Company Valuations - Angel Venture Forum
Transcription
Company Valuations - Angel Venture Forum
August 28, 2014 Presented By Stephen Thau, Partner ©2014 Morrison & Foerster LLP | All Rights Reserved | mofo.com Company Valuations: A Guide for Entrepreneurs Valuation Truths • Valuations are: More art than science What the market says your company is worth What a disinterested investor is willing to pay • Not: Family member, existing equity holder, corporate investor 2 Valuation Terminology • Valuation: value of equity interests Fully diluted: include all shares that could be issued, but not all authorized • Pre-money: value of equity before financing fully diluted shares x price per share • Post-money: value of equity after financing fully diluted shares x price per share • Post-money– Pre-money = amount raised 3 Valuation Terminology • Valuation of all equity interests • Not accounting valuation • Not 409A valuation • Not control premium • Not minority investment • Not enterprise value 4 Startup Valuation Truths • Investment decisions are driven only by projected returns on the investor’s investment • Negotiation, with no correct answer • Other terms matter too (option pool, preferences, voting rights, etc.) 5 Valuation Not Only Determinant of Founder Value • Option Pool Investors Investors Founders Founders Option Pool Option Pool $1M @ $3M Pre 25% Option Pool (post) Founder Value = $2M $1M @ $3M Pre 5% Option Pool (post) Founder Value = $2.8M • Liquidation Preference Non-Participating Participating Participating with cap • Dividend Rights (cumulative vs. non-cumulative) • Antidilution Protection 6 How Much Do You Need to Raise? • How much money you need to show significant growth or achieve next value-enhancing milestone • How much of the company do you SELL (not give) to the investor 7 Rule of Thumb: Raise to Value Enhancing Milestone + • Early stage investors are looking for rapid growth • e.g., 10X growth in 18 months • Valuation is responsive to milestone achievement • • • • Prototype completion Product launch First 1M users etc. • Things always take longer and cost more than anticipated • Budget past milestones for runway to raise next round 8 Investor’s Perspective • Where and when is the exit? • How much can this company sell for? • How much total money will it take to grow the company to the point that someone will buy it for…..let’s say, $1 billion? • What percentage will the investor need to get the return (ROI) desired? 10x? 20x? 50x? • Desired IRR? (Internal Rate of Return) >25% (per annum) 9 Market Considerations • Entrepreneur Valuation Expectations* Too Low 9% Appropriate 22% Too high 69% • All markets are affected by national trends • Follow-on investors are not always local • Entrepreneurs have limited experience of valuation *According to Angel Resources Institute 10 Angel Group Valuation Survey • National Survey of Angel Group Investment Activity – Q1 2014 Pre-money valuations: $2.7 million Mean Round Size: $1.23 million Median Round Size: $980K Mean Round Size (w/co-investors): $2.43 million Median Round Size (w/co-investors): $1.65 million Source: Halo Report – SVB, Angel Resource Institute, CB Insights 11 Angel Group Valuation Survey • By Verticals Median for Healthcare deals: $1.21 million Median for Internet deals: $1.85 million Median for Mobile/Telecom deals: $1.0 million Healthcare, Internet & Mobile/Telecom comprised 71.4% of deals Source: Halo Report – SVB, Angel Resource Institute, CB Insights 12 Typical Expected Rates of Return STAGE Seed/Start-up Early Stage Growth Later Stage IRR 82%+ 60% 40% 25% 5 Year ROI 20x 10x 5x 3x 13 Useful Estimation Methods • Comparable Transactions • Comparable Companies • Venture Capital Method • Double Revenues Method • Scorecard Method • Risk Factors Method 14 Comparable Transactions • Theory: compare valuation to similarly situated companies raising capital at similar stages • Reality Real data hard to come by Anecdotes hard to defend Investors can easily find distinguishing features 15 Comparable Companies • Theory: compare valuations of similar companies when they were at similar stage of development • Reality: More data may be available (recently public companies report 3-5 years of historical results) Perceived selection bias (not everyone will be next Google) Prepare to defend assumptions re growth 16 Venture Capital Method Terminal Value Return on Investment (ROI) (valuation at Exit) = __________________ Post-Money Valuation (Valuation at Investment or Pre-money plus investment) Assuming no dilution 17 Terminal Value Terminal Value = Revenue x Earnings x P/E Ratio 18 Estimating Terminal