ii: equities i 6: primary equity markets 7: secondary equity markets
TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Introduction
Introduction to Stock Market Investment designed for people who suspect that the
New York Stock Exchange is in New York www.business.illinois.edu/finance_dev/
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Begin With A Business
Discovery Café Use the Surveying Building as a Cyber Café
Dean’s permission I need $$
or Partner with $$
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Partnership
Two equal Partners Joe W. Partner ($10,000) Elisabeth Entrepreneur ($10,000)
Two equal shares
Par Value
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Potential Buyer
Price? Par Value Book Value
Assets – Liabilities = Shareholders Equity Earnings Earnings per Share (EPS)
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Price – Note 1
I am using information from the past to make educated guesses about what will happen in the future. You can't just graph all the past data and draw a straight line though it. A lot will depend on how I evaluate the company's ability to grow and change over an uncertain future.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Price – Note 2
Price really is irrelevant unless someone wants to buy or sell.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Share Prices
Decreasing Prices Dean gets food poisoning
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Share Prices
Increasing Prices Dean schedules the Faculty meetings in the
Discovery Café
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Expansion
Opportunity to expand to three new sites on campus.
We need $$$or another partner with $$$
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Private Equity
Accredited Investors: investors sophisticated enough to analyze the risks of a new business and who control enough money to be able to take these risks.
Angel: one venture capitalist as opposed to a group or consortium
Finance 423: Financing Emerging Businesses
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Venture Capitalist
Negotiates 40% partnership for the $50,000 we need to expand to three new sites.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Pricing
What is my share worth? What is the company worth?
(Market Capitalization)
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Success at Last
Opportunity to expand to other campuses We need $$$$$
or more partners with $$$$$
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Public Equity Market
Individual Investors: smaller investors who would normally not have the opportunity to invest in businesses
IPO: Initial Public Offering
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Investment Banking
Underwriter: financial advisers, lawyers, and marketers all rolled into one. The Underwriter takes us through the procedure of carving out a piece of the company to sell and making sure we do so legally and advantageously.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Going Public
We decide to issue 300,000 shares. The original investors retain 180,000 shares. The other 120,000 shares will be offered to the
public.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
SEC
Securities Exchange Commission to ensure that all investors have equal access
to the information they need to make informed investment decisions,
and to administer the federal securities laws and
regulate firms that provide investor services
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
EDGAR
Electronic Data Gathering And Retrieval
sec.gov/edgar/searchedgar/webusers.htm
Annual and Quarterly Filings made available to the investing public.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
SEC Registration Statement
Prospectus Red Herring
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
SEC
Registration Statement Prospectus Red Herring
Road Show Registration becomes “Effective”
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Setting the Price
Too High (?%$^#*&) Investors may not buy all the shares we offer.
Then the underwriter will be stuck with shares it can not sell,- or at least not at a profit.
Too Low (?%$^#*&) We will not generate as much money as we
might have done to finance our expansion.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
IPO: Hot
By 9:30 all 120,000 shares are sold. Secondary market Prices rise.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Hot IPO: Netscape (NSCP) Netscape Communications
(NSCP) was the classic hot issue. It went public August 9, 1995 at an offer price of $28. On the same day it hit a high of $74¾ and closed at $58¼. Netscape hit an all time high of $174 in December 1995 and split 2:1 February 7, 1996.
A year later NSCP was trading at $30
Merged with AOL in March 1999
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Cold IPO: Cyberian Outpost (COOL)
was the classic cold issue. It went public July 31, 1998 at an offer price of $26. It closed the same day at $20 1/4. This represents a drop of 20% in one day. In September it hit a low of $5 5/16 before closing at $10 7/16 at the end of the month.
Acquired by Fry’s Electronics in November 2001 for 25c per share
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Ice Cold IPO
Underwriter cannot sell all the shares offered
Underwriter can not sell enough shares to make the issue worth while and the offering may be pulled.
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Discovery Café
Price hovers right around the offer price of $50
Chapter 6: Primary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Discovery Café
What is my share worth? What is the Market Capitalization? How much money did we raise?
