Early Stage Valuation: A Fair Value Perspective
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About this ebook
Addresses significant developments in the valuation of early stage enterprises at fair value with emphasis on practical applications—features a broad selection of case studies of early stage valuation
Early Stage Valuation: A Fair Value Perspective provides a comprehensive review of the current methodologies used to value Early Stage Enterprises (ESEs) at fair value for financial reporting, investment, and mergers and acquisitions. Author Antonella Puca, Senior Director with Alvarez & Marsal Valuation Services in New York, provides accurate, up-to-date information on recent guidelines and new approaches for valuation assessments.
This authoritative guide examines how to apply market analysis, discounted cash flows models, statistical techniques such as option pricing models (OPM) and Monte Carlo simulation, the venture capital method and non-GAAP metrics to ESE valuation. The text considers the most recent AICPA, Appraisal Foundation and IPEV guidance, and examines developments in both academic research and venture capital investor practice. Numerous real-world case studies illustrate early stage valuation suitable for structuring sound, internally consistent business transactions. Covering current trends and the latest regulatory guidance in the area, this book:
- Provides step-by-step guidance on practical valuation applications
- Reflects current standards for ESE valuation, including the AICPA Guide to the Valuation of Portfolio Company Investments, the IPEV guidelines and guidance from the Appraisal Foundation
- Covers new approaches to the valuation of ESEs with option pricing models, Monte Carlo Simulation, calibration and non-GAAP metrics
- Offers an overview of start-up valuation
- Discusses how intangible assets are impacting the valuation of ESEs
The book also includes contributions from Neil Beaton, Andreas Dal Santo, Alexander Davie, John Jackman and Mark Zyla.
Early Stage Valuation: A Fair Value Perspective is an essential resource for valuation specialists, private equity and venture capital fund managers, analysts, attorneys, investment bankers, regulators and auditors, and investors with interest in the private equity and venture capital industry.
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Early Stage Valuation - Antonella Puca
Acknowledgments
As I think of the individuals who participated in this book, I would like to recall three people who are not with us today, but who are present in its pages: my father, Carlo Puca, who introduced me to the world of finance on the floor of the stock exchange in Naples, Italy; Francesco Lucarelli, who helped me find my way as a student of Economics and Finance at the University Federico II of Naples; and Morton Kenner, who welcomed me in New York and introduced me to the world of private investment funds in the early 1990s. I would also like to thank the friends, mentors, and colleagues who have accompanied me in my professional journey and have helped shape the content of this book. I especially thank, in order of acquaintance, Maria Teresa Della Cioppa, Massimo Marrelli, Todd Goldman, David Sung, Jeffrey Schwartz, David Kaufman, Jacques Gagné, John Budzyna, and Jeff Yager for their guidance over the years.
In writing this book, it has been a privilege to collaborate with Neil Beaton, Alexander Davie, Andreas Dal Santo, John Jackman, and Mark Zyla as contributors and co-authors of some chapters. I wish to express my gratitude to the friends and colleagues who have read and shared their views on selected chapters, and whose perspectives helped inform my understanding of key issues around the topic of this book, including William Bareiss, Mark Bhasin, Keith Black, Melissa Brady, Rich Carson, Shilpa Chandra, Chandu Chilakapati, Raffaele Cicala, Athan Demakos, David Dufendach, Andy Dzamba, Erik Edson, Darrin Erickson, Davide Erro, Alfredo Gallone, Jonathan Grubbs, Maria Hall, Sidney Hardee, Brett Hickey, Tom Kehoe, Rahul Keshap, Gunes Kulaligil, Lorre Jay, Steve Jugan, Vincent LaRosa, Paul McCaffrey, Andrew Metrick, Elvira Passeggio, Bruno Pinto, Jerry Pinto, Ray Rath, Sindhu Rajesh, Lorenzo Restagno, Michael Rose, Todd Rosen, Enrico Rovere, John Sawyer, Greg Siegel, Paolo Siniscalco, Mark Smith, Christine Song, Kris Thiessen, Heidi Morrow, Bill Trent, Laura Yunger, Jared Waters, Michael Weinberg, and my husband, Alexander Gamburd. I also would like to thank Aswath Damodaran, whose published work has been especially influential in certain areas of my analysis and in that of many others. I thank Sheck Cho, Elisha Benjamin, Beula Jaculin and the production team at Wiley for their support during the production of this book.
This book is dedicated to my daughter, Anna Gamburd, my mother, Paola Leosini, and my grandmother, Anna Leosini, as everyday sources of wisdom, inspiration, and strength.
