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CCPS explained: the instrument your term sheet is actually about
What the CCPS terms mean at exit
- 1x non-participating LP
- Investor takes the HIGHER of money-back or as-converted share
- Participating LP
- Investor takes money-back AND their share of the rest
- Broad-based weighted average
- Down round → conversion price adjusts moderately
- Full ratchet
- Down round → conversion price falls to the new round price (harsh)
When an Indian VC invests, they almost never buy plain equity. They buy Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares — preference shares that MUST convert into equity (typically at a liquidity event or a long-stop date). Until conversion they carry rights that plain equity does not.
Liquidation preference is the headline right: on an exit, the CCPS holder gets their money back (1x, sometimes more) before equity holders see anything. Non-participating means they choose between that preference and converting to take their percentage. Participating means they take the preference AND then share in the remainder — much more expensive for founders, and worth negotiating hard.
Anti-dilution protects the investor in a down round by adjusting their conversion terms. Broad-based weighted average is the moderate, market-standard formula. Full ratchet — resetting their price to the new round’s price entirely — can transfer dramatic ownership in a bad round.
Why this matters practically: these terms are not paperwork, they are arithmetic. Whether your Series A investor’s 1x non-participating preference converts at a ₹300cr exit is a calculation. If your cap table lives in a spreadsheet, that calculation happens ad hoc in a lawyer’s Excel during the most stressful week of your company’s life.
This explainer is general information, not legal or tax advice. Statutes change and facts differ — confirm decisions with a practising CS/CA.
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