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Do VCs Use Inside Rounds to Dilute Founders? Some Evidence from Silicon ValleyBrian J. BroughmanIndiana University Maurer School of Law Jesse M. FriedHarvard Law School June 27, 2012 Journal of Corporate Finance, Volume 18, 1104-1120 (2012) Abstract: In the bank-borrower setting, a firm’s existing lender may exploit its positional advantage to extract rents from the firm in subsequent financings. Analogously, a startup’s existing venture capital investors (VCs) may dilute the founder through a follow-on financing from these same VCs (an “inside” round) at an artificially low valuation. Using a hand-collected dataset of Silicon Valley startup firms, we find little evidence that VCs use inside rounds to dilute founders. Instead, our findings suggest that inside rounds are generally used as “backstop financing” for startups that cannot attract new money, and these rounds are conducted at relatively high valuations (perhaps to reduce litigation risk).
Number of Pages in PDF File: 51 Keywords: Venture capital, dilution, corporate governance, inside rounds, opportunism, corporate law, inside financing, adverse selection JEL Classification: G24, G32, G33, G34, K12, K20, K22, M13 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: June 27, 2011 ; Last revised: April 26, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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