venture capital and the representation of start ups paul v. rogers covington & burling february...

34
VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

Upload: margaret-short

Post on 23-Dec-2015

226 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS

Paul V. Rogers

Covington & Burling

February 27, 2006

Page 2: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

2

I. Overview

1. Choice of Entity

2. Capital Structures and Venture Financings

3. Employee Incentives

4. Intellectual Property Issues

5. Management Issues

6. Exits or Liquidity Events

Page 3: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

3

II. How I Got Here

1. History Major in College

2. 3 years at Manufacturers Hanover

3. Hale and Dorr – Boston (14 years)

4. Covington & Burling – DC (6.5 years)

Page 4: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

4

III. Practice Differences

1. NY – Wall Streeta. Financial Institutionsb. Fortune 500

2. Outside of NYCa. Businessesb. Smaller Financial Institutions

Page 5: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

5

Practice Differences (cont’d.)

3. Venture “Clusters”a. Silicon Valley

b. Boston

c. Virginia

d. Seattle

e. North Carolina

f. New York

Page 6: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

6

IV. Characteristics of Clients

1. Entrepreneurial

2. Very Driven – 100 mph

3. Crusaders or Prophets

4. Financial Incentives

5. Cool Technology

6. Short Time Horizons

Page 7: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

7

V. Characteristics of Venture Capitalists

1. Very Competitive

2. Pressured on Returns to Limited Partners

3. Risk v. Rewarda. Willing to lose entire investment for multiple returnb. 1-2x Return Not Interestingc. 4-10x Return

4. Focus Issuesa. Positiveb. Negative

5. Also Have Short Time Horizons

Page 8: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

8

VI. Cheat Sheet for a Lawyer for Start Up

1. Ongoinga. Capital Stock

i. Classesii. Ownershipiii. Restrictions

b. Intellectual Propertyi. Protection of Ownershipii. Proper Licensing

In or Out

2. Venture Financinga. Economic Returnb. Control Issuesc. Liquidity

Page 9: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

9

VII. Choice of Entity

1. Corporationa. Subchapter S

2. Limited Liability Company

3. Partnership

4. Considerations in Choosing Entitya. Types of Stockholdersb. Number of Stockholdersc. Financing Sourcesd. Liquiditye. Taxesf. Liability

Page 10: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

10

VIII. Capital Structures and Venture Financings

1. Indebtednessa. Loans

i. Principal Amountii. Interest Rateiii. Payment Termsiv. Sources

Angels Friends/Relatives Founders (really equity)

Page 11: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

11

Capital Structures and Venture Financings (cont’d.)

b. Convertible Debti. Interest bearingii. Payable on date certainiii. Convertible into equity

Option of holder or issuer Designated or undesignated security Pricing

iv. Subordinated to other Indebtednessv. Sources

Similar Valuation Issues

Page 12: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

12

Capital Structures and Venture Financings (cont’d.)

2. Stockholders’ Equitya. Preferred Stock

i. Convertibleii. Non-convertible

b. Common Stocki. Votingii. Non-voting

c. Additional paid in capitali. Amount paid for shares less par value

d. Retained earnings/accumulated deficit

e. Treasury Stock

Page 13: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

13

Capital Structures and Venture Financings (cont’d.)

3. Common Stock – General

a. Voting (Can be Non-Voting)

b. Dividends (Junior Status)

c. Liquidation (Junior Status)

i. Percentage Ownership No preferences Rare to Have Classes

Page 14: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

14

Capital Structures and Venture Financings (cont’d.)

4. Preferred Stock – Generala. Redeemable

i. Date certainii. Occurrence of event (e.g., IPO)

b. Classic or Straight (usually no short term redemption)

c. Convertibled. Participating

Page 15: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

15

DEBT

EQUITY

Debt Security Equity Security

LOANS/NOTES

CONVERTIBLE NOTES

REDEEMABLE PREF. STOCK

CLASSIC/STRAIGHT PREF. STOCK

CONVERTIBLE PREF. STOCK

CONVERTIBLE & PARTICIPATINGPREF. STOCK

COMMON STOCK

Page 16: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

16

IX. Preferred Stock (Debt Equivalents)

Redeemable and Straight, or Classic

1. Return of capital

2. Interest rate or dividend

3. Premium upon repayment

4. Voting

Page 17: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

17

X. Preferred Stock (Equity Equivalents)

Convertible and Participating Stock1. Convertible

a. Choice of economic rights – preferred or common

b. Pay $1,000,000 for 20% = convert if company worth more than $5,000,000

2. Participating1. “Cake and eat it, too”

2. Receive $1,000,000 plus 20% of remainder

Page 18: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

18

Convertible and Participating Stock (Cont’d.)

