‹#› 1 Equity Financing ‹#› 2 Types of Equity Securities nCommon stock nPreferred stock nWarrants ‹#› 3 Common Stock nIt is a share of ownership in a corporation that usually entitles its holders to vote on the corporation’s affairs nThe common stockholders of a firm are generally viewed as a firm’s owners nSome firms have two classes of common stocks – dual-class shares with different in the term of votes per shares qClass A qClass B ‹#› 4 Common Stock nDual-class shares are typical for firms that are majority controlled by some person or group qFord Motor, Reader’s Digest, etc nThese firms were family-owned firms until they grew too large to be financed by the family alone nBecause the families did not want to give up control, they created two classes of common stock with one class having more votes per shares than other class nIn these situations, family members will usually own the majority of shares with the greater voting power ‹#› 5 Common Stock nThe stocks in a number of different countries outside the United States are divided into A and B classes with foreigners restricted to holding the B shares, which often have no voting rights or nShares B have voting rights, but not enough to permit foreigners to control the firm ‹#› 6 Preferred Stock nIt is a financial instrument that gives its holders a claim on a firm’s earrings that must be paid before dividends on its common stocks can be paid nPreferred stock is used much less than common stock as a source of capital nHe biggest issuers of preferred stock have historically been electric utilities which have been allowed to claim the dividends as an expense when selling electricity rates ‹#› 7 Preferred Stock nPreferred shares are almost always cumulative qIf the corporation stops paying dividends, the unpaid dividends accumulate and must be paid in full before any dividends can be paid to common shareholders qAt the same time, a firm generally cannot be forced into bankruptcy for not paying its preferred dividends nVoting rights of preferred stocks differ from instrument to instrument qpreferred stocks do not always have voting rights or qthey obtain voting rights when preferred dividends are suspended ‹#› 8 Preferred Stock nConvertible Preferred qStocks that can be converted into the common stock of the issuer qStandard features of convertible preferred stock specifies the number of common shares into which each preferred share can be converted nAdjustable-Rate Preferred qAbout half of preferred stock issued in the 1990’s was some variant of adjustable-rate-preferred stock an instrument that was invented in the 1980’s qIn each form of adjustable-rate preferred stock, the dividend is adjusted quarterly (sometimes monthly) by an amount determined by the change in some short term interest rate qMost of these stocks is sold by financial institutions seeking deposits and so bought by corporate financial managers seeking tax-advantaged investment for short-term funds qARPS – adjustable-rate preferred stock qDARTS – Dutch auction rate stock qAPS – auction preferred stock qRP – remarketed preferred q ‹#› 9 Preferred Stock nMIPS qMonthly Income Preferred Securities qOne of the biggest advantages of preferred stocks is that it allows corporations to issue a debtlike securities without lowering the rating on their existing debt qHowever, in contrast to debt securities whit tax-deductible interest, preferred stock has the disadvantage that its dividends are not tax deductible qA key distinction between a MIPS and a typical preferred security is that the MIPS can defer the dividends for only 5 years while standard preferred stock can defer the dividends indefinitely and qUnlike standard preferred stock, MIPS can force the firm into a bankruptcy for failure to pay the dividend on this instrument q ‹#› 10 Warrants nIt is a equity-related security nWarrants are the call long-term options on the issuing firm’s stock nCall options give their holders the right to buy shares of the firm at a prespecified price for a given period of time nThese options are often included as part of a unit offering, which includes two or more securities offered as a package qE.g. firms might try to sell one common share and one warrant as a unit nThis kind of unit offering serves as a form of staged financing in which investors have an option to either invest more in the firm if it is successful or to shut it down by refusing to invest as the option’s prespecified price ‹#› 11 Secondary Markets for Equity nPublicly traded securities is that they can be sold later in public secondary market nTypes of Secondary Markets for Equity qSecondary Equity market nCan be organized as an exchange or as an Over-the-counter-market nAn exchange is a physical location where buyers and sellers came together to buy and sell securities nAn OTC market in contrast, allow buyers and sellers to transact without meeting at one physical place qThe National Association for Security Dealers Automated Quotation System ‹#› 12 Secondary Markets for Equity nTwo alternatives of the traditional exchange-based and OTC-base markets are known as third and fourth market including elements of both OTC and exchange markets nThird market is composed of exchange-listed stocks that can be bought and sold over the counter by brokers nFourth market consists of large investors who traded exchange listed stocks among themselves, bypassing the exchange nAlthough it is difficult to obtain data on transaction costs from alternative markets, an estimate of the cost of trading on exchange floor is 0.05$ to $0,1 per share nIn contrast, costs of trading in the off-exchange markets can be as low as $0.01 per share ‹#› 13 Secondary Markets for Equity nIn all markets, trading is done by brokers, dealers, or both nA broker facilitates a trade between a buyer and a seller by bringing the two parties together qBrokers profit by charging brokerage commission fee for this service nAlternatively, dealers buy and sell securities directly, that is, they maintain an inventory in the security and stand willing to take the opposite side of a buy or sell qDealers make their money on the bid-ask spread, buying at the bid price and selling at the ask n ‹#› 14 Equity Market Information Efficiency