SAFE: Investor Walkthrough

Your $50,000 in , explained

You are putting money into Pacer through a SAFE. If that term is new, this page walks you through exactly what it means, then models what your specific investment could turn into. Every number is editable. Nothing here leaves your browser.

1 What a SAFE actually is

A SAFE is a promise of future stock, not stock today.

SAFE stands for Simple Agreement for Future Equity. You give Pacer money now. In exchange, you do not get shares today. You get the right to shares later, automatically, the next time Pacer does a priced funding round (a "Seed" or "Series A," where investors buy stock at an agreed price).

It was invented by Y Combinator to let founders raise early money fast, without the cost and haggling of pricing the whole company before it is ready. It is the most common way friends, angels, and early backers put money into startups today.

It is not a loan.

A loan has an interest rate and a date it must be paid back. A post-money SAFE has neither. There is no interest accruing and no maturity date. You are not a lender waiting to be repaid. You are an early owner waiting for your ownership to formalize.

One term does all the work.

Your SAFE rewards you for being early with a valuation cap: the maximum company price your money is allowed to convert at. When Pacer's shares are finally priced, that cap means your dollars buy more of them than someone investing the same amount later. Your cap is $10M, and it is the single term that drives everything below.

How your money becomes shares: the lifecycle

1

Today: you fund the SAFE

Your money goes to Pacer. You sign a short agreement (a few pages) recording your amount and your valuation cap. No share price is set yet.

2

Later: Pacer raises a priced round

New investors agree on a price per share. This is the trigger. Your SAFE automatically converts into shares at that moment.

3

Your cap kicks in

Your money converts as if Pacer were worth no more than your cap, even when the round prices the company higher. Because you were early, your effective price is lower, so your dollars buy more shares than the new money.

4

Exit: the company is sold or goes public

You own a percentage. In a sale or IPO, you receive that percentage of the proceeds (after later rounds have diluted everyone a bit). That is your return.

Why the cap matters: a quick picture

Say your cap is $10M. If Pacer's first priced round values the company higher than that, your cap lets you convert as if the company were only worth your cap. New investors pay the higher price; you do not. That is the early-backer reward, in one sentence.

2 Your terms

3 What you would own when it converts

These assume Pacer's first priced round (where your SAFE converts) lands at the valuation below. It is an assumption you can change, not a promise.

Your ownership at conversion
What sets your price
Vs. investing at the round
extra ownership your SAFE earns

4 What it could be worth

Your slice after dilution: . At each hypothetical sale price for Pacer, here is roughly what your stake returns:

If Pacer sells for…Your stake is worthThat is~Annual return
Simplified: assumes a healthy "up" exit where your shares share in the proceeds with everyone else. Ignores liquidation preferences and option-pool nuance, which matter more in a flat or down sale. Directional, not a quote.

5 The honest part

Early-stage investing is high risk. Please read this.
  • You can lose all of it. Most startups do not reach a big exit. A SAFE can convert to shares that end up worth zero.
  • It is illiquid. Your money is tied up until a sale or IPO, which may be many years away, or may never come.
  • Your SAFE only converts if Pacer raises a priced round. If that never happens, conversion terms vary by agreement.
  • These figures are illustrative. They are scenarios you typed in, not forecasts, and not a promise of any return.
  • Invest only what you can afford to lose, and only money you do not need for years.
One potential upside worth asking your accountant about (QSBS): if Pacer is a U.S. C-corporation and you hold the stock for 5+ years, a large portion of your eventual gain may be excluded from federal capital-gains tax under Section 1202 (Qualified Small Business Stock). This can be very valuable, but it has conditions. This is not tax advice. Confirm with your own CPA.
What if Pacer never raises a priced round?
A SAFE has no expiration date, so it simply waits. There are still three ways it pays off without a future priced round. One, any later equity financing converts it into shares. Two, if Pacer is acquired first, a post-money SAFE pays you the greater of your money back or your ownership at the $10M cap, whichever is more. Three, if Pacer ever winds down, the SAFE is repaid after company debts but ahead of common stock, to the extent money remains. The only outcome with no return is Pacer quietly continuing on its own forever without ever raising again or selling. Your signed SAFE document governs the exact mechanics. This is the standard YC post-money SAFE behavior, not legal advice.
What happens if Pacer gets acquired before my SAFE converts?
Your SAFE has a built-in payout at a sale. You receive the better of two things: your original money back (a 1x return of capital), or the value of the shares your cap entitles you to at the sale price. In a strong sale the cap path wins and you share in the upside. In a small or early sale the money-back path protects your principal to the extent the proceeds cover it.
Can I ever lose more than I put in, or owe money?
No. A SAFE is not a loan and carries no further obligation. The most you can lose is the amount you invest. There is nothing to repay and no way for your liability to grow beyond your cheque.
When would I actually see cash back?
Only at a liquidity event: Pacer being acquired or going public. Until then your ownership is on paper and illiquid. A SAFE pays no dividend or interest along the way, so plan on this being long-horizon money.

6 Jargon decoder

Valuation cap
The highest company valuation your money is allowed to convert at. A lower cap means each of your dollars buys a bigger slice. It is your reward for being early.
Post-money vs pre-money SAFE
"Post-money" (the modern standard) locks your ownership percentage cleanly at investment ÷ cap. "Pre-money" (older) is fuzzier because other SAFEs can dilute your percentage before pricing.
Priced round
A funding round (Seed, Series A) where investors and the company agree on an actual price per share. This is the event that turns your SAFE into real shares.
Dilution
When the company sells new shares later, everyone's percentage shrinks a little. Normal and healthy. Your smaller slice is of a much larger pie.
Pro-rata rights
The option (not obligation) to put more money into future rounds to maintain your ownership percentage. A perk that often rides along with a SAFE.
Liquidation preference
A term on priced-round shares that decides who gets paid first in a sale. In a strong exit it rarely changes your outcome; in a weak one it can. Your SAFE converts into the round's shares and inherits its terms.
Exit
The event that turns paper ownership into cash: the company is acquired or goes public.
This document is an educational illustration prepared for a prospective investor in Pacer Systems, Inc. It is not an offer or solicitation to sell securities, not a guarantee or projection of any return, and not legal, tax, accounting, or investment advice. All figures are hypothetical scenarios entered by the user and do not represent Pacer's actual valuation, financials, or forecasts. Any actual investment is governed solely by the executed SAFE agreement and related documents. Consult your own legal, tax, and financial advisors before investing. Calculations run entirely in your browser and are not transmitted anywhere.