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Convertible Instrument Valuation Guide in Australia

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Convertible Instrument Valuation Guide

01 Introduction

Why Convertible Instruments Exist

Convertible instruments are a common financing tool for startups and companies in the growth stage. In the risky, uncertain world of early-stage capital raising, founders and early investors face the problem that the price of equity in a company is uncertain.

The Hybrid Nature and Its Implications

These securities are hybrids that usually convert to equity at a subsequent financing round, exit or maturity. The convertible nature of these instruments makes them interesting from an analytical perspective, important from a commercial point of view, and difficult to value.

The AASB 9 Framework and Why Valuation Matters

The valuation of convertible instruments is significant for financial reporting, investor decision-making, and assessing the economic effect on equity holders. According to AASB 9 – the Australian Accounting Standard on financial instruments – the classification and measurement of convertible instruments is determined by the terms of the instrument and the contractual cash flow characteristics test.

A convertible instrument is not just debt with an embedded conversion option; it is an economically unique hybrid security whose value is based on the likelihood of conversion, the expected value of the underlying equity at conversion, and the economic characteristics of the various possible outcomes. It is not debt, and thinking it is can be costly.

02 What Is a Convertible Instrument?

Definition and Conversion Mechanics

A convertible instrument is a security that behaves like debt or a hybrid security but can convert into equity. Conversion is not mandatory; events trigger it.

The Range of Instrument Types

The breadth of instruments included in the category of convertible instruments has grown as startup financing has developed.

The Embedded Features That Create Complexity

The common feature of all these instruments, which sets their valuation apart from pure debt and pure equity, is that they contain conversion features, discounts, valuation caps, or interest that generate embedded optionality.

03Why Clients Need Convertible Instrument Valuation Guide?

The triggers for professional convertible instrument valuation cover the entire lifespan of the instrument – from its inception to its final disposition at conversion, redemption or exit. Understanding the various valuation triggers is important for practitioners to appropriately scope engagements and for companies to appreciate their ongoing measurement and disclosure requirements.

Financial Reporting

The primary driver of the need to value convertible instruments is the requirement to measure fair value under AASB 9 and AASB 13. The accounting standard AASB 9 requires the remeasurement of financial instruments classified as fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL) to fair value at each reporting period, with gains and losses recorded in the income statement.

Fundraising and Investor Reporting

The typical business use case for valuations of convertible instruments is fundraising. When a company is raising funds for a new round with outstanding convertible notes or SAFE notes, both the company and its new investors want to understand the cap table impact.

Mergers, Acquisitions and Exit Events

Acquisitions and IPOs are the most significant events for converting any convertible instrument. Exit conversion impact analysis involves modelling the conversion terms for each exit scenario.

Tax and Regulatory Compliance

The taxation of convertible instruments in Australia is covered by the TOFA (Taxation of Financial Arrangements) and general capital gains tax rules – a complex area where the accounting classification and tax treatment may be different.

04 Key Features That Affect Valuation

Convertible Instruments Are Not Simple Debt or Equity

Convertible instruments are not simple debt or equity – their value is based on features. Each feature gives rise to a different economic right or obligation that must be valued. How these features interact – and how the value of the instrument changes with the value of one or more features – is the substance of convertible instrument valuation.

The Conversion Discount

The conversion discount is the most obvious value driver for the holder. A 20% discount on a convertible instrument means that if the instrument converts in a qualifying round, the holder gets shares at 80% of the price paid by new investors – a 25% premium in equity terms compared to new investors.

The Valuation Cap and Other Key Terms

The valuation cap plays with the conversion discount in interesting ways. The cap sets the pre-money value at which the instrument will convert – and for instruments on very successful companies, the cap may be much more valuable than the discount.

05Key Valuation Approaches

The choice of valuation approach for a convertible instrument depends on the instrument’s conversion features, the type of business, and the reason for the valuation. While business valuation approaches (income, market, and cost) are fairly generic, convertible instrument valuation approaches are more specialised, capturing the probability-weighted economic consequences of multiple conversion scenarios.

Probability-Weighted Scenario Analysis

The probability-weighted scenario analysis is the most common method for valuing convertible instruments in the startup environment, and is the one that most closely reflects their economic nature.

Option Pricing Approach (Hybrid Model)

The option-pricing approach values the conversion feature of a convertible instrument as an embedded option on the issuing company’s equity value and applies option-pricing theory.

Discounted Cash Flow (Adjusted)

The discounted cash flow (adjusted) approach is most suitable for valuing convertible instruments where the debt characteristics are dominant – instruments where the probability of repayment at maturity is high or where the conversion terms are so restrictive that the value of the option is very low.

Binomial / Simulation Models

Binomial/simulation models are the most robust and flexible approach to valuing convertible instruments with complex features that cannot be accurately modelled in either a scenario-based or a simple option-pricing approach.