Value Investment Exit year Revenues Earnings (Net Profit) P/E Terminal Value $.5 million 5th year $20 million 10% ($2million) 15 x $30 million Reminder: Terminal Value = Revenue x Earnings x P/E Ratio 19 Venture Capital Method Made Easy • Determine the potential value of company at exit (“terminal value”): i.e., $150MM • Determine the return on investment required: i.e., 20X • Calculate Post-Money: $150MM/20 = $7.5MM • Determine size of investment: i.e., $3MM • Calculate Pre-Money: $7.5MM- $3MM= $4.5MM 20 Venture Capital Method – Working Backwards From Exit • Estimate terminal value • Project all financing rounds to exit • Build in valuation step-ups for each round • Work backward to determine initial pre-money 21 Venture Capital Method – Working Backwards From Exit 5x Step-Up to Exit 3x Step-Up from Post-A to Pre-B Assume: $100M exit and $10M capital raise, with $2M Series A and $8M Series B $8M Series B – 5x Return to Exit Post-Money = $20M Pre-Money = $12M $2M Series A – 3x Step-Up from A→B Post-Money = $4M Pre-Money = $2M 22 Scorecard Method • Determine median value for pre-revenue companies in your space in your region (recent deals) • Assign % weighting on each critical issue • Calculate the weighted average of each issue • Multiply median value by weighted average 23 Valuation Factors • Management • Size of Opportunity • Products /Services • Marketing/Sales • Competition 30% 25% 15% 10% 10% 24 Calculate Weighted Average Multiple FACTOR Management Opportunity Product Sales Competition Other ANALYSIS WEIGHT RESULT INPUT On board except sales 30% 120% 36% Large 25% 130% 33% Disruptive 15% 130% 20% No channels 10% 50% 5% No big layers 10% 110% 11% Need partners 10% 80% 8% Weighted Average 112% 25 Calculate Pre-Money Valuation Median Value Weighted Multiple $2.0 million 1.12 Pre-Money Valuation $2.3 million 26 Risk Factor Method • Determine a starting valuation point • Consider and assess risk • Assign positive or negative values to each • Pre-money valuation = Sum 27 Risk Types • • • • • • • • • • • • Management Stage of Business Legislative/Political Risk Manufacturing Risk Sales & Marketing Risk Funding/Raising Capital Risk Competition Technology Risks Litigation Risks International Risk Reputational Risk Potential Lucrative Exit 28 Assign Values to Each Risk • Maximum/Minimum = +3/-3 • i.e., “Stage of Business Risk” 0 for pre-revenue +1 for beta +3 for paying customers • +1= $100k added to pre-money valuation • -3 = $-300k subtracted from pre-money 29 Example Management Stage of Business Legislative/Political Risk Manufacturing Risk Sales & Marketing Risk Funding/Raising Capital Risk Competition Technology Risks Litigation Risks International Risk Reputational Risk Potential Lucrative Exit +2 +1 0 -1 -3 -1 +1 +2 0 +1 0 +1 30 Risk Factor Summary Example Base Valuation $2,000,000 Total value of plusses (8) + $800,000 Total value of minuses (5) - $500,000 Pre-Money Valuation $2,300,000 31 Concluding Truths • Returns drive investment decision • Calculations generally did not included dilution events such as the impact of subsequent investments • Valuation is an art not a science • More important to calculate it rationally and not emotionally • Use multiple methods • Estimated valuations are fine to get the conversation started 32 Contact Information PARTNER PALO ALTO/WASHINGTON D.C. (202) 887-1571 [email protected] Stephen Thau has been representing emerging companies for close to twenty years. His practice focuses on the representation of technology, life science and medical device companies in transactional matters, including public and private financings, mergers and acquisitions, licensing and collaborations and strategic alliances. He also represents venture capital and investment banking firms in public and private financing transactions. He has represented companies in numerous public offerings, public and private M&A transactions, and collaboration agreements, and companies and investors in over 100 venture capital and debt financing transactions. Mr. Thau is a frequent speaker on venture capital financings and served on the faculty at the 2005 and 2007 Emerging Entrepreneurs workshops at Stanford University. Mr. Thau is recommended as a leading lawyer by Chambers USA 2014, Legal 500 US 2014 and Best Lawyers in America 2012. He was also named to the Daily Journal's inaugural list of 25 leading biotech lawyers in California, in 2011. Rankings He is ranked in Chambers USA 2014, Legal 500 US 2013-2014 and Best Lawyers in America 2012. Education Harvard University (A.B., magna cum laude, 1989) Stanford University (J.D., Order of the Coif, 1994) 33