Shareholder Preemptive Rights: Common Terms of Subscription Privileges

Shareholders of closely held, privately owned companies often worry that their voting and economic rights may be diluted if the company were to issue new securities. An issuance of new securities could diminish a shareholder’s proportionate share of profits, dividends, and other distributions. These concerns may be especially acute when a company is just starting up and its owners anticipate future rounds of equity or debt financing. To prevent these undesirable consequences, shareholders may seek preemptive rights in offerings of new securities.  

Some states provide shareholders preemptive rights as a matter of law, while others require that preemptive rights be expressly granted in a company’s state filings or its organizational documents. Delaware’s general corporation law, for example, requires that preemptive rights be granted to shareholders in a company’s certificate of incorporation. Although there is some variance among state corporation laws, a company usually spells out the terms and conditions of any preemptive rights in its shareholders’ agreement.

Preemptive Rights: Determining a Shareholder’s Ownership Percentage

Preemptive rights entitle shareholders of a company to maintain their proportionate beneficial ownership interests by allowing them to participate in offerings of new securities on a pro rata basis. When a company issues new securities, each shareholder has a right to purchase a percentage of the new securities equal to the shareholder’s ownership percentage of the company’s outstanding stock prior to the offering. Each shareholder’s ownership percentage is calculated by dividing the number of the shareholder’s shares by the total outstanding shares of the company. One of the key differences among preemptive rights provisions is the way that the amount of total outstanding stock is determined. 

Preemptive rights may be offered either on an “as converted” or “as converted, fully diluted” basis. If the preemptive rights are offered on an “as converted” basis, then a company’s total outstanding stock prior to a new securities issuance includes both the total outstanding stock of the company and the outstanding stock there would be if its convertible preferred stock and convertible debt were to convert. If the preemptive rights are offered on an “as converted, fully diluted” basis, then a company’s total outstanding stock prior to a new securities issuance includes the company’s total outstanding stock on an “as converted basis,” plus the outstanding stock there would be if all options and warrants were exercised.

When a company plans to issue new securities that are subject to shareholders’ preemptive rights, the company commonly sends each shareholder a subscription warrant notifying him of the number of shares he is entitled to purchase.

Limitations on Preemptive Rights

Whether preemptive rights are offered on an “as converted” or “as converted, fully diluted” basis, they are customarily subject to certain limitations. Shareholder agreements restrict preemptive rights by excluding, or carving out, specific securities offerings from the definition of “new securities.” Securities offerings that may be carved out from the definition of new securities include those related to:

Equity Incentive Plans. Shareholders generally do not have preemptive rights in any new securities issued as part of a board approved employee equity incentive plan or other benefit program where the primary purpose is not to raise additional capital for the company. This exception allows the company’s board to incentivize management by offering them stock options and other interests in securities, while at the same time shielding the company from the prospect of a management buyout.  

Strategic Acquisitions. Where new securities are issued as consideration for the acquisition of another business entity, shareholders’ preemptive rights typically don’t apply. This exception enables the company to enter into transactions like stock-for-stock exchange mergers, or B reorganizations, in which an acquiring company issues new securities to the target company’s shareholders in return for a controlling interest in the target, and asset-for-stock exchange mergers, or C reorganizations, in which a company issues new securities to a target company’s shareholders in exchange for substantially all of the assets of the target. By affording the company an opportunity to grow through strategic acquisitions, this exception allows the company’s business operations to benefit from synergies and economies of scale and scope. 

Equity Kickers. So-called “equity kickers,” or equity interests attached to corporate debt, issued in connection with arm’s-length debt financing transactions are often excluded from a shareholder agreement’s definition of new securities. Banks may want to couple their rights as senior lenders with an equity position in the borrowing company and purchasers of corporate debt securities may prefer bonds issued with convertible features like options and warrants. In return, the issuing company receives lower interest rates on its senior and subordinated financing.

