Accounting for SAFEs: Liability or Equity, Caps and Discounts, and What Happens at Conversion
A SAFE usually lands in the liabilities column, not equity, because it promises a variable number of shares for a fixed dollar amount. This guide explains the classification debate, the conversion math, and the journal entries from closing to conversion.
Regulation Crowdfunding: How Founders Raise Up to $5 Million From the Public Without Hiring Wall Street
Reg CF lets non-reporting U.S. companies sell securities to the public up to $5 million per rolling 12 months through an SEC-registered funding portal. This guide walks through the $124,000 investor limits, Form C disclosure, bad-actor checks, tombstone advertising, ongoing C-U and C-AR filings, and the bookkeeping for SAFEs, offering costs, and escrow that founders most often get wrong.
WACC for Small Businesses: Calculating Your Hurdle Rate with the Build-Up Method
WACC blends the after-tax cost of debt and the build-up-method cost of equity into one hurdle rate. A worked example yields 15.5% for an equity-heavy small business, the minimum return a project must clear to create value.
Regulation D Rule 506(b) vs Rule 506(c): How Founders Pick Between the Quiet Round and the Public Pitch in 2026
Rule 506(b) and Rule 506(c) of Regulation D both allow uncapped private placements but differ sharply on marketing and verification. 506(b) bans general solicitation and permits up to 35 sophisticated non-accredited investors on a reasonable-belief standard; 506(c) permits public solicitation but requires reasonable steps to verify every purchaser is accredited. A March 2025 SEC no-action letter lets issuers rely on $200,000+ individual or $1 million+ entity minimum checks as the primary verification step.
Section 382 NOL Limitation After Ownership Change: How Venture-Backed Startups Preserve Net Operating Loss Carryforwards Through Equity Rounds
Section 382 caps a startup's pre-ownership-change net operating loss deductions at the pre-change fair market value multiplied by the long-term tax-exempt rate (about 3.56 percent in February 2026), triggered when 5 percent shareholders collectively gain more than 50 percentage points over a rolling three-year testing period.
SAFE vs Convertible Note: A Founder's Guide to Choosing the Right Early-Stage Financing
A SAFE is a contract granting future equity with no maturity or interest, while a convertible note is a loan with 4–8% interest and an 18–24 month maturity that becomes due if no priced round closes — and Y Combinator's 2018 post-money SAFE locks each investor's ownership at Investment ÷ Cap, dilution that hits founders, not prior SAFE holders.
Finding the Right Business Structure for Your Company
Choosing the right business structure is crucial for your company's success, impacting taxes, liability, and funding opportunities. Learn how to make an informed decision that aligns with your business goals.