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Stock Exchanges
Exists to bring buyer and seller together in a two sided auction.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Auction
Buyers Bid . . . . . 10 @ $50.40 1 @ $50.35 10 @ $50.30 90 @ $50.25 120 @ $50.20
Sellers Ask 60 @ $50.65 10 @ $50.60 95 @ $50.55 50 @ $50.50 . . . . . .
Bid Ask Spread =10₵
Tick =5 ₵
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Discovery Café
Over The Counter NASDAQ NYSE
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
OTC: Over The Counter
Stocks not listed on an exchange trade over-the-counter.
OTC stocks are generally smaller companies that trade infrequently
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
OTC
John Q. Investor goes to his broker to buy 1000 shares of Discovery Café.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
OTC
The Pink Sheets brings buyers and sellers together by providing a contact of the dealers in the stock.
http://www.OTCmarkets.com/home
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASD
National Association of Securities Dealers self regulating organization oversees the OTC market administers rules of fair practice and governs
the rules of how securities are traded, delivered, and settled.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASDAQ
National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation
Began as a computerized network to link traders of OTC issues that traded more frequently.
Filed for status as an exchange under the name NASDAQ
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASDAQ
Has no trading floor network of computer and telephone lines
that link the members of the NASD Works through a system of competing
Market Makers
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Brokers, Dealers, Market Makers
Suppose that Bill Gates writes a book entitled "The Secrets of My Success - The Microsoft Story".
Bill is a good friend* and I can get copies of this book autographed by the author.
*Actually, Bill doesn’t know me from Eve
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Broker
Agent When you want to buy a book I can buy it for
you. I charge you what I paid for the book (plus commission).
When you want to sell a book I can sell it for you. I give you what I get for the book (minus commission).
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Dealer
Manages an Inventory When you want to buy a book I sell it to you
from my inventory of books. I charge you my quoted ask price plus a small markup for handling.
When you want to sell a book I buy it from you for my inventory of books. I pay you my quoted bid price less a small markup for handling.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Market Maker
Must always stand ready to buy/sell When you want to buy a book, whenever you
want to buy a book, I must sell you one from my inventory of books.
When you want to sell a book, whenever you want to sell a book, I must buy it from you.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Market Maker
Bid $50 If you want to sell a
book, I will buy it from you for $50
Ask $53 If you want to buy a
book, I will sell it to you for $53
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
Market Maker
Bid $40 Discourage book
sellers by lowering the price to $40
Ask $42 Encourage book
buying by lowering the price at which I sell to $42
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASDAQ: Example
Discovery Café applies for listing in NASDAQ Assigned the ticker symbol CAFE (all
NASDAQ stocks have 4 character symbols – or they used to anyway.)
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASDAQ
John Q. Investor goes to his broker to buy 1000 shares of Discovery Café
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NASDAQ
NASDAQ does not bring buyers and sellers together; it uses a system of wholesellers to ensure that you can always buy and sell
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NYSE
Has a trading floor Uses a specialist system
Specialist: one and only market maker for a particular stock.
The specialist is situated at one of the seventeen specialist posts on the floor of the exchange. There are 482 Specialists employed by 21 firms.
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NYSE: Example
Discovery Café decides to list its shares on the NYSE
Our ticker symbol must change DVC
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NYSE
John Q. Investor goes to his broker to buy 1000 shares of Discovery Café
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NYSE: Example
Specialist Bid $50 Broker Joe gets $1 per share more for his shares
Specialist Ask $52 John’s broker can buy
directly from the specialist at $52ohn pays $1 per share less
Chapter 7: Secondary Equity Markets © Oltheten & Waspi 2012
NYSE:
The specialist system brings buyers and sellers together by bringing everyone to the same place on the floor of the exchange
If there is an insufficiency of buyers then there is a market maker at hand
Specialist keeps the limit order book
Gosh, I can hardly wait to find out what a limit order is…. maybe I’ll read chapter 8