February 23, 2026
Converts: PIPE and Pre-IPO Considerations
John blogged last week that debt offerings are having a moment – in large part to fund AI-related capex – and “hyperscalers” are negotiating atypical terms. The AI boom is also one factor that’s driving a surge in convertible notes issuances, according to this Cleary memo.
In the converts space, PIPEs and pre-IPO issuances are becoming more common – and the notes often look different than their traditional counterparts. The memo says that PIPE convertible notes are including bespoke features such as:
– Governance rights, such as board or observer seats, and the right to vote the underlying shares on an as-converted basis.
– Consent rights over items such as changes of control, M&A or other extraordinary transactions; material asset sales, investments, expenditures, borrowings, or issuances; related party transactions; material changes to organizational documents or lines of business; and other material adverse changes.
– Guarantees or collateral.
– Financial covenants.
– Prepayment provisions.
– Purchase price adjustments beyond standard anti-dilution provisions in capital markets convertible notes – e.g., ratchets for lower-priced issuances within a certain period.
– Equity sweeteners, such as warrants.
– Paying interest cash or in kind (PIK interest), or a combination of the two.
– Alternative return calculations – e.g., based on a specified internal rate of return (IRR) or multiple on invested capital (MOIC).
– An extended lock-up or standstill for the investor, as well as restrictions on hedging and transfers.
– Registration rights to facilitate SEC registered resale.
– Issuing in the form of preferred stock, rather than debt.
The memo says that converts are also playing a growing role in the pre-IPO ecosystem, with pre-IPO convert deals often involving discussions of similar features as PIPE converts. See the memo for a more nuanced discussion. If you’re looking for more on converts, check out our “Convertible Debt” Practice Area for more resources.
– Liz Dunshee
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