A Round Financing

  

The initial round of official funding for a venture capital backed start-up company. In practice, most companies "boot strap" themselves for the first few hundred grand or million bucks of funding from angel investors, who often invest with no set valuation other than "at a discount of 30% to whatever the valuation is of the A-round." Normal A-Rounders are actual venture capitalists who invest professionally out of funds run by general partners as funded by limited partners.

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Finance: What is the Difference Between ...6 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop - what's the difference between a private company and

00:06

a public company? one word- regulation. well private companies have virtually

00:12

none. that is they are only quote regulated unquote by the contracts that [chains fall off building]

00:18

are passed among the key parties. I agree to invest such and such amount of money

00:22

to buy this many shares- and outlining the contract here in runs what happens

00:27

to that money given various outcomes. well private companies are usually

00:30

funded and covered by the wealthy. and the government feels that the wealthy

00:34

can afford their own damn lawyers that they have enough education to know that

00:38

they need lawyers ,and while they're on their own. but in the case of public

00:42

companies things are different the government feels like it owes protection

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to Jo Plummer sixpack who invests his hard-earned 3 grand a year in savings in

00:52

coca-cola stock. coke arguably the most public of public companies lives under [Coca Cola shares and price pictured on a website]

00:57

all kinds of rules. disclosures of operations disclosures of finances and

01:02

disclosures of governance and CEO compensation or bottling plant problems

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in South Paulo or even that lawsuit over the carbonated swimming pool boondoggle

01:13

in Nairobi. why so much paperwork and disclosure bureaucracy? well the

01:17

government feels that if they require all these notices from coke then Joe

01:22

plumber 6-pack is somehow protected as if Joe ever read those coca-cola

01:28

document disclosure statements. yeah pretty much never. would Joe understand

01:33

them even if he did read them? well probably not so why bother with them? in [man sits behind tall stacks of paperwork]

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theory it's just meant to be an added layer of protection for stockholders

01:40

just in case Joe decides to take a shmoop financial literacy course someday and

01:46

becomes a Rain Man level genius with you know the digits. of course on the other

01:50

hand there are a lot of government people who need employees and coke pays

01:54

lots and lots of fees for all of that disclosing, so as usual you know follow

01:59

the money. [man walks down yellow brick road littered with money] oh yeah.

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