About the Author
Antonella Puca, CFA, CPA/ABV, CEIV, is a senior director with Alvarez & Marsal Valuation Services LLC in New York. She specializes in the valuation of private equity and venture-backed companies for financial and tax reporting, M&A transactions, buy-sell agreements, estate planning, and litigation purposes. Prior to that, Antonella has been part of the alternative investment group at KPMG/Rothstein Kass, where she helped launch RK's Bay area practice, the global investment fund practice of EY in San Francisco and New York, the financial services team at RSM US, and the valuation team at BlueVal Group in New York.
Antonella is currently serving on the Business Valuation Committee of the AICPA and as a consultant on the CFA certification team. She has served as a member of AIMA's research committee and as a director of the board and treasurer of the CFA Society of New York. She has served at CFA Institute as a consultant in the area of practice analysis and curriculum review, and as a director in the GIPS, ethics, and professional standards group. She is currently serving as a board member and treasurer of Snehacares Inc., a nonprofit organization that she co-founded in 2015 dedicated to assist children with HIV AIDS in Bangalore, India.
She is a frequent presenter and author on valuation and alternative investment topics. She holds the CFA charter and is licensed as a CPA in California and New York. Antonella holds the Certificate in Entity and Intangibles Valuation (CEIV) and is accredited in business valuation by the AICPA.
Antonella graduated in economics, with honors, at the University Federico II of Naples, Italy, with a thesis in public finance, and has a master of law studies from NYU School of Law. She has been a research fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and has held the Italian national title in the 420 sailing class for Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia.
About the Contributors
Neil J. Beaton, CPA/ABV/CFF, CFA, ASA, is a managing director with Alvarez & Marsal Valuation Services, LLC. Mr. Beaton specializes in the valuation of public and privately held businesses and intangible assets for purposes of litigation, acquisitions, sales, buy-sell agreements, ESOPs, incentive stock options, and estate planning and taxation. He earned a bachelor's degree in economics from Stanford University and a master's degree in finance from National University. He is a certified public accountant (CPA), chartered financial analyst (CFA), and accredited senior appraiser (ASA). Additionally, he is accredited in business valuation (ABV) and certified in financial forensics (CFF). Mr. Beaton is a frequent lecturer at universities, is an instructor for various business valuation courses, and speaks nationally on business valuation with a special emphasis on early stage and high-technology companies. He has written two books on early stage company valuation, has contributed to chapters for a number of other books on valuation and damages issues, and has written numerous articles on these topics. He is a former co-chair of the AICPA's Valuation of Private Equity Securities Task Force, and a former member of the AICPA's ABV Exam Committee and the AICPA's Mergers & Acquisitions Disputes Task Force. He is currently a member of the Business Valuation Update editorial advisory board, a member of the board of experts for the publication Financial Valuation and Litigation Expert, and on the editorial board of the National Association of Certified Valuation Analysts' Value Examiner.
Andreas Dal Santo, CFA, is a managing director with BlueVal Group, LLC. Mr. Dal Santo specializes in the valuation of technology companies and diversified businesses for purposes of financial reporting, M&A transactions, and business sales, partnership buyouts and buy-sell agreements, IRC 409A, and estate and gift taxes. He earned a master's degree in economics and finance with distinction from Ca' Foscari University, Venice, Italy, and has taken coursework at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Future of Commerce. He is a chartered financial analyst (CFA), accredited in business valuation (ABV) and holds an advanced risk and portfolio management (ARPM) certificate. Mr. Dal Santo has more than 20 years of experience in investments, business valuation, and management consulting. Prior to BlueVal, he has managed more than $1 billion in European, North American, and Emerging Market assets for Arca Fondi, a leading investment management firm based in Milan. As head of global emerging markets for Arca Fondi, he has gained experience in business modeling and valuation in a broad range of securities in a variety of sectors across different countries and markets. Prior to that he was a specialist in North American Tech, Media, and Telecom investments for Arca Fondi. He has served as a director on the boards of private companies and nonprofit organizations, including the CFA Society New York and the CFA Society Italy.
Alexander Davie is a member in the Nashville, Tennessee, law firm Riggs Davie PLC. He works extensively with technology companies, including startups and emerging growth companies, as well as businesses in other industries, providing legal counsel on company formation, business planning, mergers and acquisitions, technology transactions, corporate governance, debt and equity financings, and securities offerings. In addition, Mr. Davie represents investment advisors, securities brokers, hedge funds, private equity funds, and real estate partnership syndicators in numerous private offerings of securities and in ongoing compliance.
Mr. Davie has experience serving on the boards of a number of civic organizations, including the Nashville Business Incubation Center. He is also active in the Tennessee Bar Association, serving on the executive counsel of its business law section.
