The Flip Transaction: Bringing Your Foreign Startup into the US Investment Market
By Roger Royse, Partner, Haynes Boone, LLP in Palo Alto, CA.
The flip transaction, bringing your foreign startup into the US investment market. Non-US startups often arrive at the point where they wish to seek funding from a US venture capital firm or establish a presence in the US. Sophisticated investors tend to prefer to invest in US portfolio companies jurisdiction, typically in Delaware.
There are several reasons that foreign entrepreneurs should move their startup from their home countries to the US. The decision to relocate may cause an increased company’s valuation or effect attractiveness for additional financing. US investors are likely to find companies that have reincorporated in the US as a more attractive investment opportunity. Companies seeking to build relationships with local investors find this becomes an easier task by relocating the business to the US. Many foreign companies already see a sizable portion of their revenue coming out of the US and a relocation to the US is a logical progression.
There are several ways to move a foreign startup to the US. For example, the foreign entity could be merged or converted into a new Delaware corporation. The owners of the foreign startup would become the shareholders of the surviving Delaware corporation. However, the most common solution for moving foreign entity into the US has been the “flip” transaction, in which the foreign entity’s shareholders create a new US entity and exchange their foreign stock for the US stock. Through this transaction the original shareholders are now the owners of the US entity, and the US entity becomes the parent of the foreign entity. The company has been reincorporated in the US satisfying the investor’s conditions to funding and angel investors and venture capital funds would then invest in the newly formed US entity.
Consider the most common scenario:
Forco, a foreign startup, has filled a market need and has accelerating year-over-year growth. Without proper funding, Forco remains highly vulnerable to emerging, funded competitors. Forco has identified Investor, a US-based angel investor or venture capital firm interested in investing. However, Investor has expressed discomfort with Forco’s foreign entity structure and foreign governing law. As a condition to funding, Investor requires Forco to reincorporate in the US and the flip approach is selected. In the flip, Forco’s shareholders create a new US entity (“Domco”), and exchange their Forco stock for Domco stock. After the exchange, the shareholders will own Domco, and Domco will own Forco. Investor invests into Domco.
Foreign startups should generally not flip before securing US investors. First , the flip eventually subjects the worldwide operation to US tax because the new US parent is taxed on its worldwide income. Second, a US parent may discourage foreign VCs from investing in the business. In addition, foreign entrepreneurs and prospective US investors should consider other issues such as the tax consequences of the flip to the shareholders of the foreign entity in their home jurisdictions, ownership and sharing of intellectual property rights between the US parent and the foreign subsidiary, intercompany agreements, issuance of equity incentives to non-US employees, review of shareholder agreements to conform to US law, securities law compliance and the need for third-party consents or approvals under existing commercial contracts of the foreign entity.
A willingness to flip opens the world’s top venture capital market to foreign startups. As the world gets smaller. Foreign companies should consider a tax efficient move to the US for investment, new markets and talent.
We hope you found this article about the flip transaction helpful. If you have questions or need expert tax or family office advice that’s refreshingly objective (we never sell investments), please contact us or visit our Family office page or our website at www.GROCO.com. Unfortunately, we no longer give advice to other tax professionals gratis.
To receive our free newsletter, contact us here.
Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more updates.
Considerately yours,
GROCO, GROCO Tax, GROCO Technology, GROCO Advisory Services, GROCO Consulting Services, GROCO Relationship Services, GROCO Consulting/Advisory Services, GROCO Family Office Wealth, and GROCO Family Office Services.
Options to Avoid Foreclosure
Options to Avoid Foreclosure By Alan Olsen, CPA, MBA (tax) Managing Partner Greenstein Rogoff Olsen & Co. LLP The divide between Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill appears to be spreading even wider after President Obama used his State of the Union Address to take dead aim at high net worth individuals. The president wants…
Sale of Residence – Real Estate Tax Tips
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Sale of Residence – Real Estate Tax Tips You may qualify to exclude from your income all or part of any gain from the sale of your main home. Your main home is the one in which you live most of the time. Ownership and Use Tests To claim the exclusion, you must meet…
Attracting Talent to Your Startup Organization
Attracting Talent to Your Startup Organization By Alan Olsen Building a successful startup company takes a lot of work and there are several important factors that play a role in whether or not a company makes it. One of the most important factors is having the right talent in. However, that is also one of…
A Bridge to Higher Social Security Benefits
A Bridge to Higher Social Security Benefits CHOOSING WHEN TO START receiving Social Security bridge benefits is one of the most crucial financial decisions facing new retirees. Many people assume collecting retirement bridge benefits as soon as they are eligible at age 62 and supplementing that income with IRA withdrawals is the best way to…