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Vol. 72, No. 5, May 1999 |
Attracting Venture Capital for Business
Start-ups
By Catherine M. Gillman &
Anne E. Ross
n April 28, 1998, Wisconsin
added a new tool to its economic development program when it
enacted legislation authorizing tax incentives for investments
in Certified Capital Companies (CAPCOs). CAPCOs, organizations
whose primary business activity is investing in "qualified
businesses," have been used in a handful of other states
as a method of promoting venture capital investment within the
state. With the enactment of 1997 Wisconsin Act 215 (the Act),1
Wisconsin joined Louisiana, Missouri, and New York in offering
premium tax credits to insurance companies that make a certified
capital investment in a CAPCO. Florida joined the group shortly
after Wisconsin by passing its own CAPCO legislation on May 28,
1998, and CAPCO legislation has been introduced in both houses
of the Illinois Legislature.
This article reviews the development and operation of these
CAPCO programs and the enabling legislation in Wisconsin, exploring
the roles of the CAPCO investment vehicles, the qualified businesses
that will receive the venture capital funds, and the insurance
company investors. The article also focuses on how attorneys
can help their clients in any of these three categories take
advantage of Wisconsin's new CAPCO program.
History of CAPCOs
CAPCOs began in 1983 when Louisiana enacted legislation allowing
their creation. The initial legislation sought to encourage residents
to invest in small Louisiana businesses by offering Louisiana
income tax credits, in amounts of up to 35 percent of the cash
invested, to both individual and corporate taxpayers for qualified
investments in a certified Louisiana capital company.2 This focus
on relatively small investors proved unsuccessful, however, and
CAPCOs did not emerge as a viable means of raising venture capital
for early-stage companies until 1990. In 1990 Louisiana amended
its CAPCO statute to provide for premium tax credits to insurers
investing in Louisiana CAPCOs at the rate of 120 percent of the
dollars invested. That year, a Louisiana venture capital firm
began its first CAPCO.3 Since then, more than $200 million reportedly
has been invested in Louisiana CAPCOs.4
Because of the apparent success of CAPCOs in Louisiana, Missouri
became the second state to authorize CAPCOs in February 1997,
with New York joining the group in August. Although hard evidence
is not readily available, anecdotal evidence suggests that CAPCOs
have been successful in attracting venture capital investment
from insurance companies that had not previously invested in
venture capital funds on a regular basis.5
Overview of the CAPCO program
The goal of the CAPCO legislation is straightforward: increase
the pool of private venture capital available for investment
in early-stage small businesses in the state. The CAPCO program
seeks to achieve this goal by providing tax incentives totaling
$50 million, initially, to insurance companies to increase their
level of participation in early-stage investments. Insurance
companies, which often have significant amounts of cash to invest,
are subject to regulatory and market constraints on their ability
to increase their premiums written as a percentage of their total
"surplus" (that is, funds held to satisfy policyholder
claims). Funds invested in relatively high risk, illiquid investment
vehicles are not fully credited to an insurer's surplus
by regulators and financial rating agencies. Therefore, many
insurers are not active in financing early-stage companies. The
CAPCO legislation constitutes a "credit enhancement"
tool that opens the door for certain insurance companies to invest
in early-stage Wisconsin companies, without incurring an unacceptable
risk of reduction of their policyholders' surplus.
In Wisconsin, the CAPCO legislation will work essentially
as follows. An insurance company will make a certified investment
in a business licensed by the state as a CAPCO. The insurance
company will receive a dollar of premium tax credits for each
The state's new certified capital companies (CAPCO)
legislation taps insurance companies as a source of venture capital for
investment in early-stage companies in Wisconsin. Attorneys can help their clients
benefit from this new program. |
dollar of certified investment in the CAPCO. Premium taxes (technically,
"license fees") against which the credit will be allowed
are assessed against gross premiums collected in Wisconsin by
out-of-state fire and marine, casualty, and life insurance companies
and by Wisconsin domestic life insurance companies. An insurer
may take credit for its certified capital investments in CAPCOs
(to the extent that such investments represent an actual increase
in the insurer's aggregate investments in early-stage Wisconsin
businesses) at the rate of 10 percent per year for 10 years.
Unused credits may be carried forward to future tax years. Insurers
also may sell the CAPCO tax credits to other insurers that are
subject to premium taxes in Wisconsin, upon proper notice to
the Commissioner of Insurance.6
The premium tax credits are "earned" in the year
that the insurance company makes the certified investment in
a CAPCO. The credits are subject to recapture, however, if the
CAPCO fails to comply with certain requirements of the Act, causing
either decertification of the CAPCO or disqualification of the
investment pool. The portion of the credits subject to recapture
depends upon the extent to which the CAPCO placed its certified
capital in "qualified investments" in "qualified
businesses" before the event giving rise to decertification
or disqualification.7
Certification and operation of CAPCOs
The Wisconsin Department of Commerce (WDOC) is responsible
for certifying CAPCOs and investments in them. To be certified
as a CAPCO, an organization must be primarily involved in the
investment of cash in qualified businesses, and must have a minimum
of $500,000 in both net worth and liquid assets. In addition,
at least two responsible officers of the CAPCO must each have
a minimum of two years of experience in the venture capital industry.8
An organization seeking certification must pay a nonrefundable
application fee of $7,500,9 and an annual certification fee of
$5,000 thereafter.10 The WDOC will conduct an annual compliance
review of each CAPCO to ensure compliance with applicable statutory
and regulatory requirements.
