Warrants provide investors the right to purchase additional shares of a private company's stock at a preset price within a specified time period. This helps balance the risk of investing in early stage companies with potential future rewards. Warrants are often included in deals where investors purchase debt or preferred stock to induce them to take on the risk of the startup. They allow investors to see how the company performs before deciding if they want to make an additional investment at the original price. Warrants protect investors from share dilution from future equity issues by the company.
2. Overview
Investing in early stage companies is a difficult balancing act
of risk vs. the potential for future reward.
Warrants are often used as additional inducement for early
investors to invest in a company.
A company may issue warrants by themselves or may include
them as part of a deal for investors purchasing debt securities
or preferred stock.
3. What is a Warrant?
A traditional warrant provides the holder the right, but not
the obligation, to purchase a specified number of shares of
common stock of a private company, during a specified time
period, at the fair market value of the shares at the time the
warrant is issued.
The anti- dilution provisions in a warrant are the most
heavily negotiated provisions.
The purpose of an anti- dilution provision is to protect the
holder from being diluted because the company issues
additional equity in the future.
4. Startup Example Deal
Early stage investors commit to a company’s Series A funding
round and receive warrants equal to 25% of their initial
investment that expire in one year.
In other words, the early stage investors have the ability to
purchase up to 25% of the total number of shares they
initially purchased at the same price per share as their initial
investment, provided that they exercise the warrants within
the one- year period.
5. Why use Warrants?
There is always a risk that any deal will not be executed and
become profitable. For startups this is usually a big risk.
Even when the investors are excited about the idea, they
remain uncertain about how the company will perform after
making an investment.
Warrants allow investors to observe how the company
performs against projections before deciding whether they
want to make an additional investment at the same price that
they initially invested.
Needless to say, investors like to be able to use the benefit of
hindsight prior to making additional investments.
6. Bottom Line
Warrants are often used as additional inducement for early
investors to invest in a company and can be used to bridge
the gap in perceived execution risk between the founders and
the early stage investors.