Issuing Securities to the Public 19.1 The Public Issue 19.2 Alternative Issue Methods 19.3 The Cash Offer 19.4 The Announcement of New Equity and the Value of the Firm 19.5 The Cost of
Trang 1Issuing Securities to the
Public
19.1 The Public Issue
19.2 Alternative Issue Methods
19.3 The Cash Offer
19.4 The Announcement of New Equity and the Value of the
Firm 19.5 The Cost of New Issues
19.6 Rights
19.7 The Rights Puzzle
19.8 Shelf Registration
19.9 The Private Equity Market
19.10 Summary and Conclusions
Trang 2The Public Issue
The Basic Procedure
Management gets the approval of the Board
of Directors
The firm prepares and files a registration
statement with the SEC.
The SEC studies the registration statement
during the waiting period.
The firm prepares and files an amended
registration statement with the SEC
If everything is copasetic with the SEC, a
price is set and a full-fledged selling effort
Trang 3The Process of A Public
Offering
1 Pre-underwriting conferences
2 Registration statements
3 Pricing the issue
4 Public offering and sale
5 Market stabilization
Several months 20-day waiting period Usually on the 20th day After the 20th day
30 days after offering
Trang 4Alternative Issue Methods
There are two kinds of public issues:
The general cash offer
The rights offer
Almost all debt is sold in general cash offerings
Trang 5The Cash Offer
There are two methods for issuing securities for cash:
Trang 6Firm Commitment
Under a firm commitment underwriting, the
investment bank buys the securities outright from
the issuing firm
Obviously, they need to make a profit, so they buy at
“wholesale” and try to resell at “retail”
To minimize their risk, the investment bankers
combine to form an underwriting syndicate to share the risk and help sell the issue to the public
Trang 7Best Efforts
Under a best efforts underwriting, the underwriter does not buy the issue from the issuing firm
Instead, the underwriter acts as an agent, receiving
a commission for each share sold, and using its
“best efforts” to sell the entire issue
This is more common for initial public offerings than for seasoned new issues
Trang 8Green Shoes and Lockups
Green Shoe provision
Allows syndicate to purchase an additional 15% of the issue from the issuer
Allows the issue to be oversubscribed
Provides some protection for the lead underwriter as they perform their price stabilization function
Lockup agreements
Restriction on insiders that prevents them from selling their shares of an IPO for a specified time period
The lockup period is commonly 180 days
The stock price tends to drop when the lockup period expires due to market anticipation of additional shares hitting the street
Trang 9The Announcement of New Equity and the Value of the Firm
The market value of existing equity drops on the
announcement of a new issue of common stock
Falling Earnings
Trang 10Work the Web Example
How have recent IPOs done?
Click on the web surfer to go to the Bloomberg site and follow the “IPO Center” link
How many companies have gone public in the last week?
How have companies that went public three
months ago done? What about six months ago?
Trang 11The Cost of New Issues
1. Spread or underwriting discount
2. Other direct expenses
Trang 12The Costs of Public Offerings
EquityProceeds Direct Costs Underpricing
Trang 13of incorporation, the firm must offer any new issue of common stock first to existing shareholders
This allows shareholders to maintain their
percentage ownership if they so desire
Trang 14Mechanics of Rights Offerings
The management of the firm must decide:
The exercise price (the price existing
shareholders must pay for new shares)
How many rights will be required to purchase one new share of stock
These rights have value:
Shareholders can either exercise their rights or sell their rights
Trang 15More on Rights Offerings
Ex-rights – the price of the stock will drop by the
value of the right on the day that the stock no longer carries the “right”
Standby underwriting – underwriter agrees to buy
any shares that are not purchased through the rights offering
Stockholders can either exercise their rights or sell them – they are not hurt by the rights offering either way
Rights offerings are generally cheaper, yet they are much less common than general cash offers in the U.S
Trang 16Rights Offering Example
Popular Delusions, Inc is proposing a rights offering There are 200,000 shares outstanding trading at $25 each There will be 10,000 new shares issued at a $20 subscription price
What is the new market value of the firm?
What is the ex-rights price?
What is the value of a right?
Trang 17Rights Offering Example
What is the new market value of the firm?
There are 200,000 outstanding shares at $25
each.There will be 10,000 new shares issued
at a $20 subscription price
shares
20
$ shares
000 ,
10 share
25
$ shares
000 ,
200 000
, 200
,
5
Trang 18Rights Offering Example
What is the ex-rights price?
There are 110,000 outstanding shares of a firm with a market value of $5,200,000
Thus the value of an ex-rights share is:
7619
24
$ shares
000 ,
210
000 ,
200 ,
Trang 19The Rights Puzzle
Over 90% of new issues are underwritten, even
though rights offerings are much cheaper
Trang 20 The firm must be rated investment grade.
The cannot have recently defaulted on debt
The market capitalization must be > $75 m
No recent SEC violations
Trang 21The Private Equity Market
The previous sections of this chapter assumed that
a company is big enough, successful enough, and old enough to raise capital in the public equity
market
For start-up firms and firms in financial trouble, the public equity market is often not available
Trang 22Private Placements
Avoid the costly procedures associated with the registration requirements that are a part of public issues
The SEC restricts private placement issues ot no more than a couple of dozen knowledgeable
investors including institutions such as insurance companies and pension funds
The biggest drawback is that the securities cannot
be easily resold
Trang 23Venture Capital
The limited partnership is the dominant form of
intermediation in this market
There are four types of suppliers of venture capital:
1 Old-line wealthy families.
2 Private partnerships and corporations.
3 Large industrial or financial corporations have established
venture-capital subsidiaries.
4 Individuals, typically with incomes in excess of $100,000
and net worth over $1,000,000 Often these “angels”
have substantial business experience and are able to tolerate high risks.
Trang 24Venture Capital
Private financing for relatively new businesses in
exchange for stock
Usually entails some hands-on guidance
The ultimate goal is usually to take the company
public and the VC will benefit from the capital raised
in the IPO
Many VC firms are formed from a group of investors that pool capital and then have partners in the firm decide which companies will receive financing
Some large corporations have a VC division
Trang 25Choosing a Venture Capitalist
Look for financial strength
Choose a VC that has a management style that is compatible with your own
Obtain and check references
What contacts does the VC have?
What is the exit strategy?
Trang 26Funds earmarked for working capital for a firm that is currently
selling its product but still losing money.
5 Third-Round Financing
Financing for a firm that is at least breaking even and
contemplating expansion; a.k.a mezzanine financing.
6 Fourth-Round Financing
Financing for a firm that is likely to go public within 6 months;
Trang 27Summary and Conclusions
Larger issues have proportionately much lower
costs of issuing equity than small ones
Firm-commitment underwriting is far more prevalent for large issues than is best-effort underwriting
Smaller issues probably use best effort because of the greater uncertainty
Rights offering are cheaper than general cash
offers
Shelf registration is a new method of issuing new debt and equity
Venture capitalists are an increasingly important
influence in start-up firms and subsequent financing