SAFE Primer
SAFE Primer
SAFE Primer
A safe is a Simple Agreement for Future Equity. An investor makes a cash investment in a company, but
gets company stock at a later date, in connection with a specific event. A safe is not a debt instrument,
but is intended to be an alternative to convertible notes that is beneficial for both companies and
investors.
Why
1. Debt instruments have requirements including regulations 1, interest accrual, maturity
dates, the threat of insolvency and in some cases, security interests and subordination agreements. These
requirements can have unintended negative consequences.
2. A safe is intended to be simple for both companies and investors, with the usual path to
agreement requiring the negotiation of only one item the valuation cap.
3. A simple equity security has the potential to become standardized, and a standardized
form has the benefits of certainty and speed, which in turn results in lower (or zero) transaction costs for
companies and investors.
When
Most startups need to raise money soon after formation in order to fund operations, and the safe can be a
vehicle for investors to fund companies at that very early stage. Unlike the sale of equity in traditional
priced rounds of financing, a company can issue a safe quickly and efficiently, without multiple
documents and the necessity of a charter amendment. As a flexible, one-document security, without
numerous terms to negotiate, the safe should save companies and investors money and time.
How
The investor and the company agree on the valuation cap, mutually date and sign a safe and the investor
sends the company the investment amount. What happens next? Nothing, until the occurrence of one of
the specific events described in a safe. In the meantime, an outstanding safe would be referenced on the
companys cap table like any other convertible security (such as a warrant or an option).
Q&A
Does a safe convert at a round of equity financing? Yes, when the company decides to
sell shares of preferred stock in a priced round, an outstanding safe will convert into shares of preferred
stock. There is no threshold amount that the company must raise to trigger the conversion.
What if the pre-money valuation of the company in the financing is higher than the
Valuation Cap in a safe? The holder of a safe gets a number of shares of preferred stock calculated
using the Valuation Cap, not the higher pre-money valuation. However, the preferred stock that a safe
holder is issued will have a liquidation preference that is equal to the original safe investment
amount, rather than based on the price of the shares issued to the investors of new money in the
financing. This feature means that the liquidation preference for safe holders does not exceed the
1 For example, the California Finance Lenders Law.
original investment amount (a 1x preference). For example, if the company issues Series A preferred
stock in the financing, a safe holder would be issued Series A-1 preferred stock, the only difference
being the name and the share price attributable to that series. See Example 1 in Appendix II.
What is the difference between Safe Preferred Stock and Standard Preferred Stock? Safe
Preferred Stock will be a separate series of preferred stock issued in the Equity Financing, commonly
referred to as shadow preferred or sub-series preferred stock. Safe Preferred Stock will have the
same rights, privileges, preferences and obligations as Standard Preferred Stock, but the liquidation
preference, conversion price, and dividend rate will be calculated based on the price per share of the
Safe Preferred Stock. The price per share of Safe Preferred Stock is determined by dividing the
Valuation Cap in a safe by the companys fully diluted outstanding capitalization (the Company
Capitalization, described below). See Example 1 in Appendix II.
What if the pre-money valuation of the company in the Equity Financing is lower than
the Valuation Cap in a safe? The Valuation Cap is inapplicable in this situation. A safe holder gets the
same preferred stock, at the same price, with the same liquidation preference, as the other investors of
new money in the financing. See Example 2 in Appendix II.
Do safe holders get pro rata rights? Yes, when they become stockholders of the
company. As holders of preferred stock, former safe holders will have a pre-emptive right to purchase
more shares if and when the company raises another round of financing. This pro rata right must be in
either the Equity Financing documents or a side letter. Please consider this pro rata right carefully.
There is no dollar threshold on this right even an investor putting the smallest amount of money into
your company will get pro rata rights. If it is not acceptable to you to have every investor holding pro
rata rights going forward, consider adding a dollar threshold. See Appendix I for sample language.
Does a safe holder have a choice about converting a safe in an equity financing? No,
conversion in an Equity Financing is automatic and the safe then terminates. A safe is intended to turn
safe holders into stockholders.
