1 / 18

Equity Financing

Equity Financing. Ty Medler Marie Hoffman Cynthia Robertson. Recap from last chapter: Debt Financing. Bonds vs loans as a source of financing capital Debt vs Equity Financing. Concepts to learn. What are the key features associated with Equity Financing

bfernandez
Télécharger la présentation

Equity Financing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Equity Financing • Ty Medler • Marie Hoffman • Cynthia Robertson

  2. Recap from last chapter:Debt Financing • Bonds vs loans as a source of financing capital • Debt vs Equity Financing

  3. Concepts to learn • What are the key features associated with Equity Financing • What is the investment banking process • Conduct simple valuation analyses of common stock • What is market equilibrium and efficiency

  4. Equity Financing in a nut shell

  5. What is a shareholder? • Any person, companyor other institutionthat owns at least one share of a company’s stock. Shareholders are a company's owners. They have the potential to profit if the company does well, but that comes with the potential to lose if the company does poorly. A shareholder may also be referred to as a "stockholder". www.investopedia.com

  6. Rights and Privileges • Preferred Stock- not always “preferable” • Usually no voting rights • Don’t increase in value the way common shares can • When company does pay dividends, holders receive money before common stockholders. • Claim on Residual Earnings • Net income “belongs” to share holders • Some portion may be paid out as dividends • Sometimes management doesn’t pay out to divided b/c the firm needs that money elsewhere, like back into the firm t sustain operations or conduct research and development.

  7. Common Stock HoldersRights and Privileges • Control of the Firm • Right to elect directors of the firm and hold sway over critical moves and decisions in the firm. • The more shares you own the more votes you have. • Hostile Takeovers • During a merger or acquisition, control of the firm occurs without the support of the controlling or majority shareholders. • Poison Pill: a “triggering” event allows shareholders during a hostile takeover to purchase additional shares at a nominal price. This safety clause keeps hostile takeovers from occurring because it dilutes the entirety of all shares. • General VS Family Dollar

  8. Common Stock HoldersRights and Privileges • Preemptive Right • The right to purchase additional stocks shared by the firm. Protects the stockholder… • Power of control • Dilution of value • Ask Eduardo Saverinwhat this means. • “you were told…signed papers” - rights offering • Lawyer up! • Just Angry Words

  9. Selling New Stock • Rights Offerings: • When new stock is issued by a company, it sells these shares first to it’s existing stock holders, usually at a nominal price. • Private Offerings • Public Offerings/Private placement • The sale of securities to a small number of investors (e.g., large banks, mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds). • Alternative Purchase Options • ESOP / ESPPs • Employee Stock Ownership Plans • Employee Stock Purchase Plans • DRIPs • dividend reinvestment plan • DSPP • Direct Stock Purchase Plans

  10. NYSE and NSDAQ • like I'm five • Facebook Hiccup: What Went Wrong on the NASDAQ Dealers Market Vs Auction Market

  11. Types of Common Stock • Private placement - The sale of securities to a small number of investors (e.g., large banks, mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds). • Alternative Purchase Options • - ESOP / ESPPs • Employee Stock Ownership Plans • Employee Stock Purchase Plans • - DRIPs • dividend reinvestment plan • DSPP • Direct Stock Purchase Plans • Types of transactions… • New Issue Market • Primary Market • Secondary Market

  12. Selling New Stock • Rights Offerings: • When new stock is issued by a company, it sells these shares first to it’s existing stock holders, usually at a nominal price. • Private Offerings • Public Offerings/Private placement • The sale of securities to a small number of investors (e.g., large banks, mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds). • Alternative Purchase Options • ESOP / ESPPs • Employee Stock Ownership Plans • Employee Stock Purchase Plans • DRIPs • dividend reinvestment plan • DSPP • Direct Stock Purchase Plans

  13. Selling New Stock: Public Offerings

  14. Selling New Stock: Private Placements

  15. Selling New Stock: Employee Stock Purchase Plans

  16. Selling New Stock: • Dividend Reinvestment • DRIPs • Stockholders can automatically reinvest their share of the dividends back into the company • Direct Purchase Plans • Allows individual investors to purchase stock directly from the company. Employee Purchase Plans, Dividend Reinvestment Plans, and Direct Purchase Plans are great for individual investors but typically do not raise large sums of capital for the firm.

  17. Review • What is a rights offering? • What is a private placement, and what are it’s primary advantages over a public offering? • What are employee stock purchase plans? • What is a dividend reinvestment plan? • What is a direct purchase plan?

More Related