I think the point of the article is that they don't give the entrepreneur more leverage. I don't think that there is a correlation between convertible note seed financings and rising valuations: valuations are rising for all types of financings over the last five years.
The downside to a note is exactly this: the cap in the note is the valuation an investor would pay. That is how I view it, as an investor. And when the next round is lower than the cap, it usually means the company is busted somehow. I am completely indifferent, as an investor, to a convertible note or equity because the outcome is generally the same for me. The reason I hate notes generally has to do with the negotiations around them (what's the term, what happens if the company gets acquired before the A, what happens if the other angels get pissy and try to claim that the company is in default, do I have pro-rata rights in the next round, etc.)
But my biggest fear with convertible notes is what the Series A VCs are going to do to me, the angel investor. They could generally not give a damn about me and since the company already has my money, I have no negotiating leverage if they decide to do anything aggressive. With an equity deal, I know what I have and, since it's very similar to what the founders have (common stock) it's hard to screw me without screwing the founders.
I'd like to know what you consider the upside of convertible notes, or how they give the entrepreneur leverage, because I just don't see them.
At a seed stage, the major cause of rising valuations is the massive competition for good deals. This is caused by the massive proliferation of angel investors. This is caused by simpler financings, including convertible notes.
Where does the entrepreneur get leverage? So many ways:
- small angel investors cant afford to spend a large amount on lawyers, so simple legal terms are enablers
- rolling closes are massive enablers. They mean you don't need a lead. Which means there isn't anyone with leverage. Which means if anyone thinks the price is too high they can drop out without affecting the price from the other investors. In fact, since you'll have cash in the bank from half your investors, you can raise with the financial pressure off, and demand a higher price from other investors.
- cheap legal fees allow smaller rounds (even a cheap priced round is 15-25k; our bill came to 42k). You can raise 100k in a weekend with no extra costs.
The massive proliferation of angels is not due to simpler documents. The massive proliferation of angels is due to the smaller amounts raised in seed rounds.
It's just as easy to use template equity financing docs as template debt financing docs. I'm not sure where this alleged complexity comes from. There is no intrinsic complexity of equity docs that doesn't exist for debt docs. I've negotiated debt docs (for real loans to companies further along that were far, far more complicated than any equity docs you've ever seen. Because having more than one type of financing in a company adds intrinsic complexity (because the interests of different parties are no longer identical.) The reason convertible debt docs are simple is because no one cares enough to legally protect themselves. If you and the investor cared that little in putting together equity docs, the equity docs would be just as simple.
You can do a rolling close with equity. At least half the equity financings I've been involved with in the last ten years have had more than one close (my firm in the 90s tried to be the only one in the round, so there was only one close.) You can also do an equity round with no lead just as easily as a debt round. Why not? The reason most equity rounds have leads is because smart investors insist on leads and smart investors prefer equity. That's correlation, not causation.
I've done priced seed rounds for less than $10k. Series A and later are more expensive because there are more reps and warranties and checking of charters and etc.
The downside to a note is exactly this: the cap in the note is the valuation an investor would pay. That is how I view it, as an investor. And when the next round is lower than the cap, it usually means the company is busted somehow. I am completely indifferent, as an investor, to a convertible note or equity because the outcome is generally the same for me. The reason I hate notes generally has to do with the negotiations around them (what's the term, what happens if the company gets acquired before the A, what happens if the other angels get pissy and try to claim that the company is in default, do I have pro-rata rights in the next round, etc.)
But my biggest fear with convertible notes is what the Series A VCs are going to do to me, the angel investor. They could generally not give a damn about me and since the company already has my money, I have no negotiating leverage if they decide to do anything aggressive. With an equity deal, I know what I have and, since it's very similar to what the founders have (common stock) it's hard to screw me without screwing the founders.
I'd like to know what you consider the upside of convertible notes, or how they give the entrepreneur leverage, because I just don't see them.