Cornell NYC Tech Campus – What is Good for Cornell is Good for NYC

I am a Cornell grad (undergrad ’87 and ’90 law) and currently teach at the Johnson School (Cornell’s business school).  I love Cornell.

Cornell is responding to a massive RFP issued by NYC (Mayor Bloomberg’s office) for the establishment of a tech campus on Roosevelt Island.  It is a huge undertaking.  Our proposal focuses on masters of engineering degrees, a joint MEng/MBA degree and other graduate degrees.  The competition seems to be coming down to Cornell vs. Stanford (which is not surprising).  Our alumni base in and around NYC is Cornell’s huge asset – some 50,000 strong!  We will provide mentoring to Cornell NYC startups, guest lecture in class, employ graduates, etc.

As Cornell prepares to submit its bid for this 1M+ sq ft campus, please join the grassroots effort on Twitter by following and RTing @CornellTechNYC to help influence Bloomberg in this important selection process.

Thx!

Rule 409A

I just ran into a Rule 409A question the other day, and the CEO with whom I was discussing the issue suggested I write about it.  So, here goes.

In “VC world” Rule 409A is best known for providing a safe harbor for private company valuations, and in particular the setting of strike prices for employee stock options.  If the strike price is at or above fair market value (FMV), then the grant of the option is not a taxable event as the employee is getting nothing of immediate value.  If the company conducts an outside independent valuation, then, under 409A, the burden is on the IRS to prove that the valuation was not reasonable (i.e., too low in value thereby imparting immediate taxable value to the optionee).  This safe harbor has resulted in companies spending (or, depending on your perspective, wasting) money on getting these outside independent valuations.  A whole cottage industry popped up, and the cost of a valuation is typically $4-8K.   And the company will typically get it updated yearly.

My view is that 409A is a terrible piece of legislation as applied to private companies.  I just read Jason Mendelson’s post from today and he obviously agrees.  I encourage you to read his post.

Here is one reason why 409A valuations drive people nuts.  Let’s say a given company has raised $15mm in VC funding and is generating about $3mm in revenue and starting to ramp up quickly.  Furthermore, it is in an industry where M&A transactions typically happen in the 3-4X revenue range.  That means, assuming a 1X liquidation preference, that the common stock should be worth zero NOW simply based on the fact that the aggregate liquidation preference exceeds the M&A revenue multiples.  Yet, if you get a 409A valuation done, I can almost guaranty that based on alternative valuation techniques (DCFs off projected earnings), the common stock will not be worth zero.  But heck, cannot we just call the value a penny per share and let the government collect more tax when the stock is later sold generating higher gains for the option holder?  That is Jason’s point.

I recently chatted with a lawyer for the same company as the CEO referenced above.  Here is what he told me:  the board can set the stock option price and not rely on the 409A valuation safe harbor.  But, in that case, the burden falls on the company/board to prove the reasonableness of the valuation if challenged by the IRS.  My reaction to this is “fine”.  That is risk worth taking perhaps particularly if you use the aggregate liquidation preference analysis mentioned above. Tough to argue that it is not reasonable.

Worth some thought and discussion.

Reblog – Pigs and Chickens

Just read a great post by Jeff Bussgang (Flybridge general partner).  Full title is “Why Venture Capitalists Invest in Pigs, Not Chickens“.   The point about young companies with under 40 employees not needing a COO is pretty powerful.  CEO needs to be “all in” and all over the company.  Mark Suster just wrote about this exact topic as well; his post is titled “Why Your Startup Does Not Need a COO“.   There are obviously exceptions to everything.

Good reading.

Big Startup America Announcement

I am sure that many of you know about the recently launched Startup America initiative.  You can learn more about Startup America here.

Today, Startup America announced an expansion of its program partners.  The partners are donating real services, products, training, etc.  And there are BIG dollars involved.  The full announcement is here.

I am proud of Startup America and I hope it has BIG success and impact.   The benefits would be felt by many people across the country.  This is about massive job creation and economic development.

At the same time, I have one additional suggestion for the federal government: allocate real dollars to states to invest in venture capital backed businesses, ideally via established fund managers.  Now this is self-serving.  But, considering that it would not take much investment by the government to make a huge difference (for example, $1 billion would be about 5% of the VC invested dollars in 2010), this type of direct investment approach would make a true difference.  Startups need dollars.  Allocate $20 million per state and require that it be invested within one year.  There are many ways to skin the cat.

If you ever have a chance to ring this bell (assuming you support it) please do.