How to read news about a company's valuation and not draw false conclusions
“The company was valued at $1 billion”—the headline sounds impressive. But what does this really mean?
Rating mechanics:
Post-money valuation vs. Pre-money valuation
Pre-money: assessment before investment
Post-money: valuation after investment (Pre-money + round amount)
If an article says “the company raised $50 million at a $1 billion valuation,” it means that:
Post-money valuation = $1 billion
Pre-money valuation = $950 million
Investors bought 5% of the company ($50M / $1B)
Valuation != Market price
Private companies: The round valuation is the price agreed upon by the investor and the founders. This is not a market price in the same sense as shares on the stock exchange.
No liquidity: you cannot sell your share at this valuation.
May be inflated: to show success to the next investor.
Can be lowered: to save on equity for the team.
Key questions when reading the news:
1. What round?
Seed/Series A: high uncertainty, high risks, but also potential growth
Series C/D/E: the company has already been built, the risks are lower, but growth is slowing down
2. Who invested?
Top-tier VC (Sequoia, a16z, Lightspeed): strong signal function, but not a guarantee of success
Corporate investors (Google, Microsoft): strategic interest, not just ROI
Family offices: sometimes more conservative than VC
3. How long since the last round?
2x growth in 6 months: impressive, but may be overpriced
2x growth in 2 years: organic and sustainable
4. What event triggered the news?
Actual Closed Round: Real Score
Rumors from insiders: may not be confirmed
PR campaign before IPO: may be overpriced
False conclusions to avoid:
“A valuation of $1 billion means the company is successful” does not mean there can be money-losing even without a product
“This is the next Amazon” - analogies rarely work, the context is always different
“I can buy shares at this valuation” - no, if this is not an IPO or a direct transaction
Output:
Valuation in private markets is one metric among many. Use it in context: round, investors, growth, revenue, margin, team, market. Don't draw conclusions based on the title alone.
Action:
Consult @amch_manager for specific assessment details