Mr. Davie received his bachelor of arts degree in economics from the University of Pennsylvania, graduating magna cum laude and his Juris Doctor degree from Duke University School of Law, graduating with high honors. While in law school, he served as the managing editor of the Duke Law & Technology Review. In addition, he received a master of education degree in organizational leadership from Peabody College at Vanderbilt University.
John Jackman, CFA, is the president and managing director of Cortland Valuation Group. He chairs Cortland's oversight committee for the firm's valuation technical standards and plays an active role in working closely with clients, providing authoritative oversight to the valuation engagement leaders.
He has 20 years of experience in the valuation industry, providing valuation and financial consulting services worldwide for the purposes of financial reporting, tax planning and compliance, financing, bankruptcy, litigation, mergers and acquisitions, restructuring and recapitalizations, leveraged buyouts, private equity and investment.
He is an expert in financial reporting requirements, including fresh start accounting, ASC 805, Business Combinations; ASC 350, Intangibles—Goodwill and Other; ASC 360, Property, Plant and Equipment; and ASC 718, Compensation—Stock Compensation. He has particular expertise in the valuation of intellectual property and intangible assets and regularly performs valuations and/or arm's-length royalty rate/transfer price analyses related to intangible assets. He has been a co-leader of a team hired as the designated expert on behalf of the United States Internal Revenue Service in the area of intellectual property valuation.
Mr. Jackman has in-depth experience with the valuation review process with national and regional accounting firms throughout the United States and has worked closely with international firms under the IFRS financial standards. He also performs in-depth audit reviews of third-party valuation work product on behalf of various accounting firms. Additionally, he remains current with industry standards and best practices by actively participating in conferences throughout the country. He has been a formal speaker and presenter to many organizations and professional groups on topics ranging from valuation in the context of licensing to intellectual property and economic lives, to enterprise value and steady-state analysis. He also develops and delivers in-house valuation training programs to select clients.
Prior to Cortland, he was chairman and managing director of the Windward Group, Inc., which merged with Cortland in January of 2014. Preceding TWG, he was the managing director-valuations of Cove Partners LLC, a boutique investment banking firm in San Diego, California; and the vice president of Caliber Advisors, Inc., where he was the head of the financial reporting group. He previously held positions with Navigant Capital Advisors and Kroll Zolfo Cooper.
Mark L. Zyla is a managing director of Zyla Valuation Advisors, LLC, an Atlanta, Georgia based valuation and litigation consultancy firm. He received a BBA degree in finance from the University of Texas at Austin and an MBA degree with a concentration in finance from Georgia State University. He also completed the Mergers and Acquisitions Program at the Aresty Institute of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and the Valuation Program at the Graduate School of Business at Harvard University. He is a certified public accountant, accredited in business valuation (CPA/ABV), certified in financial forensics (CFF) by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), a certified financial analyst (CFA), and an accredited senior appraiser with the American Society of Appraisers certified in Business Valuation (ASA).
Mr. Zyla is the chairman of the Standards Review Board of the International Valuation Standards Council (IVSC). He recently served on the AICPA's Forensic and Valuation Services Executive Committee. He is a member of the Business Valuations Committee of the ASA where he also serves as a member of the Business Valuation Standards and Technical Issues subcommittees. Mr. Zyla is on the Advisory Council of the Master of Science in finance program at the University of Texas at Austin. In 2013, he was inducted into the AICPA Business Valuation Hall of Fame.
He is a frequent presenter and author on valuation issues. He has served on the faculty of the Federal Judicial Center and the National Judicial College teaching business valuation concepts to judges. He is author of Fair Value Measurement: Practical Guidance and Implementation, 3rd ed., published by John Wiley & Sons (2019). Mr. Zyla is also the author of the course Fair Value Accounting: A Critical New Skill for All CPAs
published by the AICPA. He is also co-author of several portfolios related to fair value measurement published by Bloomberg BNA.
Preface
Early stage valuation addresses the valuation of companies that are in the early years of their life cycle, are growing rapidly, and where most of the value is based on expectations about the future. Early stage enterprises (ESEs) include companies that may have an initial concept, design, or business plan, but not an actual product. They also include multibillion-dollar unicorns
with significant revenue and operations that have yet to reach profitability. The valuation of an ESE that approaches an IPO or an M&A transaction is based on a mix of quantitative analysis, people insight, and intuition for the company's growth prospects.
