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posted by n1 on Tuesday May 19 2015, @04:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the everything-must-always-be-more dept.

A "unicorn" is Silicon Valley jargon for a pre-IPO startup with a valuation of 1 billion USD or more. Once a rarity (hence the name), there are now quite a few unicorns; the Silicon Valley law firm Fenwick & West has just concluded an examination of recent investment deals involving 37 of these hotshot companies. Fenwick & West noted that every deal, without exception, contained contract provisions of "liquidity preference" for the investors; i.e., in the event of liquidation, the new investors would recover their stake before common stockholders and (in some cases) before earlier investors as well.

Re/code's Arik Hesseldahl helps break down Fenwick & West's analysis for the benefit of those of us who haven't taken a crash course in pre-IPO financing. It turns out that the huge valuations, which probably do a lot (in the short term) for the egos and aspirations of the founders and employees, come with a catch; the deals that authorized those valuations were designed to minimize downside risk to the new investors. But that often means that the founders, rank-and-file employees - and angel investors only get their dream paydays if and when everything goes right.

For an even more graphic (though lengthier) explanation, venture capitalist Heidi Roizen posted a parable of a founder (note: fictional) whose startup was an almost instant hit, expanding rapidly with the help of several waves of venture investments. Then the company hit a wall of the type that many startups eventually run into, even the most successful ones. But because the investment deals contained "boilerplate" language for liquidity preferences and other terms protecting each successive investor from downside risk, the founder walked away with nothing.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @05:29AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @05:29AM (#184934)

    But you can no more herd unicorns than you can herd cats! For all their resemblance to horses, unicorns are solitary creatures. I doubt you could find one, let alone capture one, and it is beyond the realm of possible events that a unicorn would submit to so foul an AC as you! Alright, who let Voldemort out of his box again? Huh? I am not going to be responsible for cleaning up this mess!! Oh, no, not this time!! I'm telling you, so you will know. What, angels? Venture capitalists that will give us money on the off chance it doesn't all disappear? Count me in! I even have a unicorn, over here, in the stable, and you can do what ever you need to it. (hint, there is a reason the horn falls off, it was not a real horn, and thus not a real unicorn, in the first place. And you just . . . . nevermind.)

  • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @01:49PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @01:49PM (#185056)

    Dunno about you but I heard cats all last night, fuzzy little psychopaths. Just find some unicorns that make a noise and hearding them is easy, so avoid unicorns that have a resemblance to a hoarse.