and Capital Allocation nThere exists various methods that can be used to value equities nAll these methods assume that security prices satisfy what financial economists call he efficiency markets hypothesis qFama (1970) summarizes the idea of efficient markets as a “market in which prices “fully reflect available information” qIn other words, financial market prices are quite close to their fundamentals values and hence do not offer investors high expected returns without exposing them to high risks ‹#› 15 Equity Market Information Efficiency and Capital Allocation nEconomist are concerned about the efficiency of stock prices because stock prices affect how capital is allocated throughout the economy qNetscape’s initial public offering (IPO) in August 1995, which launched the Internet boom in the half of the 90’s nThe underwriters that issued the shares originally anticipate an offering at around $14 a share, but because of strong demand at that price, the offering price was raised to $28. nDuring the initial trading to stock price rose from $28 per share to more than $70 before closing at $58.25 per share nThe market’s enthusiastic acceptance of the Netscape IPO had a major effect on the Internet industry qAfter Netscape IPO, it was widely acknowledge that public markets were providing equity financing at very favorable terms for internet firms qAs a result, a substantial amount of capital flowed into newly formed internet firms and a major new industry was born r ‹#› 16 The Market for Private Equity nAlong with the boom in the public equity markets during the 1990’s, the role for private equity increased in importance nBy private equity it means equity that is not registered with Security Commission and cannot be traded in the public equity markets nIndividuals and families hold the largest portion of private equity with personal investments in relative small private businesses nIn additional, there are large institutions that provide private equity to companies ‹#› 17 The Market for Private Equity nThese institutions can be classifies as those specializing in venture capital, o providing equity capital for emerging new companies, and those specializing in restructuring, or providing equity capital for more mature firms that are making fundamental changes in the way that they are doing business ‹#› 18 The Decision to Issue Shares Publicly nMany economists believe that the relative liquid equity market and the active new issues market provide a competitive advantage to young firms nWithout access to good capital market, many entrepreneurs and venture capitalists would find it difficult or impossible to cash out or diversify their holdings nThat in turn would make starting a firm more expensive and reduce the rate at which firms are created ‹#› 19 Demand and Supply-Side Explanations for IPO Cycle nThere are both demand-side and supply side explanations for cyclical nature of the IPO market nOn the demand side, there are period when an especially large number of new firms, which are unlikely to obtain private funding in attractive terms, have investment projects that need to be funded qThe internet start-ups from 1995-1998 are goods examples nOn the supply side, there might be periods when investors and institutions that traditionally invest in IPOs have a lot of money to invest qIf a large inflow of money went into mutual funds that invest in small stocks ‹#› 20 Demand and Supply-Side Explanations for IPO Cycle nA firm considering going public would be interested in knowing whether hot issue periods qPeriods during which large number of firms going public – are driven nA large demand for public funds by firms that need financing or, nAlternatively, by a large supply of public funds that need to be invested n ‹#› 21 Demand and Supply-Side Explanations for IPO Cycle nIt the hot issue periods are demand driven qEntrepreneurs may wish to avoid going public during that time because of competition for funds would suggest that the firm might get better price by waiting nThe Supply-side explanation would suggest the opposite qIPOs are observed frequently in some years and not in others because entrepreneurs are able to time their initial public offerings to correspond with the greater supply of available findings and thereby get better deals in the hot issue period q ‹#› 22 Demand and Supply-Side Explanations for IPO Cycle nLoughran and Ritter’s empirical study (1995) suggested that the post-issue stock returns of firms that go public in hot issue periods are quite low, which support the supply-side explanation nWhat this means is that entrepreneurs may benefit from timing their IPOs so that they come out in hot issue periods qFor an investor’s perspective, this would not be a good time to buy IPOs ‹#› 23 The Benefits of Going Public nFirms go public for a number of reasons nFirst, firms may be able to obtain capital at more attractive terms from the public markets qEmerging Internet firms may have found public market to be a cheaper source of financing because of investor enthusiasm for their products nA number of firms go public issue very few shares in their initial public offering and do not really need the capital that is raised qThis was the case when Microsoft went public q ‹#› 24 The Benefits of Going Public nMicrosoft stated that one reason it went public was to provide liquidity through the public markets to firm’s managers and other insiders who were previously compensated with shares and who might otherwise be locked into an illiquid investment nSimilarly, the stock of a publicly traded firm may be considered a more attractive for of compensation than the stock of a private firm, making it easier for the public firm to attract best employees qBeing public means that the original owners, investors and old and new managers can cash out the firm and diversify their portfolios ‹#› 25 The Benefits of Going Public nAn addition advantage of being public is that stock prices in the public markets provide a valuable source of information for managers of the firm qEvery day, investors buy and sell shares, thereby rendering their judgments about the firm’s prospects and it can be useful reality check nA falling stock price indicates that a number of