From a legal perspective, SAFEs are generally viewed as derivative contracts providing rights to future equity ownership (i.e., warrants without an expiration date). As such, they fall under specific state and federal regulations.
A simple agreement for future equity (SAFE) is a financing contract that may be used by a startup company to raise capital in its seed financing rounds. The instrument is viewed by some as a more founder-friendly alternative to convertible notes.
From a legal perspective, SAFEs are generally viewed as derivative contracts providing rights to future equity ownership (i.e., warrants without an expiration date). As such, they fall under specific state and federal regulations.
A SAFE is an investment contract between a startup and an investor that gives the investor the right to receive equity of the company on certain triggering events, such as a: Future equity financing (known as a Next Equity Financing or Qualified Financing), usually led by an institutional venture capital (VC) fund.
An SAFT is an investment contract between investors who provide capital and developers who issue the s after specific conditions are met. An SAFE is a contract where investors provide capital in exchange for equity in a company at a future date.
SAFEs were first developed by Y Combinator in 2013 as an alternative to convertible notes. A SAFE agreement is a type of convertible instrument, but unlike debt instruments, SAFEs do not accrue interest or have a maturity date, making them an attractive fundraising option for early-stage startups.
The equity method is typically applied when a company's ownership interest in another company is valued at 20%–50% of the stock in the investee. The equity method requires the investing company to record the investee's profits or losses in proportion to the percentage of ownership.
They are accounted for as equity on the balance sheet. When the Simple Agreement for Future Equity converts to preferred stock, the accounting entries are that the SAFE entry is removed and the amount is credited to preferred equity (ignoring any APIC implications).
For example, if a SAFE has a valuation cap of $10 million, and your startup's next financing round values the company at $15 million, the SAFE investor's equity will be calculated based on the $10 million cap, not the $15 million valuation.
SAFE Note Example For example, an investor purchases a SAFE note from your startup with a valuation cap of $10M. Your company's value is set at $20M at $10/share during the subsequent funding round. The SAFE note will convert based on the valuation cap of $10M.