Europe's start-ups turn to increasingly complex debt deals as cash dries
up
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[March 18, 2024] By
Elizabeth Howcroft
LONDON (Reuters) - European venture capital-backed companies are signing
up to increasingly complex convertible debt deals which risk giving
investors more control or bigger payouts further down the road, people
involved in the deals told Reuters.
Ultra-low interest rates allowed growing companies to complete equity
funding rounds at sky-high valuations during a boom in 2020 and 2021.
But as venture funding has dried up, companies and their investors have
been wary of equity funding rounds which risk establishing a new, lower
valuation.
Convertible debt, which changes into equity after a set period, can
enable company founders to raise cash quickly and privately, without
publishing an updated valuation.
The volume of convertible debt issued by European venture capital-backed
firms hit a record $2.5 billion in 2023, up from $1.7 billion in 2022,
Dealroom data compiled for Reuters shows.
But as the deals become more complex, they can offer investors more
upside and create risks for the companies, according to Reuters
interviews with lawyers, company founders and an investor familiar with
the deals.
"If you don't know what you're doing, structured debt can be a Trojan
horse," said Ali Niknam, CEO of Dutch digital bank Bunq, who has raised
via convertible debt at a previous company.
"If for whatever reason you don't make it, and it gets converted,
sometimes people lose control."
James Wootton, a partner at law firm Linklaters, said that as companies
have found it harder to raise money, the power has shifted towards
investors.
This means deals are becoming increasingly "structured", including terms
that favour investors such as handing them bigger stakes if management
does not meet certain targets.
Deals can be structured to create an incentive for the company to IPO or
raise more funds, for example by having interest rates which accrue over
time, Wootton said.
Newer convertibles include clauses that grant investors more equity if
profit margins drop below a certain level or if financial targets are
missed, one venture capital investor familiar with recent convertible
deals said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Termsheets have also featured agreements whereby the more time that
passes until an IPO, the bigger the discount at which the debt is
converted into shares, the investor added.
For some, convertibles offer an opportunity to secure alternative
longer-term funding while waiting for venture capital market conditions
to improve.
Josef Fuss, a London-based partner at law firm Taylor Wessing who has
worked on recent deals, said he had seen an increase in the size and
duration of convertible notes.
"You're kicking the can down the road and you're saying we're all
optimistic here, in 18 months, 24 months, the world's going to be a
different place hopefully and then we can have the valuation discussion
then – that is the basic premise," he said.
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A drone view of the City of London, Britain's financial powerhouse,,
Britain March 3, 2024. REUTERS/Yann Tessier//File Photo
HARDEST MARKET
Venture fundraising in Europe has slowed sharply, from $130 billion
in 2021 to $62 billion in 2023, PitchBook data shows, leaving some
early-stage firms in a funding crunch as they burn through cash.
"It's the hardest market I've worked in my professional career,"
said James Downing, who has worked in finance for 20 years and is
managing director for Europe at Hercules, a venture lender.
Hercules loaned around $200 million in the UK and Europe last year,
down from around $400 million in 2022.
"(Start-ups) are not as lend-able as they were a couple of years ago
when they were flush with VC equity," Downing said, adding that
fintech, software and consumer-focused companies were those running
out of cash fastest.
Traditional bank loans are not available to everyone and can be
expensive - market rates are around 9-13% for earlier-stage and
7.5%-10% for later-stage companies, said Sonya Iovieno, head of
venture and growth banking at HSBC Innovation Banking.
To be sure, not all firms using debt are running out of cash or
avoiding a revaluation, and convertibles are not necessarily risky,
the industry participants who spoke to Reuters said.
Norwegian lithium-ion battery business Morrow is among the VC-backed
companies which helped swell convertible debt issued by start-ups to
last year's record.
Morrow told Reuters it placed a convertible loan last year among its
main shareholders.
"Like other start-ups, Morrow Batteries has found that the capital
markets have become more challenging the last couple of years for
companies in the scale-up phase as we are," CEO Lars Christian
Bacher said in emailed comments.
Later-stage companies are also getting a taste for convertibles.
Swedish battery-maker Northvolt has raised $3.5 billion in such debt
since 2022 and listed companies in the U.S. are turning to
convertible bonds to save on interest costs.
While venture capital firms are optimistic that equity fundraising
will recover when rates fall, some companies may not be able to
stave off lower valuations indefinitely, said Aberdeen University's
Chair of Finance, Gerhard Kling.
"Delaying revaluations is not a good strategy because at the end of
the day it's the truth, it comes out, you can’t escape," he said.
"It's a bit of a gamble, you hope the market condition improves but
I'm not entirely convinced it will."
(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes
and Alexander Smith)
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