3. Dividends4. Voting Rights5. Conversion Features6. Redemption

Page 19: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

19

EXAMPLES

1. Redeemable/Straight or Classic Preferreda. Investment - $1,000,000b. Percentage Ownership – Often 0% as not

participating (can receive participation through warrants for common stock)

c. Liquidation at $50,000,000d. Return - $1,000,000 invested (often plus an

interest rate) – assumes 1x liquidation preference

Page 20: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

20

Examples (cont’d.)

2. Convertible Preferred Stocka. Investment - $1,000,000

b. Percentage Ownership – 20%

c. Liquidation at $50,000,000

d. Return – a choice: $1,000,000 invested (often plus a dividend rate) or $10,000,000 (assumes 1x liquidation preference)

Page 21: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

21

Examples (cont’d.)

3. Participating Preferred Stocka. Investment - $1,000,000

b. Percentage Ownership – 20%

c. Liquidation at $50,000,000

d. Return - $10,800,000

e. $1,000,000 invested (often plus a dividend rate) plus 20% of $49,000,000 – “cake and eat it too” security (assumes 1x liquidation preference)

Page 22: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

22

XI. Other Venture Investment Issues

1. Control1. Board of Directors2. Special Approvals3. Stock Transfer Restriction4. Rights of First Refusal on Future Financings

2. Registration Rights3. Drag Alongs4. Financial Reporting

Page 23: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

23

XII. Employee Incentives

1. Casha. Salaryb. Bonus

2. Stock Optionsa. Incentiveb. Non-Qualified Stock Optionsc. Vestingd. Pricinge. Exercisef. Tax/Securities Law

Page 24: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

24

Employee Incentives (cont’d.)

3. Restricted Stocka. Pricingb. Paymentc. Vestingd. Tax/Securities Laws

4. Other Equity Incentives

Page 25: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

25

Employee Incentives (cont’d.)

5. Founders’ Stocka. Cheap (Penny Shares)

6. Restrictionsa. Rights of First Refusal

b. Rights of Co-Sale

Page 26: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

26

XIII. Intellectual Property

1. Assignment of Existing Intellectual Property2. Licensing/Acquisition of Third Party Rights3. Invention Assignment Agreements4. Prior Employer’s Rights5. Former Employees6. Demand Letters

a. Generalb. Exit Event

Page 27: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

27

XIV. Management Issues

1. Board of Directorsa. Powers

b. Membership

c. Nominations

2. Officersa. State Law

b. Powers

Page 28: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

28

Management Issues (cont’d.)

3. Contractual Rightsa. Limits on

i. Changes to Capital

ii. Changes to Certificate of Incorporation and By-Laws

iii. Mergers & Acquisitions

iv. Incurrence of Indebtedness

v. Revisions to Business Plan

vi. Management Changes

vii. Capital Expenditures

Page 29: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

29

Management Issues (cont’d.)

4. “Who is the Client” Issues

5. Corporate “Divorces”a. Founder v. Founder

i. Control Issues

ii. Buyouts

Page 30: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

30

Management Issues (cont’d.)

b. Board v. Managementi. Cause v. Without Cause

ii. Stock Vesting

Page 31: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

31

XV. Liquidity Events

1. Salea. Merger

i. Receive Stock or Cash from Acquiror

b. Stock Purchasei. Generally Cash

c. Asset Salei. Usually Cashii. Tax Issuesiii. Liability Issues

Page 32: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

32

Liquidity Events (cont’d.)

d. Considerationsi. Number of Stockholders

ii. Securities Laws

iii. State Corporation Laws

iv. I.P. Rights

v. Licenses

Page 33: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

33

Liquidity Events (cont’d.)

2. Initial Public Offeringsa. Sale to Publicb. Usually only Issuer Sharesc. Valuation Event for Stockholdersd. Future Source of Liquidity

i. Lock Upsii. Rule 144iii. Registration Rights

Page 34: VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF START UPS Paul V. Rogers Covington & Burling February 27, 2006

34

Liquidity Events (cont’d.)

3. Liquidationa. Sell Assetsb. Wind Downc. Pay Employees/Landlord

4. Bankruptcya. Comparatively Rare