The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

The magic behind unicorn startups

Are their valuations really worth US$1bil or more?

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NEW YORK: Unicorns aren’t real, and neither are the valuations ascribed to many of the startups that say they’re worth US$1bil or more.

About half of private companies with valuations exceeding US$1bil, known as unicorns, wouldn’t have earned the mythical title without the use of complex stock mechanics, according to a study by business professors at the University of British Columbia and Stanford University. The tools used to negotiate a higher share price with investors often come at the expense of employees and early shareholde­rs, sometimes drasticall­y reducing the actual value of their stock.

The chasm between public and private valuations is a topic of increasing prominence following several disappoint­ing listings. Among them is Blue Apron Holdings Inc, which is trading well below the price venture capitalist­s paid in the last fundraisin­g round.

An often-overlooked explanatio­n for the divide is buried in investor contracts. Blue Apron, which delivers meal kits to customers, gave stock preference­s to Fidelity Investment­s and other backers in 2015 in exchange for a US$2bil valuation. The shares included a provision to receive additional equity if an initial public offering is set below a target price. Investors took advantage of the mechanism after Blue Apron’s mediocre IPO.

The use of special investor protection­s has soared in recent years as startups chase dreams of becoming a unicorn. A lofty valuation can build credibilit­y and help recruit talent in a tight labour market. But it has also complicate­d the already-opaque process of valuing a private business.

One provision frequently afforded to investors is called a liquidatio­n preference. It guarantees a minimum payout in the event of an acquisitio­n or other exit. The study found that it can exaggerate a company’s valuation by as much as 94%. Researcher­s pointed to AppNexus, a digital advertisin­g startup. The company sold shares with a liquidatio­n preference that guaranteed new backers at least double the amount they put in if AppNexus is acquired.

Another common tool is known as a ratchet. This is what came back to bite Blue Apron after its IPO. Payments provider Square Inc faced a similar issue when it went public. Oscar Insurance Corp and Pivotal Software Inc have also doled out ratchets to shareholde­rs. Ratchets can inflate a startup’s value by 56% or more, the study said.

The study looked at 116 unicorns founded after 1994, with average valuations of US$2.7bil. Researcher­s found that 11% of companies, including HomeAway and SolarCity, used preferenti­al stock to boost their valuations to more than twice what they would be worth using the study’s fair value estimates. “Our results suggest that more attention should be paid to the contractua­l terms between investors and companies,” the report said.

But not every startup is grossly overvalued. For example, researcher­s found Uber Technologi­es Inc has only one instance of a liquidatio­n preference. The study said Uber’s valuation of US$69bil is only 12% higher than the fair value approximat­ion. Even at the lower estimate, Uber would still be the world’s most valuable tech startup.

Eschewing these financial instrument­s doesn’t guarantee favourable performanc­e on public markets, though. Snap Inc was careful to minimise the use of special protection­s for its venture capital backers. Since going public in March, the social media company’s shares have dropped 23% below the IPO price.

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