Royalty Treatment
Instead of selling ownership, sell a piece of the revenue stream.
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In The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy carried with her the power
to go home all along. The problem was she didn't know clicking
her heels three times would do the trick. Entrepreneurs seem to be suffering from similar oversight. A
source of growth capital is often right under their noses but goes
unnoticed. And as Dorothy travels across a mysterious land,
entrepreneurs descend into a netherworld of venture capitalists,
angel investors and investment bankers with sometimes terrifying
results. An often overlooked source of capital is the company's own
sales, says Arthur Fox, a longtime proponent of so-called royalty
financing and president and CEO of Lexington, Massachusetts-based
Royalty Capital Management Inc., which manages the Royalty Capital
Fund I LP. 73% of community bank executives say small
businesses are essential to their continued success.
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Here's how royalty financing works: A company seeking growth
capital takes out a loan from investors to the tune of, say,
$100,000. In exchange for the loan, the company pays the investors
a percentage of its sales every month, anywhere from 2 percent to
perhaps as much as 15 percent over an indefinite time period, until
the investor has received back the original $100,000 principal,
plus perhaps another $200,000 to $400,000 of return. According to
Fox, the benefits of deploying such a funding strategy are many. In
fact, he says, "I am surprised that royalty funding is not
standard operating procedure for entrepreneurs." Royalty financing benefits include: - Preservation of equity:
Remember, there are only 100 points of ownership to go around, and
they start disappearing with alarming speed when a company is
selling equity at the riskiest stage of its development.
"Royalty financing," counsels Fox, "enables the
entrepreneur to avoid surrendering ownership and control because it
is in fact a loan rather than a sale of equity." He adds that
at some point a company may still have to sell equity to raise
money, but by deferring the event to a point where the company is
more established, you preserve your ownership position. Selling
equity in an established company is less expensive than selling it
in start-up companies.
- Accessibility: Truth be
told, says Fox, "most companies cannot raise equity capital.
They do not have a story indicating they will be large enough to
orchestrate an exit strategy, such as a buyout or public
offering." In the context of how angels and VCs make their
returns, the diminished prospect of a big-bang exit is a death
knell. Another common barrier is that entrepreneurs aren't
raising enough capital to warrant the attention of serious
investors. By contrast, in a royalty structure, which provides
investors a return on their investment each and every month in
which sales occur, the pool of likely investors is staggering in
comparison to the small coterie of tight-fisted venture
investors.
- Nichemanship: Fox says
professional investors typically recoil from niche or obscure
markets because they're not big enough to create large enough
companies to satisfy their need for size and scale. "Royalty
financing prizes such markets," says Fox, "because the
more specialized a market, the greater the likelihood that the
profit margins can easily fund a stream of royalty
payments."
- Tax deductibility: Because
royalty deals are structured as loans, the return to the investor
represents interest, which reduces a company's net income,
true, but also lessens the tax bite for profitable companies. This
isn't the case for equity investments. "As a result of the
tax deduction," says Fox, "the net cost of the deal is
reduced substantially."
Royalty financing won't work for every company. According to
Fox, the chief characteristics of a company that can successfully
raise money through royalty financing are high gross and operating
margins and the existence of sales. Regarding margins, at the gross level (sales less cost of sales)
the margin should be at least 50 percent, Fox counsels. At the
operating level (gross profit less selling, general and
administrative costs), the pretax margin should not be less than 10
percent. The reason for these requirements is that the royalty
payment to investors comes right off the top. "There has to be
enough profit in the sale so payment to investors does not
seriously undermine the performance of the company and,
consequently, its ability to generate high margin sales in the
first place." At a broader level, that generally means
companies selling commodity products are good candidates because
commodities by definition are high-volume, low-margin products and
services. As for sales, it would be theoretically possible to entice
investors into a deal for a product that hasn't been developed
yet, but quite difficult. In fact, if you can pull off such a feat,
you are in the wrong career. Burn your business plan immediately
and get a broker's license. The fact is, for most investors to
bet on the future sale of products, they need to see a track
record. The net, net: Start-ups need not apply. As a final point to consider about royalty financing: Learn well
the theoretical construct of the financing because there are few
experts who will lead you through the deal. Fox, who generally
looks at companies only in New England, says that despite the
benefits it bestows on investors and entrepreneurs alike, royalty
financing has not reached the mainstream of entrepreneurial
finance. Like Dorothy, you have a long road ahead.
David R. Evanson is a principal at Gregory FCA, an investor
relations firm. Contact Source - Royalty Capital Management Inc.
5 Downing Rd., Lexington, MA 02421-6918, (781) 861-8490.
Originally published in the September 2001 issue of Entrepreneur Magazine
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