Stock Splits and Dividends. Another exception to the definition of new securities is the issuance of common stock resulting from a share dividend, share split, or similar event that is made on a pro rata basis. In shareholder agreements involving venture capitalists, this exception is generally not included. As primary capital contributors to a business, venture capitalists have considerable bargaining power and negotiate for additional anti-dilution protections by having their respective ownership percentages preserved after stock splits.

Public Offerings. Often, there is an exception for an initial public offering or listing of the company’s shares on a nationally or internationally recognized stock exchange. Usually, the exception only pertains to certain public offerings in which the new securities represent a specified percentage of the company’s total outstanding stock or raise proceeds above a defined threshold. The qualified public offering exception is commonly included in shareholder agreements among private equity firms when the sponsors anticipate a partial or total exit from their investment by means of an initial public offering.  

In practice, shareholder preemptive rights only benefit those shareholders with enough capital to participate in new securities offerings on a pro rata basis with their fellow investors. Shareholders with limited cash reserves may find themselves unable to exercise their preemptive rights in qualified offerings of new securities and consequently discover that their voting and economic rights have been diluted. 

Venture Capital Financing

Companies that have burned through what cash friends and family have been willing to provide, and still can’t get a bank loan, turn to strangers for money. These strangers go by many names, one being “venture capitalists”. 

Venture capitalists provide money when other sources are not available. Most venture capital financing goes to companies in a narrow band of industries:  technology, information services, life science and telecommunications. Because so many start-up ventures fail, venture capital tends to adopt a collective mentality, flocking toward those deals and industries that are perceived to have the greatest chance of a quick and profitable exit.

A common requirement for venture capital is a founder or CEO who has had previous successful experience with venture capital money. Also, venture capital tends to favor companies that are already far along in the development process and need funding to get a product to market.  Finally, venture capital needs to see that projected revenues will accelerate very quickly, like a hockey stick, once product development and launch are complete. New ventures in mature industries with slower growth prospects, no matter the brilliant the business plan, are not a target of venture capital investors.                                  

Once a decision is made to provide venture capital financing, the venture capitalist typically prepares a term sheet for the investment, setting out the principal terms of the transaction. The term sheet is later reflected in formal legal documents. Whatever negotiations transpire between the company and the venture capitalist occur as the term sheet is circulated. 

Venture Capital Term Sheets

The following provisions are typically covered in venture capital term sheets:

1. Fixing the “pre-money” value of the company in order to determine how much equity the new investors will receive. For example, if the company has a pre-money value of $3 million and the venture capitalist provides $1 million of capital, the company will be worth $4 million after the investment, and the venture capital will receive shares equal to 25% of the outstanding stock.

2. Defining the terms of the security the venture capitalist will receive—generally preferred stock. The term sheet will spell out the rights and preferences of the preferred stock, such as dividends (often payable in more shares of preferred stock), liquidation preference, conversion rights (how the preferred stock is converted into common stock), and anti-dilution protection (in case the common stock is split or additional shares of common stock are issued at a price that is less than the conversion price of the preferred stock).

3. Actions that require the consent of the preferred stock voting separately as a class, such as a merger or sale of the company, amending the terms of the preferred and the issuing securities with rights senior to those of the preferred. Generally, the approval of the venture capitalist will be required in order to undertake any significant event.

4. A right to demand that the company file a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission covering the stock so that it can be sold in the public markets. Also, the right to participate in any registration statements filed by the company on behalf of other investors.

5. The right to elect one or more members to the board of directors.

6. Who will serve as CEO and chief technology officer of the company.

7. How much stock management will own, generally through incentive stock options, including lock up provisions prohibiting the sale or transfer of such stock except in connection with a transaction in which all shareholders participate.

8. Rights of first refusal and preemptive rights with respect to new shares offered by the company.

9. The right of the investors to participate in any sale of stock by the original founders of the company.

Venture capital generally comes in stages. Each round of capital is designed to get the company to the next stage of development. As the stages proceed, different venture capitalists may become involved, as the industry has firms that specialize in different stages of development.