What happens to a safe if a company is acquired or merges with another company? In a
change of control transaction, a safe holder can convert a safe into shares of common stock, calculated
based on the Valuation Cap, or have its investment returned. A safe holder will decide which of these
two options is more advantageous, depending on the terms of the merger or acquisition. See Example 4
and Example 5 in Appendix II.
What is the difference between Company Capitalization and Liquidity Capitalization?
Company Capitalization is the companys fully diluted outstanding capital stock as calculated at the
time of an Equity Financing. If a company intends to adopt an equity incentive plan in connection with
the Equity Financing, Company Capitalization includes the shares allocated to that plan. If a company
has already adopted an equity incentive plan, Company Capitalization includes all shares reserved under
that plan, as well as any plan increases contemplated in connection with the Equity Financing.
Liquidity Capitalization is a companys fully diluted outstanding capitalization as calculated at the
time of a Liquidity Event. This calculation includes outstanding options (vested and unvested) under an
equity incentive plan, but excludes all unissued shares in the plan.
What happens to a safe if the company goes public? If a company goes public, a safe will
convert into shares of common stock calculated based on the Valuation Cap (or the safe holder can cash
out the safe).
Does a safe ever expire? A safe has no maturity date. A safe is designed to expire and
terminate only when a safe holder has received stock or cash, in an equity financing, change of control
transaction, IPO or dissolution whichever occurs first. In theory, a safe could remain outstanding for a
long time without the need to extend any dates or time periods. A safe can be amended by the
company and the safe holder, if necessary. See Example 6 in Appendix II.
What happens to a safe if the company shuts down and goes out of business? In a
dissolution, any money that the company has to distribute would be distributed to safe holders before
any money is allocated to holders of common stock.
Can a safe have a discount, or a Most Favored Nation provision? Yes. This Primer
describes a safe with a Valuation Cap only (a Standard Safe). Other versions of the safe are
described in Appendix I.
Appendix I
Alternative Versions of a Safe
(Standard version of a safe is Valuation Cap only)
1. Cap and Discount
This is a safe with a negotiated Valuation Cap and Discount Rate. Either the
Valuation Cap or the Discount Rate applies when converting this safe into shares
of Safe Preferred Stock.
The Discount Rate applies to the price per share of the Standard Preferred Stock
sold in the Equity Financing. If this calculation results in a greater number of
shares of Safe Preferred Stock for the investor, the price per share based on the
Valuation Cap is disregarded (and vice versa). See Example 7 in Appendix II.
The conversion of this safe in a Liquidity Event is the same as a Standard Safe.
2. Discount, No Cap
This is a safe with a negotiated Discount Rate, e.g., a 20% discount off the price
per share of the Standard Preferred Stock, applied to the conversion of this safe
into shares of Safe Preferred Stock. See Example 8 in Appendix II.
If the safe is converting in a Liquidity Event, the investor could elect to have the
Purchase Amount repaid, or to convert the safe into shares of common stock,
based on the fair market value of the common stock at the time of the Liquidity
Event with the Discount Rate applied to the common stock price.
This is a safe with no Valuation Cap and no Discount Rate. If the company
subsequently issues safes with provisions that are advantageous to the investors
holding this safe (such as a valuation cap and/or a discount rate), this safe can be
amended to reflect the terms of the later-issued safes. The amendment term is the
so-called MFN Provision. Note that, unless the later safes include an MFN, the
MFN of the original safe is amended away once the safe holder decides the MFN
is triggered. In other words, the MFN provision typically provides only one
opportunity to amend the original safe, not multiple opportunities as the company
continues to issue additional safes.
If there is an Equity Financing before this safe is amended pursuant to the MFN
Provision, the investor would receive the same shares of preferred stock as the
investors of new money in the Equity Financing, at the same price. However, this
safe does not automatically convert into shares of preferred stock unless the
amount of new money raised in the Equity Financing is at least $250,000 2. This
If all of your prospective investors want pro rata rights and you agree to give each
such investor pro rata rights, use the safe as-is no changes are required to the
template. If this is your decision, be aware that changing your mind about giving
these rights at the time of the Equity Financing is not fair to these early investors.
