How to sell a business today for a price based on future worth
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How to sell a business today for a price based on future worth

When raising finance, founders often give away a chunk of equity in exchange for the cash they need to grow the business. However, there’s a way to get the same level of finance at half the “equity cost” or less.

While there are official ways to value a business for tax or litigation purposes, there is no valuation “standard” when it comes to selling businesses. As the cliché goes, a business is worth only what someone is willing to pay for it.

Whether an owner is parting with just a portion of equity to raise finance for growth or is selling the business in its entirety, buyer and seller need to agree on valuation of the business before the transaction can complete.

However, the value that founders attribute to their business is generally based on their own optimistic vision of where the business is going, and the profit and cash flow the business is destined to generate. Investors, on the other hand, take a far more conservative view. They prefer to base valuations on hard facts – the company’s historical performance rather than some rose-tinted view of the future.

Building bridges

So, how can buyer and seller find a halfway house that accommodates investors’ reluctance to value businesses based on projected future performance, while at the same time catering to founders’ demands that their business is valued on the larger profit they are convinced will materialise in due course?

Enter a relatively new form of financing that, as a business advisor who assists owners selling businesses, I have seen growing in popularity over recent years.

The name Is Bond, convertible Bond

In its simplest form, a convertible bond (convertibles are also referred to as notes or convertible debt) involves investors putting up the finance now, but advancing it in the form of a loan that is converted to equity at a future date (based on the valuation at that date).

The advantage for the founders is that they are in an even better position to drive growth because they’ve sacrificed neither shareholding nor control. If their confidence turns out to be merited the loan converts to equity at a future point in time when the business has demonstrated the growth and cash flow required to command a higher valuation.

The investors benefit too. As the finance is in the form of a loan they are not taking a chance on the owners reaching profit targets. If targets are met the loan converts to equity; if the targets aren’t met investors’ are protected as they stand in the shoes of lenders rather than equity holders.

The key elements of a convertible note include:

  • The interest rate and an agreement that interest will “accrue”
  • A maturity period or the time at which the debt will convert to equity
  • What events/circumstances govern the triggering of the conversion
  • The preferential rate at which the debt converts (discount)
  • It can also include a pre-agreed “maximum valuation” of the company at the maturity date (to protect the investor from getting too small a percentage of the equity when the debt is converted), which is referred to as a cap

Example: Acme Isn’t Limited

Investors value Acme Ltd at £10m (5 x its annual profit of £2m) and are willing to provide £1m in finance for 10% of the equity. The founders believe the valuation is far too low as the company has valuable intellectual properties and is on the verge of a major market breakthrough that will triple profitability within 24 months.

The solution; investors provide £1m in the form of a loan at 6% interest accruing (ie. not paid in cash). At “maturity” (24 months) the founders have tripled the profits to £6M a year placing the company’s value, using the same multiple as before, at £30m. The investors’ original loan together with the interest now stands at circa £1.12M which converts to equity based on the entire company now being worth £30M.

Analysis: The investors get just under 4% of the equity rather than the 10% they targeted originally, but they are happy as it’s 4% of a much larger business. They did lose out on the phenomenal increase in value of the business, but that’s the price they paid for not taking a gamble on growth. The founders benefited from having access to the finance when they needed it and without giving equity away at a price that did not take into account the anticipated increase in earnings.

This is an over-simplified version of how convertible bond’s works in practice. In reality, the loan converts at a slightly preferential rate to reward the investors for (in part) believing in the founders’ projections and taking a chance on them. These investors would likely get circa 5% of the equity rather than the 4% mentioned above.

Note-able (sigh) cautions

Multiple rounds of convertible debt – with small investments from various angel investors – can really muddy the water and impact on future approaches to institutional investors for further rounds of financing.

In the UK, convertible notes don’t qualify for tax reliefs under the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) or the Seed Enterprise Investment Schemes (SEIS). This is a major disadvantage as early stage investments in the UK are heavily influenced by these two schemes. The Chancellor announced in 2014, that the policy relating to EIS and SEIS tax reliefs for convertible debt were under review. However, budget related announcements in 2015, suggest that any plans for change have been shelved.

There is often ambiguity in notes that founders need to be cautious about. Lack of clarity on whether the note converts at pre-money or post-money basis is one of them. There’s also much jargon – “full-ratchet”, “overhangs”, “drag/tag along rights” etc.

Parting words: No founder should enter into convertible debt arrangements without professional advice. Drafting of the documents is crucial and it’s worth paying well for the right legal expertise.

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