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By Yin Wu, Co-Founder & CEO
Understanding the nuances of equity is more important than ever. We've compiled answers to the most common questions from recent conversations with over 100 startups.
While no one knows what will happen or how bad things will get, here is what we do know:
The role of the founder is often to be a paranoid optimist. Prepare for the worst and believe in the upside to give your company the greatest chance of making it through any macro environment.
Thank you to Pulley board member Keith Rabois at Founders Fund for his response to this question.
"I’ve been warning of a market crash since October 2021. The situation we’re in now is very similar to the dotcom burst of 2000. For the past few years, we deluded ourselves into thinking things could only go up and to the right. Back in 2000, multiple successive interest rate hikes by the Fed led tech stocks to crash. The exact same thing is happening now. When interest rates are going up, tech stocks will go down. Basic econ 101 tells us that when you raise interest rates, it impacts the discount cash flow formula for valuing stocks, with an exponential impact on further out years. Because tech companies tend to have longer paths to profitability, many founders are seeing their present valuations disproportionately cut. With publicly traded tech stocks down 50-90%, it’s become impossible for private companies to escape their public market comps (e.g., any crypto company inevitably is compared to Coinbase, which is down 85% from its highs)." - Keith Rabois, Founders Fund
It is unclear how long this pullback will last. It may be a few months like 2020, 18 months like 2008, or a brutal three-year correction like 2001. Understand your financials, and plan for all scenarios.
In order to survive, you must maximize your runway. Get to at least 24 months of runway, and ideally 30 months. You will need to raise 6-9 months before you run out of capital; if you have only 18 months of runway, you will need to raise in Spring 2023, in a potentially unfavorable fundraising climate.
If you have +24 months of runway…
Once you have 24+ months of runway, you are in one of two camps:
If you have 12 to 24 months of runway...
To extend your runway, you have three options:
If you have <6 months of runway and need to raise now...
Act immediately to get to 12 months of runway. Act with a greater sense of urgency. You should expect rounds to take twice as long to close.
Do not wait or delay. Follow the leads of Coinbase, SuperHuman, Tesla, and others in adjusting your plans quickly.
Companies raised at very high valuations in recent years, so we anticipate more repricings and down rounds as the market continues to correct. Instacart did a share repricing in April 2022, and Klarna’s valuation dropped 85% from $45.6b to $6.5b in June 2022.
For employees: If you believe in the long-term success of the company, and you primarily attribute the repricing to short-term macroeconomic conditions, there may be a silver lining. You may have a greater upside if the company gives you a supplemental grant. If so, plan ahead for additional cash outlays - both for exercising your supplemental grant and for a potentially higher tax bill later down the line. If you have already exercised, you may want to speak with a tax advisor about how best to navigate your situation.
For companies: If your company does a share repricing, this will affect both recruiting and employee morale. With recruiting, a proactive repricing can have a positive effect. Any new hires will now receive options at a lower strike price, which means that they have more equity upside in the company. For recent hires whose options are now less compelling, it’s standard to issue new grants to ensure fairness and to keep them motivated. Repricings are mostly happening at the late stage, and the nuances at every company are different. We recommend speaking to your legal and finance teams to figure out the best option for your company.
Here’s the good news. The earlier stage of the startup, the less the downturn should affect your team if you have sufficient runway.
First, early-stage companies have a longer time horizon to return capital. Late-stage companies are expected to scale and go public in an adverse public market. Late-stage companies with a high burn need to restructure their teams to stay afloat.
Second, returning a $100m investment is very different than returning a $1m investment. Each round of funding closes opportunities. Acqui-hires are still possible at the early stage.
Finally, worth is relative. Getting 10x growth for a company at $100k in revenue is getting to $1m. $900k in revenue is achievable in any macro climate.
Everything gets easier for startups in a recession, except fundraising. Bear markets are an excellent opportunity to focus on:
The amount of dilution depends on your industry and capital needs. Previously, we saw 10-15% dilution at the Seed Stage and a further 15-30% at the Series A. A great outcome in the bull market was if founders owned 50% of the company after a Series A. The rules have changed. Depending on the traction your company is seeing, expect valuations to decrease and founder ownership to decrease proportionately.
We have an equity calculator on Pulley that can model dilution through your Series A.
Thank you to Avichal Garg at Electric Capital for his response to this question.
"The most important lesson is that you cannot act out of fear. Fear leads to poor decision-making because it leads to a focus on minimizing the chances of failure. You must focus on maximizing your chances of success. Founders also have a tendency to take everything about their projects personally. This often leads to founders making themselves sick from stress.
Do not make yourself sick from stress. Do not act out of fear. Manage your own psychology to become even more ambitious, bold, and determined." - Avichal Garg, Electric Capital
Don't see your questions answered here? Get in touch with our team, read our Pulley equity guides, or check back in over the coming weeks for more equity insights to come.
Talk to an expert about using Pulley for your equity management.