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Anti-Dilution Clauses Explained: Full Ratchet vs. Weighted Average

What Every Indian Founder Must Know Before Signing a Term Sheet 

What Is an Anti-Dilution Clause? 

An anti-dilution clause is a contractual provision that protects investors when a company raises a subsequent funding round at a lower valuation than the previous one, what’s commonly called a “down round.” When a down round occurs, the clause adjusts the investor’s conversion price, so they receive more shares, compensating them for the decline in per-share value. 

In India, these clauses are typically embedded in the shareholders’ agreement (SHA) and must comply with the Companies Act, 2013, the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999, and, for listed entities, SEBI regulations. For private companies receiving foreign investment, FEMA’s Non-Debt Instrument Rules also come into play. 

Anti-dilution protection is not legally mandatory. No statute requires it. But it is a standard feature in virtually every venture capital term sheet, and the type of anti-dilution you agree to have an outsized impact on who controls the company if valuations dip. 

For a deeper primer on shareholder agreements, see our guide on key clauses.  

Full Ratchet 

Under a full ratchet mechanism, the investor’s original conversion price is reset to match the new, lower price per share in the down round, regardless of how many shares are issued or how much new capital enters. It treats the investor as though they had originally invested at the lower valuation from day one. 

This is the most aggressive form of anti-dilution protection. It provides maximum protection for the investor at the maximum cost to founders and common shareholders. 

Example: How Full Ratchet Impacts Founder Equity 

Consider a real-world-style scenario. Prajna’s edtech startup raised ₹10 crore in Series A at ₹1,000 per share, issuing 10,000 shares to the investor. The company later raises a Series B at ₹500 per share. 

Without anti-dilution protection, the Series A investor still holds 10,000 shares. Their ownership is diluted proportionally by the new issuance, just like everyone else’s. 

With full ratchet protection, the investor’s conversion price resets from ₹1,000 to ₹500. Their ₹10 crore investment now converts into 20,000 shares instead of 10,000. The investor’s ownership effectively doubles, and the extra 10,000 shares come directly at the expense of the founders’ percentage and in some cases ESOPs as well. 

In Prajna’s case, her personal stake dropped from 38% to 24%. Her CTO co-founder went from 15% to under 10%. 

Case study – Housing.com 

Housing.com, the Indian proptech startup, became a cautionary example in the mid-2010s. After a public management crisis and severe valuation markdowns, early investors with aggressive anti-dilution terms were reportedly able to reprice their holdings, significantly diluting the founding team and early employees. The episode became widely discussed across India’s startup ecosystem as a warning about unchecked investor-friendly clauses. 

Weighted Average 

Weighted average anti-dilution takes a fundamentally different approach. Instead of resetting the conversion price to the new lower price entirely, it calculates a blended conversion price that accounts for both the price and the number of shares issued in the down round. The more shares issued at the lower price, the greater the adjustment, but the adjustment is always less severe than full ratchet. 

The Formula 

The standard weighted average formula is: 

New Conversion Price = Old Price × (A + B) ÷ (A + C) 

Where: 

  • A = Total shares outstanding before the new round 
  • B = Number of shares the new investment would have purchased at the old price 
  • C = Actual number of new shares issued in the down round 

Because B (the hypothetical shares at the old price) is always smaller than C (the actual shares at the lower price), the denominator is larger, and the resulting new conversion price falls between the old price and the new lower price, never as low as the full ratchet would produce. 

Broad-Based vs. Narrow-Based Weighted Average 

The critical variable within weighted average anti-dilution is what counts as “shares outstanding” in the formula. 

Broad-based weighted average includes all outstanding shares, plus options, warrants, convertible notes, and the employee stock option pool in the count. This produces a higher denominator, which means a higher adjusted conversion price and less dilution for founders. This is the more founder-friendly variant. 

Narrow-based weighted average counts only outstanding preferred shares. This produces a lower denominator, a lower adjusted conversion price, and more dilution for founders. It favors investors more. 

Indian founders should always push for broad-based weighted average. It is the market standard in mature ecosystems like the US, and it is increasingly accepted by leading Indian institutional VCs. 

Example: Weighted Average in Action 

Using the same scenario as Prajna’s edtech startup — 1,00,000 total shares outstanding before the round, 10,000 new shares issued at ₹500 — a broad-based weighted average calculation yields a new conversion price of approximately ₹955 (rather than ₹500 under full ratchet). 

At this adjusted price, the Series A investor receives roughly 10,471 shares instead of 20,000. Prajna’s dilution is approximately 0.5% instead of 14%. The difference is enormous. 

Head-to-Head: Full Ratchet vs. Weighted Average

Factor Full Ratchet Weighted Average
Founder dilution Severe, can halve founder stakes Moderate, proportional to round size
nvestor protection Maximum - full value recovery Fair, partial, proportional recovery
Market prevalence in India Rare (mostly early-stage angels) Standard (Series A and beyond)
Signal to future investors Investor distrust / adversarial terms Balanced, professional deal structure
Impact on ESOP pool Heavily eroded Marginally affected
Attractiveness for future rounds Deters new investors Neutral to positive

What Startup Founders Should Negotiate 

Anti-dilution clauses are negotiable. Here are the specific strategies that matter most in the Indian context: 

1.Always Push for Broad-Based Weighted Average

This is the global standard, and most Indian institutional VCs, including firms like Peak XV (formerly Sequoia India), Accel, and Elevation Capital, accept it. If an investor insists on a full ratchet, treat it as a serious red flag about the relationship dynamic. Full ratchet is exceptionally rare in professional VC deals and is typically only seen with certain early-stage angel investors or in distressed situations. 

