Negotiate for ‘better’ stock in equity-funded acquisitions

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Timothy R
BowersContributorAndrew P
DixonContributorFor many founders, building and selling a successful venture-backed company for cash is the ultimate goal
However, the reality is that some companies will instead receive an equity-funded acquisition proposal in which equity of another private
venture-backed company, rather than cash, represents all or a significant portion of the purchase price.Because all equity is not created
equal, it is important for founders to understand how to negotiate for better equity in the context of such an acquisition proposal
a private company buyer
its liquidity profile
thus, it is least valuable
Variations of transfer restrictions (e.g., a prohibition on private secondary sales) may further diminish the desirability of common stock
by making it difficult or impossible for the holder to achieve liquidity outside of an M-A event or initial public offering (IPO).In
for enhanced preferred stock in an equity-funded acquisition for several reasons:Usually, the most senior series of preferred stock will
enjoy a liquidation preference ensuring that a certain amount of proceeds (commonly equal to invested capital) from a sale of the company
flow to stockholders of that series before proceeds are distributed to junior preferred and common stockholders.Unique contractual rights
not shared by common stockholders, like special voting rights with respect to major events and transactions, unique information rights, pro
value.Beyond the standard set of rights that are usually enjoyed by all preferred stockholders, additional contractual rights of and reduced
restrictions on enhanced preferred stock make it more likely that the holder of such equity will achieve liquidity of some or all of its
holdings prior to an M-A event or IPO
Such additional rights may include one or more of the following: time or event-based redemption rights (i.e., the right to force the
acquirer to redeem equity at a specified price in the future), other liquidity rights tied to future financings or commercial transactions
(e.g., the right to sell stock to the investors in the next equity financing), covenants of the acquirer to permit and support private
secondary sales and registration rights (i.e., the right to force the acquirer to register stock with the SEC, thereby allowing for
poles, with the type of stock and bundle of rights associated with such equity determining its precise location
Additional contractual rights and reduced restrictions may significantly improve the desirability of common stock and perhaps place the
holder in a better position than it would have been as a preferred stockholder
stock equity financing could be more favorably positioned than the holder of senior preferred stock without any enhanced preferred
rights.Negotiating for better stock
With a framework for understanding what better stock means, below are several strategies sellers can employ in M-A negotiations to obtain
negotiation and any strategy that ignores this reality is doomed to fail
To state the obvious, the first strategy to negotiate for better stock in an equity-funded acquisition is the first strategy in preparing
for any M-A event: companies should do all they can to avoid being in a dire fire sale situation when a buyer comes knocking on their door
If the seller is a failing company seeking a sale as a last ditch effort to avoid shutting its doors, even the best strategies may be