Bonus Round
Taking on some venture debt after a round of VC can give you more bang for your buck.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/venturecapital/article62652.html
Silicon Semiconductor Corp. knows how to make a good thing last.
The Durham, North Carolina, company makes tiny, high-efficiency
power management semiconductors for use in battery-powered
electronics like laptops. Late last year, the company's ability
to stretch the life of a battery attracted a $10 million venture
investment from the granddaddy of silicon, Fairchild
Semiconductor.
That might have been enough for some companies. But Silicon
Semiconductor knows that, like a battery, venture capital
dollars need to last as long as possible. The company had an
aggressive rollout schedule for its new technology and needed to
maximize its cash available to accomplish that goal.
With the Fairchild money in the bank, Silicon Semiconductor CEO
Glenn Kline went looking for even more cash. What he found was an
additional $3.2 million-part loan and part lease. The package came
from the venture lending arm of RBC Centura bank, in Raleigh, North Carolina.
"The trick is to find lenders who have a real venture equity
perspective," says Kline, 40, "not just a traditional
banker."
What Is It?
Venture debt is simply a loan that earns the lender a small pledge
of stock warrants. Venture lenders are willing to work with risky,
early-stage companies because that small "equity kicker"
gives them a potentially large upside.
This is territory where mainstream banks fear to tread. Not only
are banks scared off by the risk inherent in early-stage companies,
but the law also restricts them from straying too far into equity
transactions with their clients. Venture lenders, however, have the
experience and manpower to evaluate and manage the risks associated
with early-stage loans.
Venture debt typically follows close on the heels of a larger VC
round. This helps lenders protect their downside risk: VCs have
been known to help their portfolio companies make good on venture
debt obligations. This kind of loan comes in two flavors: venture
lending and venture leasing. If you need to grow head count,
develop technology or pay rent, you're looking for operating
capital from a venture lender. If, on the other hand, you need to
purchase computers, real estate, heavy machinery or other assets,
you may be able to get by with venture leasing.
Venture leasing typically carries a high interest rate, but the
equipment you purchase becomes the loan collateral. Firms that
specialize in this kind of leasing include GATX, GE Capital, Oxford
Venture Finance, Pentech and Transamerica.
In contrast, venture lending typically has a very low interest
rate, but you'll need to come up with your own collateral.
Since young companies often have very few assets to pledge, venture
lenders may take a blanket lien on receivables and intellectual
property-tactics an average bank would scoff at. On the plus side,
lenders may allow you to use the loan for nearly any kind of
operating expense. Leading venture lenders include RBC Centura,
Comerica and Silicon Valley Bank.
Cheaper in the Long
Run
Companies typically turn to venture debt soon after scoring venture
capital and well before they would qualify for a standard loan. Why
not simply go for more VC money? Selling company stock to a VC
turns out to be one of the most expensive ways to raise capital.
"The cost of equity can approach or exceed 80 percent for a
successful company," says Chris Julich, manager of venture
lending at RBC Centura.
Because the interest rate of venture debt is measured in single
digits, many entrepreneurs choose to mix some VC dollars and some
venture debt. This gives them the total capital they need at an
overall price they can afford.
But don't forget that equity kicker. Remember, venture
lenders are willing to manage the extra risk because they also
participate in the upside gain through warrants for company stock.
A $1 million venture loan, for example, can earn the lender an
additional 7 percent-or $70,000-in options for stock. According to
Julich, taking both the interest rate and the value of the warrants
into account, the cost of venture debt comes out somewhere between
8 percent and 15 percent.
Follow the
Money
Venture debt may replace a future round of equity fundraising, or
you may find that it simply helps top off an equity round that fell
a little short. In either case, it is almost always a fast and
economical way to stretch your VC cash a little further.
How much further? "For the early-stage venture-backed
company, we'll lend about 30 cents on the VC dollar," says
Chris Woolley, managing director of Comerica's
Technology and Life Sciences division in San Diego. Other
lenders say they can add 20 to 40 percent.
If you don't have a recent VC round of cash, you probably
won't qualify for the extra boost, since lenders minimize risk
by lending only to highly liquid clients. Julich says RBC Centura
often looks for cash deposits equivalent to more than nine months
of operating expenses. Cash like that constitutes a "long
runway" in venture parlance. The hope, of course, is that the
business is off and flying before the money runs out.
Back at Silicon Semiconductor, CEO Kline says that thanks to
venture debt, his company is already airborne. In fact, Kline hopes
to be able to repay the venture loans from operating revenues.
"Thanks to the venture debt, we have already launched an
exceptional product-customers are saying we're six years ahead
of the competition," says Kline.
There are as many reasons to look for venture debt as there are
businesses to fund, but the value of a good venture lender is
clear. In a world of pencil-sharpening bankers and demanding VCs,
venture lenders may be the best of both worlds.
| | REWRITING THE RULES | |
| In most cases, venture
borrowers have truckloads of VC cash and a vault full of assets for
collateral. There are, however, exceptions to the rule. "One
in 20 of our accounts has reached the stage where the company
qualifies on its own," says Dave Wanders, executive vice
president of Technology Finance for Transamerica in Chicago.
Those fortunate few include eBags Inc., an online
retailer of luggage, handbags and accessories. Although eBags has
raised venture capital-about $30 million total-the last VC round
was in October 1999, says co-founder Peter Cobb (pictured). These
days, eBags is focusing on the bottom line: The company posted its
first net profit earlier this year, despite declining air travel
and weak luggage sales. When eBags first took on venture debt in September 2002, it had
two consecutive quarters of positive cash flow (earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization). That, plus the
company's uninterrupted growth and a laser-focused business
model, was enough to convince Transamerica to roll out a $1 million
revolving credit line. Says Cobb, 45, "The money was meant to
help fuel our growth and to give us a backup plan." -D.W. |
David Worrell is a
financial writer and business advisor in Charlotte, North
Carolina.
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