A Cap (Capitalisation) Table, at the most fundamental level, is a record of all the equity that is owned by various entities (founders, employees, consultants, investors etc) in the company.
It is very important that you keep an accurate record of the equity ownership by various entities at all times. Most investors will ask for a cap table when you go to seek funding and it will determine the per-share price that will be used in the financing.
Note that in calculating your ownership in the company, you should do so on a “fully diluted basis” i.e. taking into account your option pool as well as any warrants that have been issued.
The share price for any financing will also be calculated by dividing the pre-money valuation by the fully diluted number of shares.
An entrepreneur’s journey
To understand how cap tables work, let’s follow the funding journey of a hypothetical company, ABC, Inc started by John and Jane Doe from seed funding through Series A funding. When John and Jane start the company, they decide to split their stake 50/50.
In addition, they set aside an option pool of 20 per cent for their employees. They also decided to set up the company with a total of 10 million shares with a par value of $0.001 per share which is pretty typical. The cap table will now look as follows:
- John Doe: 4,000,000 shares (40 per cent)
- Jane Doe: 4,000,000 shares (40 per cent)
- Option Pool: 2,000,000 shares (20 per cent)
Seed Round
Now let’s say the company raises a Seed round of S$500,000 from a seed VC firm Vista Capital as a convertible note with a valuation cap of S$4,000,000 and a 20 per cent discount to the next round.
This means that when the company raises a Series A, the valuation that the angel investors will get for their shares will be the lower of $4,000,000 or 80 per cent of the share price paid by the Series A investors.
Since no new shares were issued at this stage, the Cap table remains the same.
Series A funding
Now imagine that the company is doing well and has reached a milestone of S$1 million ARR (Annual Recurring Revenues). This is typically the milestone that most VCs will consider funding a company.
The company gets a term sheet from Sunrise Venture Capital to fund the company with S$6 million in funding at a pre-money valuation of S$24 million. The term sheet also stipulates an employee option pool of 20 per cent post-funding.
Also read: Future Flow’s cap table helps founders easily monitor the evolution of their stake, equity dilution
Since the term sheet requires an employee option pool of 20 per cent post-funding, the Employee option pool will need to be increased by another 1.0 million shares. This results in a total number of shares of 11 million prior to funding.
The share price for the Seed investor will be calculated as S$4,000,000/11 million shares = S$0.36 since they have a S$4,000,000 valuation cap which is lower than 80 per cent of S$24 million.
On the other hand, the share price for the Series A investor will be calculated as S$24 million/11 million shares = $2.18. The resulting cap table looks as follows:
- John Doe: 4,000,000 shares (26 per cent)
- Jane Does: 4,000,000 shares (26 per cent)
- Option Pool: 3,017,026 (20 per cent)
- Vista Capital: 1.377,128 share (9 per cent)
- Sunrise Venture Capital: 2,754,256 shares (18 per cent)
Post funding, the Company will need to do a 409A valuation to determine a new valuation of the common shares. The common shares will have a value that will be significantly less than that of the preferred shares issued to investors since they have many preferences and rights that the common shareholders don’t have.
For example, they typically have a liquidation preference where they get their money first in the event of a sale and if the sale price is not high enough there may be no distribution to common shareholders.
There are many tools available like Carta and Capshare to manage your equity. However, in the initial stages, it will be sufficient to manage your cap table using a simple spreadsheet.
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