If you only want to give pro rata rights to certain investors, you can revise the
template safe. If you want to use the exact same form of safe for every investor,
put in a threshold in the definition of Pro Rata Rights Agreement in Section 2
as follows:
Pro Rata Rights Agreement means a written agreement between the Company and the Investor (and
holders of other Safes, as appropriate), provided the Purchase Amount of this instrument is not less
than [$_______________], giving the Investor a right to purchase its pro rata share of private placements
of securities by the Company occurring after the Equity Financing, subject to customary exceptions. Pro
rata for purposes of the Pro Rata Rights Agreement will be calculated based on the ratio of (1) the number
of shares of Capital Stock owned by the Investor immediately prior to the issuance of the securities to (2)
the total number of shares of outstanding Capital Stock on a fully diluted basis, calculated as of
immediately prior to the issuance of the securities.
If you want to create a tailored safe for each investor, for any investor to whom
you will NOT be giving pro rata rights, edit the template safe to (1) remove
Section 1(a)(ii) entirely and (2) remove the definition of Pro Rata Rights
Agreement from Section 2. Section 1(a) should look as follows (subsection (i)
can be collapsed into subsection (a)):
(a)Equity Financing. If there is an Equity Financing before the expiration or termination of this instrument, the
Company will automatically issue to the Investor either: (1) a number of shares of Standard Preferred Stock
equal to the Purchase Amount divided by the price per share of the Standard Preferred Stock, if the pre-money
valuation is less than or equal to the Valuation Cap; or (2) a number of shares of Safe Preferred Stock equal to
the Purchase Amount divided by the Safe Price, if the pre-money valuation is greater than the Valuation Cap. In
connection with the issuance of Standard Preferred Stock or Safe Preferred Stock, as applicable, by the
Company to the Investor pursuant to this Section 1(a), the Investor will execute and deliver to the Company all
transaction documents related to the Equity Financing; provided, that such documents are the same documents
to be entered into with the purchasers of Standard Preferred Stock, with appropriate variations for the Safe
Preferred Stock if applicable, and provided further, that such documents have customary exceptions to any dragalong applicable to the Investor, including, without limitation, limited representations and warranties and
limited liability and indemnification obligations on the part of the Investor.
Appendix II
**Please note that many of the numbers discussed below are rounded**
Example 1
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $5,000,000.
The company negotiates with investors to sell $1,000,000 worth of Series A Preferred Stock at a
$10,000,000 pre-money valuation. The companys fully-diluted outstanding capital stock
immediately prior to the financing, including a 1,000,000 share option pool to be adopted in
connection with the financing, is 11,000,000 shares.
The company will issue and sell 1,100,110 shares of Series A Preferred at $0.909 per share to the
new investors. The company will issue and sell 220,022 shares of Series A-1 Preferred to the safe
holder, at $0.4545 per share.
In the safe, the Series A Preferred is referred to as Standard Preferred Stock and the Series A-1
Preferred is referred to as Safe Preferred Stock. The table below sets forth a comparison between
the Standard Preferred and the Safe Preferred, as each would be described in the companys
certificate of incorporation:
Liquidation preference on a
per share basis:
Aggregate payout in a change
of control transaction (each
series pari passu with the
other):
$0.90
$0.4545
$1,000,000
$100,000
$0.072
$0.036
Example 2
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $4,000,000.
The company negotiates with investors to sell $600,000 worth of Series AA Preferred Stock
at a $3,000,000 pre-money valuation. The companys fully-diluted outstanding capital stock
immediately prior to the financing, including a 500,000 share option pool to be adopted in
connection with the financing, is 12,500,000 shares.
The company will issue and sell 2,500,000 shares of Series AA Preferred at $0.24 per share to
the new investors. The Company will issue and sell an additional 416,666 shares of Series AA
Preferred to the safe holder at the same price per share. There is no difference between the
Series AA Preferred issued to the new investors and the Series AA Preferred issued to the safe
holder, and the references to Safe Preferred Stock in this case are inapplicable.
Example 3
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $8,000,000.
The company negotiates with investors to sell $2,000,000 worth of Series A Preferred
Stock at an $8,000,000 pre-money valuation. The companys fully-diluted outstanding
capital stock immediately prior to the financing, including a 1,500,000 share option pool
to be adopted in connection with the financing, is 11,500,000 shares.