In spite of their diversity, ESEs have unique characteristics as a group that warrant special consideration in valuation. An ESE valuation starts from a vision of the company's future. The valuation of an ESE requires a dynamic model that takes into account the change in the ESE's operations through a period of high revenue growth and up to a stage of long-term stable growth. At each stage of the company's development, the three key fundamental factors of value (the cash flows generated by the business), time (the time horizon of the projection), and risk (the cost of capital for the firm and the target return for the investors) are going to have a distinct relationship that needs to be captured in the valuation model. Many ESEs will not survive through an exit event such as an IPO or a business combination/sale. The assessment of the risk of failure is especially challenging in ESE valuation.
In this book, early stage valuation is presented under the fair value standard of Financial Accounting Standards Board, Accounting Standards Codification Topic 820, Fair Value Measurement, and International Accounting Standards Board, International Financial Reporting Standards 13, Fair Value Measurement. The fair value standard is used globally for financial reporting. It provides a common framework for the asset management industry to value investments, make asset allocation decisions, evaluate investment manager performance, and assess manager compensation. It drives the work of securities analysts in financial research organizations around the world. While the fair value standard continues to raise controversy in certain areas of implementation, particularly in the banking sector, it still represents the most comprehensive set of principles with global acceptance in valuation around the world today.
In presenting the state of the art
in ESE valuation, this book intends to harmonize the views of venture capital investors, investment bankers, auditors, and valuation analysts. The book is conceived for a reader who is interested in a broad perspective on early stage valuation. It presents step-by-step examples that can help build fundamental analytic tools with basic algebra. Some of the methods discussed include:
Venture capital method
Scorecard methods for seed investing
Backsolve with option pricing methods
Asset accumulation method
Various methods for valuing intangible assets
Analysis using non-GAAP metrics, including ESG metrics
Calibration under various methodologies
Scenario analysis and Monte Carlo simulation
Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model
Binomial option pricing model
There are chapters dedicated to the valuation of preferred stock, options and warrants, debt securities, and contingent consideration (earnouts and clawbacks).
In our presentation, we have considered current practice in early stage company investment, transactions, and financial reporting. We have looked at guidance from academic studies, as well as from the AICPA Accounting and Valuation Guide on the Valuation of Portfolio Company Investments of Venture Capital and Private Equity Funds and Other Investment Companies, the Appraisal Foundation, the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines, the International Valuation Standards and other sources that we list in our reference section. We have considered the documentation requirements under the Mandatory Performance Framework (MPF) for the Certified in Entity and Intangible Valuations (CEIV) Credential and the Application of the MPF for the CEIV credential. We have also considered the guidance on valuation processes and governance of the Alternative Investment Management Association.
The book provides a historical perspective on fair value and highlights how fair value principles are at the heart of our economy.
Enjoy your journey!
Introduction
Early Stage Valuation covers a broad range of valuation methods that reflect the variety of early stage enterprises (ESEs), from entities that may have just started operations to companies that have substantial revenue and have already gone through multiple rounds of venture capital financing. A recurring message throughout this book is that the approach to ESE valuation needs to follow the company's evolution and adapt to reflect the company's characteristics at each stage of development. The structure of this book consists of three parts:
Part One: Early Stage Valuation in Context lays the foundation for ESE valuation under the fair value standard and describes the main characteristics of ESEs, including their market and capital structure.
Chapter 1: Early Stage Enterprises and the Venture Capital Market introduces the definition of ESE and provides an overview of the capital markets in which ESEs operate. This chapter considers the objectives and target returns of venture capital investors and how they reconcile to the historical returns realized by ESE investments. We discuss how the venture capital market has evolved over the past decade. We identify recent trends in ESE exit strategies and valuation, considering data on M&A transactions, buyouts, and IPOs over the past decade.
Chapter 2: Fair Value Standard presents the fair value standard for financial reporting as defined in Financial Accounting Standards Board, Accounting Standards Codification 820, Fair Value Measurement (ASC 820) and International Accounting Standards Board, International Financial Reporting Standards 13, Fair Value Measurement (IFRS 13). We provide a historical overview on the development of the fair value concept, from the medieval debate on the fair price
(justum praetium) in Franciscan and Scholastic theology through the writings of Alfred Marshall, the Railroad Rate regulation of the 1890s–1910s, and the interpretation of fair value in the wake of post–World War II economic liberalism.
We then examine the fair value definition for financial reporting under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and illustrate the income, market, and asset-based valuation approaches under ASC 820/IFRS 13 as they apply to ESEs.
The last part of this chapter reviews some key reference material that we use in our analysis, with an emphasis on the most recent guidance on fair value implementation, including:
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Accounting and Valuation Guide on the Valuation of Portfolio Company Investments of Venture Capital and Private Equity Funds and Other Investment Companies (the AICPA PE/VC Valuation Guide
)
International Valuation Standards (IVS) 210, Intangible Assets and IVS 500, Financial Instruments, latest edition.