06 Key Value Drivers — What Increases or Reduces Instrument Value

The Three Interacting Dimensions of Instrument Value

The value of a convertible instrument ultimately depends on three interacting factors: the likelihood of conversion, the value of the equity at conversion, and the economic terms that determine what the investor receives in each scenario. A good understanding of the interaction among these dimensions and the factors that influence them is crucial for practitioners who value these instruments, for investors negotiating the terms, and for founders in understanding the economic consequences of the capital they are raising.

Factors That Increase Instrument Value

Factors that increase the value of a convertible instrument to the holder are those that increase the expected value of the instrument across the conversion and non-conversion scenarios.

Factors That Reduce Instrument Value

The value-reducing factors are also useful for investors and founders to consider the economics of outstanding instruments.

Table 1: Convertible Instrument Value Drivers — Impact and Analytical Implications

Value Driver

Direction of Impact

Analytical Mechanism

Key Sensitivity

Probability of equity conversion

Higher probability increases value

Conversion scenario payoff dominates the weighted average value.

Most sensitive assumption; must be grounded in company-specific evidence.

Expected equity valuation at conversion

Higher valuation increases value

Amplifies cap binding probability; increases discount value.

Drives both conversion scenario payoff and cap/discount interaction.

Valuation cap (absolute level)

Lower cap relative to expected valuation increases holder value

A higher cap-binding probability means more equity per dollar invested.

Critical for companies with a strong growth trajectory.

Conversion discount (e.g., 20%)

Higher discount increases value if conversion occurs

Increases equity received relative to new round investors at conversion.

Less impactful if the cap is binding; it operates as fallback protection.

Interest rate (for convertible notes)

Higher rate slightly increases value

Accrues to converting principal; increases equity received at conversion.

Material for long-dated instruments; less impactful for SAFE notes.

Time to conversion/maturity

Shorter time to conversion reduces time value uncertainty

A closer conversion event reduces the discounting period and uncertainty.

Affects the present value of the conversion scenario payoff.

Probability of repayment at maturity

Higher repayment probability reduces option value

The instrument behaves more like debt; conversion optionality is less valuable.

Critical for companies with uncertain funding prospects.

Credit risk of the issuing company

Higher credit risk reduces value in repayment scenarios

Reduces probability-weighted recovery in non-conversion outcomes.

Requires assessment of the company’s ability to repay if conversion fails.

07Common Mistakes in Convertible Instrument Valuation

The Fundamental Conceptual Challenge

The most common mistakes in convertible instrument valuations reflect the conceptual difficulty of these instruments: they are neither debt nor equity, and valuations that treat them as such are technically incorrect and commercially misleading. Awareness of these errors (and their causes) helps companies, investors, and advisers understand the need for rigour in the valuation of convertible instruments.

Treating Convertible Notes as Pure Debt

The most serious and common mistake is treating convertible notes as pure debt.

Other Critical Valuation Errors

In addition to pure-debt misclassification, there are several common errors that affect the integrity and auditability of convertible valuations.

08Five Key Steps: The PPA Engagement Process

The convertible instrument valuation engagement process is a five-step process that takes the understanding of the instrument through to the provision of an audit report. Each step in the process depends on inputs from previous steps, and the most important investment is in preparing a complete and accurate package of documents before the engagement starts.

Step 1 — Review Instrument Structure and Terms

The first step is to review the legal and financial terms of the instruments to be valued. This involves reading the convertible note agreements and SAFE agreements, the term sheets, and the shareholder agreements – not only the headline economics but all provisions that may impact the payoff of the instrument in any scenario.

Step 2 — Map Conversion Scenarios and Probabilities

Once the instrument terms are understood, the next step is to build the scenario framework for the probability-scored scenario analysis. This involves defining all possible outcomes and their probability, given the company’s characteristics.

Step 3 — Build and Parameterise the Valuation Model

The next step is to build and parameterise the valuation model using the inputs for each scenario, based on the scenario framework and probabilities from Step 2. The conversion terms and triggers identified in Step 1 must be explicitly modelled – not estimated.

Step 4 — Conduct Sensitivity Analysis

Sensitivity analysis is an essential part of a reliable valuation of convertible instruments because the inputs are uncertain and the most influential factors on the fair value conclusion.

Step 5 — Prepare Audit-Ready Valuation Report

The last step is the preparation of the valuation report – the main evidence document for the auditor to review and the basis for the classification in the balance sheet and disclosure of the derivative liability assessment in the financial statements.

09Our Valuation Process

Why a Structured Process Matters

A consistent engagement process serves as the operational framework for valuing convertible instruments. The following process is the typical best practice for a professional engagement, from initial review of the instruments to the delivery of the final report, and offers a guide for finance teams, startup CFOs, and auditors who are interested in understanding the process and quality of a valuation engagement.

Table 2: Convertible Instrument Valuation Engagement Process Flow

Step

Activity

Key Inputs

Output

Step 1 — Instrument Review

Review all legal terms of each instrument; document economically significant features; classify under AASB 9.

Convertible note / SAFE agreements; term sheets; shareholder agreement.

Instrument term summary: AASB 9 classification analysis.

