategies. 2) A
widely used form of employee incentive and compensation. The employee is given
an option to purchase its shares at a certain price (at or below the market
price at the time the option is granted) for a specified period of years.
Strategic Investors: Corporate or individual investors that add value to
investments they make through industry and personal ties that can assist
companies in raising additional capital as well as provide assistance in the
marketing and sales process.
Subscription Agreement: The application submitted by an investor wishing to
join a limited partnership. All prospective investors must be approved by the
General Partner prior to admission to becoming a partner.
Sweat Equity: Ownership of shares in a company resulting from work rather
than investment of capital--usually founders receive "sweat equity".
Syndicate: Underwriters or broker/dealers who sell a security as a group.
(See Allocation)
Syndication: A number of investors offering funds together as a group on a
particular deal. A lead investor often coordinates such deals and represents the
group's members. Within the last few years, syndication among angel investors
(an angel alliance) has become more common, enabling them to fund larger deals
closer to those typifying a small venture capital fund.
Tag-Along Rights / Rights of Co-Sale: A minority shareholder protection
affording the right to include their shares in any sale of control and at the
offered price.
Takedown Schedule: A takedown schedule means the timing and size of the
capital contributions from the limited partners of a venture fund.
Tax-free reorganizations: Types of business combinations in which
shareholders do not incur tax liabilities. There are four types-A, B, C, and D
reorganizations. They differ in various ways in the amount of stock/cash that
can be offered. See Internal Revenue Code Section 368.
Tender offer: An offer to purchase stock made directly to the
shareholders. One of the more common ways hostile takeovers are implemented.
Term Sheet: A summary of the terms the investor is prepared to accept. A
non-binding outline of the principal points which the Stock Purchase Agreement
and related agreements will cover in detail.
Time Value of Money: The basic principle that money can earn interest,
therefore something that is worth $1 today will be worth more in the future if
invested. This is also referred to as future value.
Trade sale: The sale of the equity share of a portfolio company to
another company.
Treasury Stock: Stock issued by a company but later reacquired. It may be
held in the company's treasury indefinitely, reissued to the public, or retired.
Treasury stock receives no dividends and does not carry voting power while held
by the company.
UBTI: UBTI, Unrelated Business Taxable Income, is a
concern to tax exempt investors in a hedge fund because the receipt of UBTI
requires the tax exempt entity to file a tax return that it would not otherwise
have to file and pay taxes on income that would otherwise be exempt, at the
corporate rate. UBTI includes most business operations income and does not
include interest, dividends and gains from the sale or exchange of capital
assets. Hedge Funds trade their own securities and therefore the tax exempt
investor's share of such income of the hedge fund is not UBTI and not subject to
federal income tax. However, hedge funds may subject tax exempt entities to UBTI
under certain circumstances where the hedge fund is borrowing or purchasing
securities on margin. Such transactions may subject the tax exempt to UBTI tax.
ULPA: Uniform Limited Partnership Act, see also the RULPA, Revised
Uniform Limited Partnership Act U.L.P.A. § 101 et seq. (1976), as amended in
1985 (R.U.L.P.A.).
Upper quartile: The point at which 25% of all returns in a group are
greater and 75% are lower.
Venture Capital Financing: An investment in a startup business that is
perceived to have excellent growth prospects but does not have access to capital
markets. Type of financing sought by early-stage companies seeking to grow
rapidly.
Vesting schedules: Timetables for stock grants and options mandating that
entrepreneurs earn (vest) their equity stakes over a number of years, rather
than upon conversion of the stock options. This guarantees to investors and the
market that the entrepreneurs will stick around, rather than converting and
cashing in their shares.
Vintage Year: The year in which the venture firm began making
investments. Often, those funds with "vintage years" at the top of the market
will have lower than average returns because portfolio company valuations were
high, e.g. an Internet Fund started in vintage year 1998.
Voluntary Redemption: is the right of a company to repurchase some or all of
an investors' outstanding shares at a stated price at a given time in the
future. The purchase price is usually the Issue Price, increased by Cumulative
Dividends.
Voting Right: The common stockholders' right to vote their stock in the
affairs of the company. Preferred stock usually has the right to vote when
preferred dividends are in default for a specified amount of time. The right to
vote may be delegated by the stockholder to another person.
Warrant: A type of security that entitles the holder to
buy a proportionate amount of common stock or preferred stock at a specified
price for a period of years. Warrants are usually issued together with a loan, a
bond or preferred stock --and act as sweeteners, to enhance the marketability of
the accompanying securities. They are also known as stock-purchase warrants and
subscription warrants.
Wash-Out Round: A financing round whereby previous investors, the
founders, and management suffer significant dilution. Usually as a result of a
washout round, the new investor gains majority ownership and control of the
company. Also known as burn-out or cram-down rounds.
Weighted Average Anti-dilution: The investor's conversion price is reduced, and
thus the number of common shares received on conversion increased, in the case
of a down round; it takes into account both: (a) the reduced price and, (b) how
many shares (or rights) are issued in the dilutive financing. See Broad-Based
Ratchet and Narrow-Based Ratchet definitions.
Williams Act of 1968: An amendment of the Securities and Exchange Act of
1934 that regulates tender offers and other takeover related actions such as
larger share purchases.
Workout: A negotiated agreement between the debtors and its creditors
outside the bankruptcy process.
Write-off: The act of changing the value of an asset to an expense or a
loss. A write-off is used to reduce or eliminate the value an asset and reduce
profits.
Write-up/Write-down: An upward or downward adjustment of the value of an
asset for accounting and reporting purposes. These adjustments are estimates and
tend to be subjective; although they are usually based on events affecting the
investee company or its securities beneficially or detrimentally.
Yield: Calculated by
dividing the gross dividend by the share price and expressed as percentage. It
shows the annual return on an investment from interest and dividends, excluding
any capital gain element.
Zombie:
A company that has received capital from
investors but has only generated sufficient revenues and cash flow to maintain
its operations without significant growth.