Making Monetary Sense: How To Understand Your VC Term Sheet

Money matters, and no one understands this more than cash-strapped startups. During the course of startup maturation, founders seek financing alternatives outside of banking, family, and friends. As a result, venture capital funding has been on the rise in the Middle East as ‘treps in this region pursue greater and more sophisticated sources of capital, with Dubai thus far serving as the funding epicenter. When gearing up to enter into a capital injection agreement, one of the first things you need to be fully knowledgeable about is the term sheet- it’s the initial key document that sets out the structure of a venture capital transaction.

THE BASICS

What A term sheet outlines the principal terms and conditions that will govern a venture capital investment.

Scope This document is almost exclusively prepared by the investor, and it will include the investor’s pre-money valuation of the target company. Term sheets are generally non-binding, though they often include confidentiality provisions and an exclusivity period for negotiations that are binding on the parties. Term sheets are often very detailed, and they should be drafted and negotiated with many considerations in mind. In particular, the parties will need to balance the interests of the target company’s stakeholders. Depending on the stage of investment, there may be stakeholders with differing financial objectives and exit strategies that must be reconciled for the transaction to proceed. Also, each round of financing should anticipate the future capital needs of the company.

Party agendas Venture capitalists (VCs) will seek rights that are commensurate with their level of investment, while the company’s founders will work to maintain capital flexibility and management control and to ensure that the VCs rights are not too onerous.

FOUR KEY PROVISIONS

A term sheet for a venture capital transaction in the Middle East typically includes four provisions: valuation, investment and management structures, and changes to share capital.

1. Valuation

VCs will propose a company valuation in the term sheet, which will determine their percentage ownership in the startup. In an ideal scenario, it would be possible to use certain industry metrics to determine the value of the target company and its expected growth.

Scenario A VC may calculate the company’s terminal value (i.e. its anticipated sale price at the end of the investment term, which is generally five to seven years from the date of the financing) using a multiple of its estimated revenue or on the basis of a typical price-to-earnings ratio used in the industry. The VC could then determine the enterprise’s pre-money valuation (i.e. its current value prior to the investment being made) on the basis of the proposed return on investment, which is often a very large multiple (e.g. 20x).