2.Cap the Adjustment

Negotiate a floor so that the conversion price can never drop below a fixed percentage of the original price, commonly 70% or 80%. This limits the maximum dilution even in a severe down round, giving founders a predictable worst-case scenario. 

3.Add a Pay-to-Play Provision

A pay-to-play clause requires investors to participate in the down round (by investing additional capital) to benefit from anti-dilution protection. If they don’t invest more money, they lose the protection, or their preferred shares convert to common stock. This mechanism ensures that only committed, long-term investors benefit from protective clauses, and it has been gaining traction in recent years as a founder-friendly negotiation point. 

4.Define Trigger Events Clearly

Anti-dilution should only be triggered by genuine equity financing down rounds, not by stock splits, employee stock issuances, strategic partnership grants, or other share issuances that don’t represent a true valuation decline. Make sure the SHA explicitly excludes these events from triggering the anti-dilution adjustment. 

5.Model the Impact on Your ESOP Pool

Anti-dilution adjustments don’t just dilute founders,they can decimate the employee stock option pool. Before signing any term sheet with anti-dilution provisions, model the impact across different down-round scenarios. Understand what happens to your ESOP pool at 20%, 30%, and 50% valuation drops. If the ESOP pool gets wiped out, your ability to attract and retain talent evaporates precisely when you need it most. 

6.Consider Sunset Provisions

Negotiate for the anti-dilution protection to expire after a certain period (say, three to five years) or upon the achievement of specific milestones (such as reaching profitability or a target revenue figure). This prevents legacy protections from haunting the cap table long after they’ve served their purpose. 

The Regulatory Landscape in India 

For private companies, anti-dilution clauses are primarily a matter of contractual negotiation within the SHA, subject to compliance with the Companies Act, 2013 (particularly provisions on share issuance, pricing, and preferential allotment) and FEMA regulations for companies with foreign investment. 

The Companies Act requires that any new share issuance, including shares issued to satisfy anti-dilution adjustments, follow proper procedures: board approval, shareholder approval where required, and appropriate pricing. For companies with foreign investors, compliance with FEMA’s Non-Debt Instrument Rules is essential, including proper valuation and RBI reporting. 

For listed entities, SEBI regulations impose additional disclosure and compliance requirements. However, most startups dealing with anti-dilution clauses are private companies, where the SHA is the governing document. 

Indian courts have increasingly engaged with shareholder agreement disputes. Cases involving contested valuations, preferential allotment pricing, and investor-founder disagreements have underscored the importance of clear, well-drafted anti-dilution provisions. Ambiguity in these clauses can lead to expensive and prolonged litigation. 

FAQ's

Are anti-dilution clauses mandatory in Indian venture capital deals?

If you file everything yourself (DIY) with a capital contribution of up to ₹1 lakh in a state with low stamp duty, the minimum cost can be as low as ₹3,000-₹5,000, including DSC and government fees. However, most founders prefer professional assistance, which brings the total to ₹10,000 – ₹20,000.

Which type of anti-dilution is more common in India, full ratchet or weighted average?

Weighted average is by far the more common mechanism in professional VC deals in India, particularly from Series A onwards. Full ratchet is rare and typically only seen with certain early-stage angel investors or in deals where the investor has significantly more bargaining power. Most institutional VCs in India accept broad-based weighted average as the standard. 

Can anti-dilution protection be waived or modified after it's been agreed?

Yes, anti-dilution provisions can be waived or modified if the company’s investors and board agree. This sometimes happens when strict anti-dilution terms make it difficult to attract new investors in a subsequent round,or when all parties recognise the need for more balanced terms. Waiver typically requires consent from the holders of the affected preferred shares.

What is a pay-to-play provision, and how does it relate to anti-dilution?

A pay-to-play provision requires investors to participate in a future financing round (typically a down round) in order to retain their anti-dilution protection. If the investor chooses not to invest additional capital in the down round, they lose their anti-dilution rights , and in some structures, their preferred shares convert to common stock. This mechanism ensures that only investors who continue to support the company financially benefit from protective clauses. 

How does anti-dilution affect the ESOP pool?
  • When anti-dilution adjustments increase the number of shares held by investors, the proportional ownership of all other shareholders, including the ESOP pooldecreases. In a severe full ratchet scenario, the ESOP pool can be significantly diluted, reducing the value of stock options held by employees and making it harder to attract and retain talent. Founders should model the ESOP impact under various down-round scenarios before agreeing to any anti-dilution terms. 

Conclusion   

Anti-dilution clauses are not just legal fine print buried in a shareholders’ agreement. They are mechanisms that determine who controls your company and who benefits from its future value, especially after a rough quarter or a challenging market cycle. 

Indian founders navigating capital markets in 2026, where global uncertainty, tighter capital availability, and evolving regulatory frameworks are all at play, must understand these mechanics.  

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