session 5: long-term financing c15.0008 corporate finance topics
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Session 5: Long-Term Financing
C15.0008 Corporate Finance Topics
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Outline
• Characteristics of debt
• Warrants and convertibles
• IPOs and SEOs
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Feedback
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Key Points
• Office Hours
• Exam points
• Book vs. Classes
• Tangents
• Real life examples
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Characteristics of Debt
• A contractual obligation to make/receive a pre-specified set of payments (interest and principal)
• No ownership rights
• No control rights
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Debt Covenants
The debt contract (bond indenture) often contains provisions restricting the actions of the debtor (firm)
• Amount and seniority of additional debt
• Dividend payments
• Assets sales
• Financial ratios (technical default triggers)
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Interest Payments
• Deductible as an expense at the corporate level (for tax purposes)
• Taxable to the recipient as ordinary income
• Failure to pay triggers default
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Debt Features
• Maturity• Sinking funds• Callability• Convertibility• Fixed or floating rate• Priority/seniority• Security/collateralization• Rating
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Announcement Effects
• Managers will try to issue equity when they think their stock is overvalued
• However, the market knows this, announcement of new equity issuance is treated as bad news -> Stock price drops
• Similar issue with debt, but to a lesser extent because debt is less risky.
• This gives rise to a pecking order.
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Financing Implications
The pecking order theory suggests that financing sources are used in the following order:
(1) retained earnings (internal cash flow)
(2) debt
(3) external equity
What increases as we go from (1) to (3)?
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Some other securities
• Preferred stock
• Warrants
• Convertibles
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Preferred Stock
• A kind of equity
• “Preference” over common stock in terms of dividend payment and bankruptcy
• Stated Value
• Cumulative/non-cumulative dividends
• Tax Code quirks, regulation for utilities, bankruptcy avoidance
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Preferred Stock
Combines the features of debt and equity
Like debt• Pays a fixed dividend• No voting rights• Sinking funds,
callability, convertibility
Like equity• Dividend payments
non-deductible• Missed payment does
not trigger bankruptcy• Perpetual
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Warrants
A warrant is a security issued by the firm that gives the holder the right to buy shares of common stock from the company at a fixed price for a given period of time, i.e., it is a call option issued by the firm.
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Warrants vs. Calls
• Call—a contract (bet) between 2 individuals, the writer and the buyer
• Warrant– The firm receives the premium (price)– When exercised
• The firm receives the exercise price• The firm provides (issues) the shares
– Often long maturity– Often sold as a package with bonds where warrants
are detachable after sale
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Traded Warrants
• NYSE traded
• Exercise price: 19.23
• Expiration: 3/19/09
• American
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The Dilution Effect
A warrant is worth less than the corresponding call option (on an identical firm without warrants) because warrant exercise dilutes ownership.
Example: all equity firm, V = $51 million, n = 1 million , S = $51/share
Call (at expiration): E = 45 C = 51-45 = $6
Warrants (at expiration): E = 45, nW = 500,000V = 51 + 45 (0.5) = $73.5 millionn = 1,500,000 S = $49/share
W = 49-45 = $4
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Warrant Valuation
• Gain from exercising call:
S-E
• Gain from exercising warrant:
[ n / (n+nW) ] (S-E)
Price of warrant:
W = [ n / (n+nW) ] C
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Convertible Bonds
A convertible bond is a bond that can be converted into common stock
An example:• Straight debt (10-year): rB = 10%• Equity: S = $25/share, rS = 16%• Convertible (10-year)
– interest rate: 6% (annual coupons)– $1,000 par convertible at maturity to 20
shares
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Terminology
• Conversion ratio: 20 shares per $1000
• Conversion price: $1000/20 = $50/share
• Conversion premium: 50/25 – 1 = 100%
• Conversion value: 20 x St (at any point in time)
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Convertible Payoffs
Payoff at maturity of $1000 face value
Payoff
Stock priceS=0 S=50
1000
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Convertible Valuation
A convertible bond equals a bond plus warrants.
Conv = Bond + 20 W
Bond: 10-year, 6%, rB = 10% B = $754
Warrant:W = [n/(n+nW)] C(E=50, S=25, t=10, =50%, rf=4%) = [100/(100+3)] $12.67
Conv = $754 + 20($12.30) = $1,000
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Initial Public Offering
Initial public offering (IPO)—the first sale of common stock to the public
• Facilitated by an investment bank
• Regulated by and registered with the SEC
• Audited financials/prospectus
• Road shows/marketing
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Why?
• Why go public?– Diversification– Liquidity– Access to capital– Establish market value
• Why not?– Reporting/auditing costs– Disclosure rules– Potential loss of control– The costs associated with an IPO
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How?
• In the U.S., the principle way of going public is via an IPO using book-building
• Internationally, firms also seem to be moving towards the book-building method
• More recently in the U.S. a few firms have used an auction method for their IPOs, e.g., Google
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Book-Building: The Mechanics
• Investment bank distributes prospectus with offer size and price range (may be updated)
• Based on information from institutional investors, the investment bank sets a size and offer price in negotiation with the issuer
• The bank buys the issue from the firm (at a discount to reflect underwriting fees) and resells it at the offer price to investors selected by the bank (best efforts vs. firm commitment)
• The bank may have the option to increase the issue size/buy more shares (greenshoe option)
• The bank supports the price in the after-market
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Auction: The Mechanics
• Investment bank distributes prospectus with offer size and price range (may be updated)
• “Certified” investors can submit bids (price and quantity) online during a predetermined period
• Dutch auction—issue is priced at or below the highest price for which there is sufficient demand to sell the entire issue and allocated using price priority
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IPO Costs
• Direct costs, e.g., fees for underwriters and lawyers (~7% of capital raised, lower for auctions)
• Indirect costs, i.e., underpricing– Underpricing is the offering price relative to
the price in the secondary market thereafter– Underpricing is a cost to the original owners
• Recent IPOs
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IPOs: The NASDAQ Bubble
First-Day 3-Year Abnormal
Period #/yr Return Return
1990-94 326 11.2% -7.2%
1995-98 438 18.1% -32.3%
1999-2000 401 65.0% -34.3%
2001 80 14.0% NA
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Seasoned Offerings
Seasoned offering—subsequent (to an IPO) offering of stock that is already publicly traded
• Rights issue vs. public offering
• Shelf registration
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Costs of Seasoned Offerings
• Direct costs (~3-5% of capital raised)• Information effect on stock price, i.e., on average
price drops 3% upon announcement– What is the effect on earnings per share?– What happens when there is an excess supply of a
stock?– What kind of announcement effects are at work?
• A small amount of issue underpricing
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IPOs and SEOs occur together
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Exam points
• Tax treatment on debt vs equity
• Announcement effects
• Pecking order theory
• Warrants and convertibles
• IPO underpricing