International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines: latest edition (the IPEV Guidelines
)
Appraisal Foundation: VFR Valuation Advisory #4, Valuation of Contingent Consideration (VFR #4
)
Alternative Investment Management Association: Guide to Sound Practices for the Valuation of Investments (2018).
Financial Instruments Performance Framework (FIFP) for the Certified in the Valuation of Financial Instruments (CVFI) Credential
Mandatory Performance Framework for the Certified in Entity and Intangible Valuations (CEIV) Credential and Application of the Mandatory Performance Framework for the CEIV Credential (collectively the MPF)
We also include some less recent sources that are also relevant for ESE valuation and that we have used in various chapters of this book. More references can be found in our selected Reference section at the end of the book.
Chapter 3: Capital Structure discusses the capital structure of ESEs, which are often complex structures with multiple classes and series of securities. We consider the most common features of common stock, preferred stock, options, and option-like instruments, debt and hybrid instruments such as simple agreements for future equity (SAFE) and keep it simple securities (KISS). We discuss economic rights of preferred stock, including liquidation, antidilution, participation, conversion, dividend and redemption rights, as well as noneconomic rights such as registration, voting, board composition, drag along, preemptive, first refusal, tag-along, management and information rights. We provide practical examples of antidilution provisions and various types of liquidation preferences and insights into how these rights may play out in valuation depending on the company's exit strategy.
Part Two: Enterprise Valuation illustrates the valuation of an ESE at the level of the overall enterprise. Most ESEs do not have debt in their capital structure or have debt with equity features (convertible debt). In this context, the enterprise value of the firm will coincide with its equity value.
Chapter 4: Seed Stage Valuation and the Venture Capital Method presents an overview of valuation of ESEs in their initial stages up to their Series A funding with venture capital financing.
We review the market for seed investing and the role that angel investors play in providing seed capital. We introduce the concepts of premoney and postmoney valuation and provide examples of how postmoney valuation is affected by a company's capital structure. We illustrate how an up
round where the postmoney valuation of a company increases may actually be a down
round from the perspective of an individual investor whose interest has been diluted by the addition of new investors into the company.
We walk through some of the scorecard methodologies that are used in the earliest stages of seed investing, including the Payne Scorecard, the Risk Factor Summation Model, the Berkus method, and the Modified Berkus method. Most of the chapter is dedicated to the Venture Capital (VC) method, which is a common approach to valuation for negotiating new stakes in portfolio company deals. One of the challenges of the VC method is how to reconcile the Target Returns
that VC investors aspire to in entering into a new deal (typically 30% or above), with the Required Returns
that investors expect to achieve based on the historical evidence of venture capital fund returns (typically in the 15–25% range). In this chapter we show some practical examples of how, given the (1) time horizon, (2) projected exit value for the deal, (3) expected risk of failure, and (4) the expected dilution percentage over the term to exit, an investor can determine the ownership percentage that needs to be negotiated in order to achieve its Required Return in a specific deal.
We conclude the chapter with an illustration of the First Chicago Method by applying a simple scenario analysis to the valuation of a company in the seed stage.
Chapter 5: The Backsolve Method is a common method under the market approach to estimate enterprise value based on the price of a recent transaction in the company's own securities. Chapter 5 walks through a case study in the implementation of the Backsolve method based on Case Study 10 of the AICPA PE/VC Valuation Guide. The chapter explores how to apply the Backsolve method in combination with an option pricing model (the OPM Backsolve Method
) to a company with a complex capital structure.
We discuss how secondary transactions can be factored into the reference price that is used as the starting point of the valuation. Finally, we illustrate how to estimate the volatility of the company's equity, which is a key input in the OPM model.
Chapter 6: Discounted Cash Flow Method is dedicated to the Discounted Cash Flow method (the DCF Method or DCF), which is a cornerstone of the income-based approach. Of all the valuation techniques discussed in this book, the DCF method is the one that has the greatest variety of applications and is also the most controversial in terms of its ESE implementation. A DCF model can provide an appropriate methodology for ESE valuation for companies that already have an established revenue stream, especially when recent transactions in the company's securities are not available or the transaction prices that are available are not indicative of fair value (for instance, a related party transaction at other-than-market terms).
It is common practice in a DCF model to use a single discount rate throughout the projection period. In this chapter, we present a dynamic DCF model that includes three stages of development: a high growth period with revenue growth and discount rates significantly above industry average (Years 1–5 in our example), a stable growth phase (Years 10-plus) where revenue growth rates are in line with the risk-free rate and the discount rate is in line with industry averages, and an intermediate declining growth stage where revenue growth and the discount rate gradually converge to their stable growth values.