The company will issue and sell 2,875,215 shares of Series A Preferred at $0.6956 per share to
the new investors. The company will issue and sell an additional 143,760 shares of Series A
Preferred to the safe holder at the same price per share. As in Example 2, there is no difference
between the Series A Preferred issued to the new investors and the Series A Preferred issued to
the safe holder.
Example 4
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $10,000,000.
Another entity proposes to acquire the company for cash consideration of $50,000,000.
The companys fully-diluted outstanding capital stock immediately prior to the
acquisition, including 1,500,000 outstanding options but excluding any unallocated
shares in the option pool, is 11,500,000 shares.
The investor can choose to have the safe purchase amount returned, or convert the safe into
shares of common stock and receive the cash consideration with the other common stockholders.
The safe would convert into 115,008 shares of common stock, based on the Liquidity Price of
$0.8695 per share (the Liquidity Price is calculated by dividing 10,000,000 by 11,500,000).
When the $50,000,000 deal consideration is allocated pro rata among all of the common
stockholders, including the investor (and assuming the outstanding options are all exercised), the
investor would receive approximately $495,074. Since this amount is considerably more than
the $100,000 purchase amount, the investor would elect to convert the safe.
Example 5
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $6,000,000.
Another entity proposes to acquire the company for cash consideration of $200,000. The
companys fully-diluted outstanding capital stock immediately prior to the acquisition,
including 795,000 outstanding options but excluding any unallocated shares in the option
pool, is 10,795,000 shares.
The investor can choose to have the safe purchase amount returned, or convert the safe into
shares of common stock and participate pro rata in the cash consideration with the other common
stockholders. The safe would convert into 179,920 shares of common stock, based on the
Liquidity Price of $0.5558 per share (the Liquidity Price is calculated by dividing 6,000,000
by 10,795,000). When the $200,000 deal consideration is allocated pro rata among all of the
common stockholders, including the investor (and assuming: (1) the outstanding options are all
exercised; (2) there is no outstanding debt; and (3) for purposes of this example, there is only the
one outstanding safe), the investor would receive approximately $3,274. This dollar amount is
calculated by dividing the $200,000 deal consideration among 10,974,920 shares of outstanding
common stock, resulting in $0.0182 per share (179,920 shares multiplied by $0.0182 =
$3,274.54). Since this amount is considerably less than the $100,000 purchase amount, the
investor would elect to cash out the safe in connection with the transaction.
Example 6
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $7,000,000.
The company grows, generates revenue and becomes cash flow positive, and therefore
does not need to raise outside capital. The company has no acquisition offers and no
plans to go public.
The safe will remain outstanding until the company has a liquidity event, even if that liquidity
event doesnt happen for years after the original date of purchase.
Example 7
Investor has purchased a safe for $100,000. The Valuation Cap is $8,000,000 and the
Discount Rate is 85%.
The company has negotiated with investors to sell $1,000,000 worth of Series A Preferred
Stock at a $10,000,000 pre-money valuation. The companys fully-diluted outstanding
capital stock immediately prior to the financing, including a 1,000,000 share option pool
to be adopted in connection with the financing, is 11,000,000 shares.
The company will issue and sell 1,100,110 shares of Series A Preferred at $0.909 per share to the
new investors. The company will issue Series A-1 Preferred to the safe holder, based on the
Valuation Cap or the Discount Rate, whichever results in a lower price per share. The 15%
discount applied to the per share price of the Series A Preferred is $0.77265. The Valuation Cap
results in a price per share of $0.72727. Accordingly, the company will issue 137,500 shares of
Series A-1 Preferred to the safe holder, at $0.72727 per share. The Discount Rate does not apply
in this case.
Example 8
Investor has purchased a safe for $20,000. The Discount Rate is 80%.
The company has negotiated with investors to sell $400,000 worth of Series AA Preferred
Stock at a $2,000,000 pre-money valuation. The companys fully-diluted outstanding
capital stock immediately prior to the financing is 10,500,000 shares.
The company will issue and sell 2,105,263 shares of Series AA Preferred at $0.19 per share to
the new investors. The 20% discount applied to the per share price of the Series AA Preferred is
$0.152. Accordingly, the company will issue 131,578 shares of Series AA-1 Preferred to the safe
holder, at $0.152 per share.