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by jpglegal
1627 days ago
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This is a lot of money, but the way this additional safe works is a bit scary. It takes on the terms of the lowest cap safe or convertible note between "when you're accepted to Y Combinator" and when you raise a priced round. Obviously the $125k Y Combinator safe is issued after you're accepted, so its cap should be one of the options for the MFN cap based on that wording. I believe Y Combinator's $125k for 7% is a post-money cap safe, which means the cap should be $1,785,714. This is a pretty low cap and a startup is unlikely to raise more seed rounds at an even lower cap than that, though it could happen. So once you raise a priced round, Y Combinator's additional $375k converts into, at best, 21% of your company, or an even higher percentage if you raise additional safes or convertible notes at a lower cap. This means that as long as you raise a priced round or hit a liquidity event, Y Combinator will own 28% of your company or more in exchange for $500,000. It's not a terrible deal, but it's a massive chunk of your company. To me, if you've already given up 28% of your company long before you've raised $1 million, you're setting yourself up to eventually have the founders' share of equity at mid-to-high single digits by the time your company IPOs or is acquired as a unicorn. You're basically setting yourself up to be like the Box co-founders, on the opposite end of the spectrum from a high-equity founder group like that of Square (34% at IPO despite raising $500 million in equity financing). Somebody tell me if I'm wrong about the terms here. I'm a lawyer, but not a venture capital lawyer. |
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