In our model, the high-growth stage is based on management's projections of revenue and cash flow amounts. The stable growth stage reflects the company's capital structure, revenue growth rate, operating margin, tax rate, depreciation, and reinvestment rate based on the analyst's long-term vision
of the company. The intermediate or declining growth stage is formula-driven.
Most of the ESE value depends on the terminal value that results from the analyst's estimates and assumptions in the stable growth stage. The chapter uses the Gordon Growth Model to estimate the terminal value of the company at the end of the projection period. In practice, multiples of revenue or earnings are often used and are also consistent with the guidance in the AICPA PE/VC Valuation Guide and the IPEV Guidelines.
Other sections of the chapter discuss:
How to estimate the cost of capital using the Build-Up method, the pure
CAPM method, the diversification-adjusted CAPM, and the CAPM with additional risk premia
How to treat the risk of failure in the context of DCF valuation
How to incorporate changes in capital structure in three stages
How to estimate the reinvestment rate that is needed to sustain growth
How to reconcile the results of the DCF model with the postmoney valuation under the Venture Capital method
Use of calibration at subsequent measurement
Documentation best practices based on the guidance provided by the MPF.
Chapter 7: Asset Accumulation Method presents the Asset Accumulation Method (AAM) as an example of an asset-based approach in ESE valuation and highlights the relevance of intangible assets as drivers of valuation. In this chapter, we identify the most common categories of intangibles that can be found in ESEs, and discuss some of the more common methods for valuing intangible assets under ASC 820/IFRS 13, including:
Multiperiod Excess Earning Method
Royalty Relief Method
Replacement Cost Method Less Obsolescence
Real option pricing
With and Without Method
We provide an example of implementation of the AAM for an ESE that emphasizes forward-looking information alongside historical, cost-based information in the valuation of intangible assets. We discuss the advantages and limitations of the AAM versus the methodologies under the market- and income approach.
Chapter 8: Non-GAAP Metrics in ESE Valuation provides an overview of non-GAAP metrics that can be used in valuation to assess the performance of an ESE relative to its targets, evaluate its prospects and trends toward profitability, and in some cases, build a more formal model for enterprise valuation. We break out non-GAAP metrics into two categories: non-GAAP financial measures, which are derived by adjusting GAAP financial statement accounts by adding or removing GAAP components, and Other Metrics,
which include elements that are outside the scope of the financial statements. Other metrics discussed in this chapter include:
Number of customers
Number of active users
Bookings
Revenue run rate
Revenue per user
Annual recurring revenue
ESG metrics
The chapter includes a sample model for ESE valuation that uses the value of current users, new users, and general corporate expenses to estimate the value of the enterprise.
Part Three: Valuation of Financial Instruments focuses on the methodologies for allocating enterprise value to preferred and common stock in an ESE, and on the valuation of other interests in a company, such as options and warrants, convertible debt, and contingent consideration (earnouts and clawbacks).
Chapter 9: Allocation of Enterprise Value presents the methodologies for allocating enterprise value to preferred and common stock based on the guidance in the AICPA PE/VC Valuation Guide and in the IPEV guidelines. We illustrate the simplified bimodal scenario, full-scenario, and the relative-scenario approaches, as well as the hybrid approach and the current value method.
Chapter 10: Valuation of Options and Warrants presents the valuation of options and warrants in an ESE. We walk through the details of the Black-Scholes-Merton (BSM) option model and show an example of how a call option can be valued using the BSM option model and the binomial lattice model. We discuss how to estimate the volatility of preferred and common stock using an OPM enterprise valuation model. Finally, we address the dilution effect that is typically associated with warrants and how it is reflected in warrant valuation.
Chapter 11: Valuation of Debt Securities is dedicated to the valuation of ESE convertible debt. After a review of the basic principles in debt valuation, we walk through an example of a convertible note that shows how to break out the valuation of the embedded option component from that of the pure
debt component valued using the yield method. We also show how debt can be valued as if it were a special class of preferred stock with senior liquidation preferences relative to all other classes in an OPM model for the enterprise. We present an example of a convertible bond valuation using calibration and we provide a step-by-step example of the valuation of a convertible bond using a binomial lattice model. We then focus on bridge notes, which are a type of convertible debt that is common in ESE capital structures. We present an example of the valuation of bridge notes on an as-if converted basis (assuming the note gets converted into preferred stock at the next round), and of bridge notes with warrants attached. We add some considerations on the valuation of debt using broker quotes (an unusual circumstance in ESE valuation) and conclude with a discussion of how to treat debt in the context of equity valuation.