To maintain its certification, and the premium tax credits
claimed by investors, the CAPCO must make "qualified investments"
in "qualified businesses" in accordance with a specified
investment schedule. Qualified investments consist of cash investments
for the purchase of: 1) an equity security; or 2) a
debt security having a maturity of at least five years and that
is either unsecured or is convertible into equity securities
or other equity participation instruments (for example, options
or warrants). Straight debt is not a qualified investment.
A qualified business must meet certain statutory tests of
its worthiness to receive economic assistance, including, among
others:
- location (that is, the business must be headquartered, and
have its principal business operations, in Wisconsin);
- need (that is, the business must be in need of venture capital
and be unable to obtain it by conventional financing);
- size and profitability (that is, the business may not have
more than 100 employees [at least 75 percent of whom are employed
in Wisconsin], may not have had an average after-tax consolidated
net income in excess of $2 million in the two previous fiscal
years, and may not have a consolidated net worth in excess of
$5 million); and
- nature of business (that is, the business must not be predominantly
engaged in professional services rendered by accountants, lawyers,
or physicians; the development of real estate for resale; or
banking or lending).
In addition, the qualified business must enter into four covenants,
which are designed to ensure that the invested funds are used
in ways likely to contribute to the growth of Wisconsin jobs
and the Wisconsin economy. The qualified business must agree
not to use the proceeds to relocate its operations, and it must
agree that, as long as the CAPCO holds the investment, it will
not relocate its headquarters out of Wisconsin; it will maintain
at least 75 percent of its employees in Wisconsin; and it will
maintain at least 75 percent of its employees at work sites that
were maintained when the investment was made.11 A CAPCO may seek
a written opinion from the WDOC concerning whether a business
in which it plans to invest meets these requirements.12
It is anticipated that the WDOC will promulgate rules setting
standards to assist in determining when a business will be deemed
to be "in need of venture capital" and "unable
to obtain conventional financing." These definitions will
be crucial to the WDOC's ability to ensure that the certified
capital reaches its intended early-stage target businesses, rather
than being used to refinance or transfer ownership in established
enterprises, or for passive investment.
Finally, the qualified investments in qualified businesses
must be made in accordance with the timetable set forth in the
Act. A CAPCO must invest at least 30 percent of an investment
pool within three years, and at least 50 percent within five
years. In the aggregate, then, qualified Wisconsin businesses
may receive $15 million or more of CAPCO funds before the end
of 2002, and $25 million or more before the end of 2004. Rules
to be promulgated by the WDOC may restrict a CAPCO's ability
to take credit for funds that are "churned" through
a qualified investment on a short-term basis, or rolled out of
and back into the same qualified business.13 A failure on the
part of the CAPCO to meet either the 30 percent/three-year or
the 50 percent/five-year requirement will result in the recapture
of part or all of the premium tax credits claimed by the investors.
Considerations for qualified businesses seeking CAPCO funding
Early-stage Wisconsin companies seeking venture capital would
be well advised to monitor the progress of the CAPCO program,
and consider submitting business plans to newly certified CAPCOs
whose investment strategies are compatible with such companies'
needs. A company that wishes to seek CAPCO funding should examine
the criteria for a qualified business embodied in the statute
and pending administrative rules, and consider its ability to
meet such criteria. It also should consider its ability to issue
the type of equity and debt instruments that would constitute
"qualified investments" for a CAPCO. Early planning
may enable a business to adjust its short- and long-term plans
to ensure that an investment in it will constitute a "qualified
investment" in a "qualified business." Depending
upon the content of the administrative rules to be promulgated
by the WDOC, it may even be possible for an early-stage Wisconsin
business to apply for a WDOC determination that it is a qualified
business, thus "preclearing" it to receive an investment
by a CAPCO.
Of course, companies hoping to obtain CAPCO funds should expect
to undergo the same level of "due diligence" examination
by a CAPCO investor that would be conducted by any other institutional
investor, and should prepare accordingly. In addition to the
usual comprehensive investment representations, warranties, and
covenants, recipients of CAPCO funding should be prepared to
enter into the four covenants described above, and others that
the CAPCO investor may feel are necessary and appropriate to
protect its certification as a CAPCO and the qualification of
the investment pool.
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