CIRD92550 - R&D tax relief: SME definition: control by venture capital companies
In many cases a venture capital company will be investing in
start up companies that have been formed to develop and exploit a
new scientific or technological idea. In such circumstances the
venture capital company may be making a large investment in a
company with few resources, and no established business history or
experience. One of the roles of the venture capital company may be
to develop and supervise the business framework so that the
technical staff can get on with what they are best at. This role,
coupled with the measures put into place to protect the investment
by the venture capital company, may be sufficient to constitute
control for the purposes of the SME tests. But cases will need to
be judged on their own facts.
As the company develops, further finance may be sought from
others, and the company will often recruit its own experienced
executives and acquire more investors. This phase may well involve
the original venture capital company loosening the reins, and the
company getting more autonomy over its operations. So the
development of the company and refinancing operations may well
lessen any elements of control by particular investors.
If there are a number of investors it should not be presumed
that they are acting in concert simply because they have agreements
regulating the terms of their investments. One would need to see
evidence that they were acting in concert before suggesting that
joint control was in place. But if one party had the powers of the
other investors delegated to it, or there were other arrangements
in place that demonstrated they were acting with a common purpose
(above and beyond simply seeking growth in the value of their
investment) this might constitute joint control.
The 1996 European Recommendation refers to venture capital
companies in the following paragraph:
‘Whereas stakes held by public investment corporations or venture capital companies do not normally change the character of a firm from that of an SME, and may therefore be disregarded; the same applies to stakes held by institutional investors, who usually maintain an 'arm's-length’ relationship with the company in which they have invested’.
This provides the framework for understanding why the interests
of these investors can be disregarded in the absence of control.
But if a venture capital company is financing and effectively
running the start up company, rather than just holding a stake, it
may well change its character.
In cases of difficulty, it may well be helpful to see any
share subscription and investors agreements entered into by the
venture capital company as these often set out the rules by which
the company will conduct its business.