Step 2 — Scenario Framework

Identify all plausible outcomes; assign scenario probabilities grounded in company-specific evidence and comparable data.

Cap table; latest funding round valuation; business plan; comparable company data.

Documented scenario framework with probability rationale.

Step 3 — Equity Valuation Basis

Establish the current equity value per share for use in conversion scenario modelling; apply OPM or PWERM if the cap table is complex.

Financial statements; funding rounds; cap table; comparables.

Equity value per share; cap table allocation if required.

Step 4 — Model Build and Parameterisation

Build probability-weighted scenario model; implement conversion mechanics; apply discount rates and timing assumptions.

All scenario inputs, conversion terms, interest and maturity terms, and discount rate derivation.

Parameterised valuation model; scenario payoff calculations.

Step 5 — Sensitivity Analysis

Test key assumptions (conversion probability, equity valuation, cap binding, timing); document fair value range.

Model output: assumption ranges from the scenario framework.

Sensitivity tables; documented fair value range.

Step 6 — Final Report

Prepare an audit-ready report documenting all terms, methodology, assumptions, analysis, and conclusions, including AASB 13 hierarchy classification.

All prior outputs, management factual review, and auditor pre-engagement.

Final signed convertible instrument valuation report.

10Indicative Timeline and Frequently Asked Questions

Planning Around Realistic Timelines

For startup CFOs, finance teams and advisers responsible for financial reporting or fundraising, it is helpful to know the expected duration of an engagement to value a convertible instrument. The engagement can range in complexity depending on the number of instruments, the terms of the instruments, and whether an underlying equity valuation is required.

Table 3: Indicative Convertible Instrument Valuation Timelines

Assignment Type

Typical Timeline

Primary Determinant

Notes

Simple SAFE note (single instrument, uncapped)

3–5 business days

Completeness of SAFE agreement and cap table.

Straightforward, where equity valuation is current and documented.

Standard convertible notes (1–3 instruments)

1 week

Equity valuation currency; scenario probability calibration.

Requires an underlying equity valuation if not current.

Portfolio of mixed instruments (multiple SAFEs + notes)

1–2 weeks

Number of instruments; consistency of terms; cap table complexity.

A consistent scenario framework across all instruments is required.

Complex instruments with multiple triggers

2–3 weeks

Simulation model complexity; scenario framework design; auditor coordination.

Binomial or Monte Carlo approach; more extensive sensitivity analysis.

Near-exit / pre-acquisition instrument valuation

1–2 weeks

Exit scenario modelling; waterfall analysis; deal term review.

Closely coordinated with legal and M&A advisers; allocation of exit proceeds required.

Are convertible notes considered debt or equity?

Convertible notes are hybrid instruments under AASB 9, with their classification as debt, equity or a combination depending on the contractual terms of the instrument.

Do SAFE notes also require valuation?

Yes, and this is a key area of under-preparation for startups. SAFE notes are financial instruments covered by AASB 9, and, like convertible notes, must be classified and measured.

What is the most important factor in valuation?

The conversion probability and the expected equity valuation at conversion are the two most important factors in valuing most convertible instruments – and they are directly related to the valuation cap and conversion discount in determining the expected payoff in the conversion scenario.

11 Challenges and Lessons Learned

Challenge 1 — The Equity Valuation Dependency

The dependency on equity valuation is the most common challenge. The scenario analysis of a convertible note or SAFE note, with probabilities, is based on an equity valuation of the company – the current equity value per share and the anticipated equity value at the time of conversion.

Challenge 2 — Calibrating Scenario Probabilities for Early-Stage Companies

The second challenge is determining scenario probabilities for early-stage companies, for which there is little empirical data on outcomes and management’s assumptions about the future are highly speculative.

Challenge 3 — The Accounting Complexity

The interaction among AASB 9, AASB 13, and AASB 132 creates a regulatory framework for convertible instruments that is truly complex, and the accounting treatment can differ significantly from the instrument’s commercial substance.

12 Conclusion and Actionable Insights

Why Convertible Instrument Valuation Matters

Convertible instruments are among the most important, complex, and misunderstood financial instruments used by startups. Their hybrid nature means there are valuation requirements unique to debt and equity, and the quality of the valuation affects the quality of the financial statements, audit opinions, and investment decisions based on those statements.

For Startup Founders and CFOs

The key takeaway is that accounting for and valuing convertible instruments is a financial governance issue – not an audit issue.

Five Actionable Steps for Practitioners

For junior and mid-career practitioners developing skills in valuing convertible instruments, here are some priorities for skill development.

Our convertible instrument valuation advisory services span the gamut of hybrid securities, from uncapped SAFE notes for early-stage startups to multi-trigger convertible instruments for pre-IPO companies, with the technical sophistication and audit-ready reporting required by financial reporting, investor reporting and regulatory compliance.  The cost of a convertible instrument is not what it costs today but what it will cost in the future. Knowing that cost, and knowing it well and early, is a key insight for founders and investors.