Chapter 12: Valuation of Contingent Consideration is dedicated to the valuation of earnouts and clawbacks that may result from M&A and buyout transactions. The purchase price of an ESE in an M&A or buyout transaction often includes a component that is dependent on the future performance of the company. A VC fund that sells an interest in an ESE, for instance, may have to recognize an earnout in its portfolio of assets with changes in fair value recorded as capital gains or losses until the contingency event is resolved. In this chapter, we address the valuation of contingent consideration based on the guidance provided by the Appraisal Foundation in VFR #4 as well as in the AICPA PE/VC Valuation Guide. We provide detailed examples of how contingent consideration in the form of earnouts (assets for the seller) and, less frequently, clawbacks (liabilities for the seller) can be valued using a probability-weighted discounted cash flows model, an option pricing model, and Monte Carlo simulation. In particular, we provide examples of the valuation of contingent consideration in the presence of:
Technical milestones with binary outcomes
Simple linear payoff structures
Linear payoff structures with floor
Linear payoff structures with floor and cap
Systematic binary structures
References conclude the book with a selected list of references that identify the main sources that we have used in our analysis, including FASB and IASB provisions, guidance from the AICPA, the Appraisal Foundation, the International Valuation Standards Council and other professional organizations, SEC filings, reports from data service providers, and research literature in the field.
PART One
Early Stage Valuation in Context
CHAPTER 1
Early Stage Enterprises and the Venture Capital Market
Early stage enterprises (ESEs) consist of private companies that are in the early years of their life cycles and have yet to reach profitability. ESEs include a broad range of entities, from companies that have an initial concept, design, or business plan but not necessarily an actual product, to multibillion-dollar enterprises with significant revenue and operations. Most recently, a surge of capital from investors and strategic partners has enabled some ESEs to reach unprecedented sizes and access the public markets while still in the process of developing sustainable commercial operations. The range of players in the venture capital (VC) markets has expanded to include a variety of institutional investors, high net worth individuals, foreign investors, and corporate players. According to a recent study, global VC assets under management (AUM) have passed the $850 billion mark, representing an estimated 14% of the global private capital industry.1 The VC market involves a global community of players, with the United States leading the way in terms of investment activity (7 out of 10 VC investment firms are U.S.-based) and other regions expanding quickly, most notably China.2 In a scenario of low interest rates, and with substantial cash at their disposal, investors are competing to enter into the high growth opportunities that ESEs can provide, pushing down the cost of capital and enhancing liquidity. In spite of their diversity, ESEs have unique characteristics as a group that warrant special consideration in valuation. In this chapter, we consider some of the characteristics that distinguish ESEs from other types of companies. We provide an overview of the VC market and ESE exit strategies, and we highlight some recent market trends that are of special relevance in ESE valuation.
CHARACTERISTICS OF EARLY STAGE ENTERPRISES
Stage of Development
The early years in a company's life cycle are often broken out in three stages of development:
Seed stage/angel stage: Commercial operations are being established, there is little or no product revenue and little expense history. Seed capital is typically provided by friends and family or angel
investors. Financing consists of relatively small investments (often less than $100,000) summing up to rounds that are generally in the $0.2 million–$3 million range.
Early VC stage/start-up stage: The company has started operations and is building up its management team. The ESE has revenues, but operating expenses are significantly higher than revenues. Losses are driven by research and development expenses and by product development costs. The company has its early VC rounds of Series A and Series B financing. It may also attract the attention of strategic investors that are interested in the synergies that the company may bring to their own operations. As the company develops, it may become a suitable candidate for a merger and acquisition (M&A) or buyout exit transaction.
Later VC stage: The company has high revenue growth and may have substantial revenue but continues to generate losses and has negative cash flows from operations. The investment in research and development is substantial; marketing expenses may also be significant and offset any incoming operating cash flows. The company engages in new rounds of financing (Series C, D, E, etc.). As it continues to grow, it may start looking at an IPO or M&A exit. As the company develops, revenue growth subsides, operating margins improve, and the company approaches self-sustaining operations.
As a company proceeds through its early-stage development, the risks associated to its future cash flow stream decrease, its likelihood of survival increases, and its valuation increases.3 In the software sector, for instance, the median valuation of companies backed by VC investment was $8 million in the angel/seed stage, $29 million in the early VC stage, and $88 million in the later VC, respectively as of December 31, 2019.4 Median valuations for software companies in the United States have increased over the past decade in all three stages, especially in the later VC stage.
