Raising Money With Short-Term Notes
How to know if convertible short-terms notes are the right financing strategy for your business
By David Newton
| June 23, 2003
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The question of using short-term notes comes up often regarding
various ways to put together an equity funding deal for individual
investors in your firm, while providing them with a measure of
hedge protection as they try to make up their minds on the strength
of your firm's prospects for sales and profits. At issue is the arrangement under question, where a small pool
of potential investors (perhaps two to three, or as many as four to
six) would like to provide funding for your business, but
they're also cautious and wish to hedge a bit on the timing for
when they finally step out and commit to putting money into your
firm. In many situations, they're waiting for some better news
about the firm's dealings in the market or with a potential
revenue contract prior to writing the check and taking their equity
stake. One way to structure the deal would be to allow them to first
loan the money to the business with a built-in equity conversion
feature as part of the loan contract. This provision includes
specific terms and pricing for them to turn the long-term liability
directly into an equity position in the business at a predetermined
future date, if and when they think the time is then right to do
so. If that time does not come, they can always remain a creditor
to the company and receive traditional repayment of principal and
interest over time, until the debt is paid back. Content Continues Below
This type funding deal requires you to evaluate whether this is
a good idea for the company and determine what types of risk
exposure are related to these kinds of terms. There are four basic
issues to contend with in this arrangement: - Will the outside funding parties request some form of
collateral on the loan, which can either tie up company assets or
put a lien on the owner's personal assets (house, car, boat,
investment accounts and so on)?
- At what price will the loan convert to shares of stock in the
company? For example, will it be based upon a predetermined formula
tied to some type of economic performance (a ratio based upon sales
revenues, profits or assets), or will it be set today at a fixed
conversion rate, regardless of future operating performance?
- This issue deals with the timing on the conversion. Some deals
are structured so that the debt converts to equity on a specific
date that both the lender and the entrepreneur agree on. Others
provide a window of time within which the lender has the option to
convert the outstanding loan to a common stock equity position in
the firm.
- Which party holds the option to initiate the conversion
process? For example, in some deals, the owners hold an option that
allows them to turn the outstanding liability into an equity
position for the former creditor. These are not as common as the
opposite arrangement, where the lender holds the option and makes
the decision to convert the debt to equity or not.
Perhaps the most typical configuration of these four issues is
that the deal is a fully amortized, collateralized convertible loan
with an initial term of four to five years, set at an interest rate
that is pegged to the prime rate plus a margin (to cover the
additional risk), with the principal and interest payments set up
quarterly. The price at which the loan converts to the shares is
preset, so the conversion is calculated by taking the outstanding
principal loan balance and dividing it by the preset conversion
price to determine how many shares will be issued. And the
conversion is preset to happen at the lender's option within a
window of time, normally anytime during the life of the loan. It's also popular for the timing to be anytime during the
first three years of a five-year loan, after which the option
expires. This provision gives the borrower some protection of
equity such that if the company can make regular payments on the
loan for three years (out of five), the owners are probably more
interested in paying off the loan in full and not having to
give shares of stock to the lender through a conversion. Once the
loan is paid in full, the liability is removed from the balance
sheet and no equity is transferred, allowing the owners to keep
their original stake. David Newton is a professor of entrepreneurial finance and
head of the entrepreneurship program, which he founded in 1990, at
Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California. The author of four
books on both entrepreneurship and finance investments, David was
formerly a contributing editor on growth capital for Industry
Week Growing Companies magazine and has contributed to such
publications as Entrepreneur, Your Money,
Success, Red Herring, Business Week, Inc.
and Solutions. He's also consulted to nearly 100
emerging, fast-growth entrepreneurial ventures since 1984.
The opinions expressed in this column are those
of the author, not of Entrepreneur.com. All answers are intended to
be general in nature, without regard to specific geographical areas
or circumstances, and should only be relied upon after consulting
an appropriate expert, such as an attorney or
accountant.
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