investors and analysts have unfavorable information about a firm’s prospects, which would tend to imply that an expansion would not be warranted ‹#› 26 The Benefits of Going Public nFinally, some managers believe that going public is good publicity qListing the firm’s stock n a national exchange may bring name recognition and increase the firm’s credibility with its customers, employees and suppliers ‹#› 27 The Costs of Going Public nIt costs a lot of money to go public qCosts of hiring an investment banker, attorney and accountants nBut by far the largest expense is the underwriting fee nThe total direct costs associated with taking a firm public are about 11 percent for the amount of money raised nWhile direct cost may be large, there existed an additional and equally important cost of going public qThe price at which the investment banker sells the issue to the original investor is generally 10 to 15 percent below the price at which the stock trades in the secondary market shortly thereafter qRegardless of the reason for the observed underpricing of new issues, firms should add the typical 10 to 15 percent underpricing to their cost of going public nTotal costs of going public could exceed 25 percent of the amount raised in the initial public offering ‹#› 28 The Costs of Going Public nOnce a firm is public, it faces other costs that private firms do not bear qPublic firms are required to provide several statements and quarterly and annual reports nBecause a public corporation is more visible than a private company, it may be pressured to do things in ways that it would not otherwise do qE.g. shareholders may put pressure on managers to make “socially responsible” investment choice nPull investments out of South Africa before the abandonment of apartheid nPressure to avoid using nuclear energy ‹#› 29 The advantages and disadvantages of going public are as follows nBetter access to capital market nShareholders gain liquidity nOriginal owners can diversify nMonitoring and information are provided by external capital market nEnhance the firm’s credibility with customers, employees, and suppliers n n n nExpensive nCosts of dealing with shareholders nInformation revealed to competitors nPublic pressure n ‹#› 30 Stock Return Associated with IPOs of Common Equity nWe noted previously that, on average IPOs are underpriced qE.g. Netscape’s stock was issued at $28 a share and closed the first day at $58.25, which suggested that the underwriter underpriced the shares by 108 percent ((58.25-28)/28) ‹#› 31 Stock Return Associated with IPOs of Common Equity nThe cost associated with the underpricing of new issues is a major cost associated with going public and has been researched extensively qUnderpricing is measured as the average initial returns measured over the first trading day (the percentage increase from the offering price to the first closing price) ‹#› 32 Stock Return Associated with IPOs of Common Equity nThe average initial returns averaged about 17% during this time period n ‹#› 33 Stock Return Associated with IPOs of Common Equity nIPOs are underpriced all over the world nThe magnitude of the underpricing is especially large in some the less developed capital markets e.g. Malaysia, Brazil, etc. n ‹#› 34 Average Initial Returns of IPOs in 25 countries ‹#› 35 What are the Long-term Returns of IPOs? nThe long-term return to investing in IPOs is surprisingly low nExamining the shareholder return to owning a portfolio of IPOs for up to five years after companies went public, these studies find annual return to be in the range of 3 percent to 5 percent, far below other benchmark returns nThe value of an IPO portfolio after five years is only 70 percent to 80 percent of the value of a portfolio that invested in all NYSE stocks or portfolio invested in S&P 500 Index nBut if the performance o IPOs is measured relative to comparison stocks with equivalent size and book to market ratios the underperformance of IPOs disappears qMost IPOs can be categorized as small growth stocks, and these stocks have historically had extremely low return ‹#› 36 What Explains Underpricing nThe tendency of IPOs to be underpriced is interest for variety of reasons nThe underpricing of IPOs increases the cost of going public and may thus deter some firms from going public nIn setting an offering price underwriters will weigh the costs and benefits of raising or lowering the issue’s price qPricing an issue too low adds to the cost of going public and therefore, to attract client, underwriters try to price their issues as high as possible qThis tendency is offset by the possibility that the issue may not sell if it is priced too high, leaving the underwriter saddled with unsold shares ‹#› 37 What Explains Underpricing nThere exists a potential conflict of interest between underwriters and issuing firms that arise because of their differing incentives and the underwriter’s better information about market conditions nThe underwriter incentive is to set the offering price low enough to ensure that all the shares will sell without much effort and without subjecting the underwriter to excessive risk nUnderpricing the issue makes the underwriter’s job easier and less risky qOften firms go pubic as a precursor to a large seasoned issues in the near future. This allows managers to first test the water with small issues and, it that issue is successful, to subsequently raise additional equity capital n ‹#› 38 Results nThe stock market plays an important role in allocation capital. Sectors of the economy that experience favorable stock returns can more easily raise new capital for investment. The stock market is likely to more efficiently allocate capital if market prices accurately reflect the investment opportunities within an industry nIPOs are observed frequently in some years and not in other years. The available evidence suggests that the hot issue periods are characterized by a large supply of available capital. Given this interpretation, firms are better off going public during the hot issue period nWe mentioned several advantages and disadvantages of going public. In general, a firm should go public when the benefits of doing so exceed the costs ‹#› 39 Thank you for your attention