Life science companies also represent a significant share of the VC market and have special operational features that need to be taken into account in developing an appropriate valuation approach.5 In most countries, the development path of life science companies is strongly influenced by government regulation. In the United States, pharmaceutical and medical device companies must test their products through clinical trials under the supervision of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). During clinical trials, medical devices or drugs are tested in four Phases to ensure that the product is safe and is working the way it was intended and designed.6
A comprehensive study of clinical drug development in the United States over the period 2006–2015 by the Biotechnology Innovation Organization has indicated that only 9.6% of the drugs that start the clinical trial actually obtain FDA approval to enter the postclinical marketing phase.7
As we further discuss in the next chapter, the stage of development has a significant impact on the methodologies that can be used in ESE valuation.
Expectation of High Growth in Revenue
The expectation of revenue growth significantly above industry average is a common feature of ESEs. In many cases, ESEs have ideas for innovative products and services that require research and development efforts as well as marketing support to become commercially viable. It is critical for the valuation analyst to consider the subject company's competitive environment and assess whether the company's products and competitive advantage are sustainable over time. Even if a company succeeds in developing a product that is commercially viable, the ability of the company to command significant revenue growth and eventually maintain market share may be limited if other companies are able to step into the same market with low barriers to entry.
Net Losses and Negative Cash Flows from Operations
By definition, ESEs have not yet reached profitability. ESE losses are typically driven by substantial investments in research and development, product development, sales and marketing, which flow through as expenses in the income statement. No income taxes are charged in the early years of an ESE's life and a potential tax benefit may have to be factored into the valuation to the extent early losses can be used to offset future taxable income in some jurisdictions. For a company that is incurring operating losses and negative cash flows from operations, an assessment of working capital provides critical insight into the company's financial strength. The percentage of the company's cash balance that is consumed in one month of operations (the monthly cash burn rate
) is an important metric to assess the company's risk of failure. A company with a monthly cash burn rate of 5%, for instance, can only survive for 20 months without additional funding, asset sales, or an improvement in operating cash flows.
Risk of Failure
Many ESEs will never reach profitable operations. A company may end up being acquired while still in the process of product development. In other cases, a company may end up exhausting its cash resources and liquidate with little or no residual value for its investors. Exhibit 1.1 presents the survival statistics of new companies in the United States for the period 2000–2015. Based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, of the companies founded in the year 2010, only 51.4% were still in operation as of YE 2015.8 The survival rate is especially low for companies in the first three years of operations.
A study of Cambridge Associates that includes an analysis of 36,286 venture capital fund investments over the period 1990–2016 estimates that 51.1% of portfolio company investments turned into a full or partial loss for the funds and that investment losses were 32.7% of invested capital.9 A recent study conducted by PitchBook on exits from VC-backed companies from January 1, 2013, through August 8, 2019, indicates that only 25% of deals return more than 1× and only one in every eight reaches a 5× return.10 The PitchBook study points out that for companies that reach an exit, the earlier stage deals (Series A and B) provide significantly higher returns (27.7% on an annualized basis for Series A versus 7.5% for Series F). On the other hand, once failure rates are taken into account, the Series return ranking changes significantly, with Series A–C investments generating negative returns, and Series F returns posting the more favorable annualized returns. We look forward to more research that can help assess the risk of failure at various stages in an ESE development.
Intangible Assets and Off-Balance-Sheet Liabilities
In most ESEs, intangible assets represent a significant driver of value. The International Glossary of Business Valuation Terms (IGBVT) defines intangible assets as non-physical assets such as franchises, trademarks, patents, copyrights, goodwill, equities, mineral rights, securities and contracts (as distinguished from physical rights) that grant rights and privileges and have value for the owner.
11 U.S. GAAP defines them as assets (not including financial assets) that lack physical substance. Most intangible assets do not appear in the balance sheet, and the related costs are expensed as incurred. For many ESEs, intangible assets need to be identified and considered as part of the ESE valuation process.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.
EXHIBIT 1.1 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Survival Rate of New Companies Founded 2000–2015
A company may have off-balance-sheet liabilities that increase its risk of failure. Also, a company may have a high risk of patent infringement litigation that is not captured in the balance sheet. The risk of off-balance-sheet liabilities is not exclusive to ESEs, but is especially significant in an ESE context where a company may not have adequate funding to defend itself in litigation and be able to survive an unfavorable litigation outcome.
Size
For an ESE, it is common to define size in terms of its equity value based on the latest round of financing. The size of an ESE will typically vary significantly depending on the stage in the ESE life cycle. One of the most striking developments in ESE financing in recent years has been the increasing number of venture-backed companies in the private markets that have passed $1 billion in valuation. In November 2013, Aileen Lee, seed-stage investor and founder of Cowboy Ventures, coined the term unicorn
to indicate these large ESEs, noting that unicorns were once an extremely rare occurrence.12
As of June 30, 2019,