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Chapter 18 Equity Trading

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Title: Chapter 18 Equity Trading


1
The Public Issues and Markets
2
The 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 gets
    underway.

3
Alternative 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.

4
The Cash Offer
  • There are two methods for issuing securities for
    cash
  • Firm Commitment
  • Best Efforts
  • There are two methods for selecting an
    underwriter
  • Competitive
  • Negotiated

5
Firm 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.

6
Best 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.

7
Mechanics 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.

8
Rights 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?

9
Rights 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.

10
Rights Offering Example
  • What is the ex-rights price?
  • There are 210,000 outstanding shares of a firm
    with a market value of 5,200,000.
  • Thus the value of an ex-rights share is
  • Thus the value of a right is
  • 0.2381 25 24.7619

11
Private Placements
  • Avoid the costly procedures associated with the
    registration requirements that are a part of
    public issues.
  • The SEC restricts private placement issues
  • or no more than a couple of dozen knowledgeable
    investors including institutions such as
    insurance companies and pension funds.
  • The biggest problem is that the securities cannot
    be easily resold.

12
Public offering vs. Private Placements
13
Venture Capital
  • The limited partnership is the dominant form of
    intermediation in this market.
  • There are four types of suppliers of venture
    capital
  • Old-line wealthy families.
  • Private partnerships and corporations.
  • Large industrial or financial corporations have
    established venture-capital subsidiaries.
  • 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.

14
Stages of Financing
  • 1. Seed-Money Stage Small amount of money to
    prove a concept or develop a product.
  • 2. Start-Up Funds are likely to pay for
    marketing and product refinement.
  • 3. First-Round Financing Additional money to
    begin sales and manufacturing.

15
Stages of Financing
  • 4. Second-Round Financing Funds 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
    a.k.a. bridge financing.

16
Summary 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.
  • Venture capitalists are an increasingly important
    influence in start-up firms and subsequent
    financing.

17
Market
  • is any mean through which buyers and seller are
    brought together to transfer goods and services
  • Market structure characteristics
  • Price-driven (Pure auction market) when buyers
    and sellers submit their bid and ask prices to a
    central location and transactions are matched by
    brokers who do not have a position in the stock.
  • Order-driven (Dealer market) when buyer and
    sellers submit their orders to dealers, who
    either buy the stock for their own inventory or
    sell the stock from their own inventory.

18
Market
  • The characteristics of a well-functioning
    securities market
  • 1.Provide timely and accurate information on the
    price
  • and volume of past transactions and on the
    supply of
  • and demand for current goods and services
  • 2.Provide liquidity
  • 2.1 marketability being able to sell
    quickly
  • 2.2 price continuity prices not change much
    from a
  • transaction to the next in the absence of new
    news.
  • 2.3 Depth numerous buyers and seller
    willing to trade.
  • 3. Internal efficiency the lowest possible
    transaction costs.
  • 4. External efficiency prices rapidly adjust
    to new
  • information so that the prevailing market
    price reflects all
  • available information regarding the asset.

19
Market
  • Markets are also categorized as primary or
    secondary.
  • Primary markets relate to the sale of new
    issues of securities. They are markets for
    Initial Public Offering (IPO)
  • Secondary markets are place where securities
    trade or exchange after their IPO. The secondary
    markets play an important role for liquidity.

20
Market
  • Broker an entity that acts as the agent of an
    investor who wishes to execute orders.
  • Dealer an entity that stands ready and willing
    to either buy stocks for its own account or sell
    from its account.
  • Bid willingness to buy a security at a given
    price.
  • Offer willingness to sell a security at a given
    price.
  • Dealers always take advantages on spread
    between Bid and Offer. They buy cheap and sell
    expensive.

21
25/2/03 12.30
22
25/2/03 12.30
23
25/2/03 12.30
24
Market
  • Over-the-counter (OTC) a market where listed
    stocks and unlisted stocks are traded by multiple
    market makers.
  • US markets
  • 1. The National security exchanges i.e. NYSE ,
    AMEX
  • 2. Regional security exchanges i.e. Midwest,
    Pacific, Philadelphia, Boston, and Cincinnati.
  • 3. OTC market i.e. NASDAQ

25
Efficient Capital Markets
  • An efficient capital market is one in which stock
    prices fully reflect available information.
  • The efficient capital market has implications for
    investors and firms.
  • Since information is reflected in security prices
    quickly, knowing information when it is released
    does an investor no good.
  • Firms should expect to receive the fair value for
    securities that they sell. Firms cannot profit
    from fooling investors in an efficient market.

26
Reaction of stock price to new information in
efficient and inefficient Markets
Stock Price
Overreaction to good news with reversion
Delayed response to good news
Efficient market response to good news
-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
Days before (-) and after () announcement
27
Reaction of stock price to new information in
efficient and inefficient Markets
Efficient market response to bad news
Stock Price
Delayed response to bad news
-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
Overreaction to bad news with reversion
Days before (-) and after () announcement
28
The different types of efficiency
  • Weak Form
  • Security prices reflect all information found in
    past prices and volume.
  • Semi-Strong Form
  • Security prices reflect all publicly available
    information.
  • Strong Form
  • Security prices reflect all informationpublic
    and private.

29
Weak Form Market Efficiency
  • Security prices reflect all information found in
    past prices and volume.
  • If the weak form of market efficiency holds, then
    technical analysis is of no value.
  • Often weak-form efficiency is represented as
  • Pt Pt-1 Expected return random error t
  • Since stock prices only respond to new
    information, which by definition arrives
    randomly, stock prices are said to follow a
    random walk.

30
Semi-Strong Form Market Efficiency
  • Security Prices reflect all publicly available
    information.
  • Publicly available information includes
  • Historical price and volume information
  • Published accounting statements.
  • Information found in annual reports.

31
Strong Form Market Efficiency
  • Security Prices reflect all informationpublic
    and private.
  • Strong form efficiency reflected weak and
    semi-strong form efficiency.
  • Strong form efficiency says that anything related
    to the stock and known to at least one investor
    is already incorporated into the securitys price.

32
Relationship among three different information
sets
33
Types of Orders
  • Market Orders an order executed at the best
    price available in the market.
  • Limit Orders an conditional order which be
    executed only if the limit price or a better
    price can be obtained.
  • Buy limit order means that stock may be
    purchased only at the designated price or lower.
  • Sell limit order means that stock may be sold
    only at the designated price or higher.

34
Index and Benchmark
  • Price-weighted an arithmetic average of
    current prices therefore, index is influenced by
    the differential prices of its components. i.e.
    Dow Jones Industrial average 30(DJIA), Nikkei 225

DJIAt the value of the DJIA on day t Pit
the closing price of stock i on day t Dadj
the adjusted divisor on day t
35
Index and Benchmark
  • Value-weighted compares market value (number of
    shares outstanding x current price) at time t
    with market value on the base day. i.e. SET
    Index.

Indext Index value on day t Pt the
ending prices of stocks on day t Qt the
number of outstanding shares on day t Pb the
ending prices of stocks on base day Qb the
number of outstanding shares on base day
36
SP indexes vs. Russells indexes
  • SP indexes are committee driven whereas
    Russells indexes are completely formula driven.
  • SP indexes are market-cap weighted, whereas
    Russells are market-float weighted. Cap weighted
    is more transparent than float weighted since
    determining the number of shares outstanding is
    easier than determining those available for
    purchase.
  • SP rebalances its indexes continuously when a
    company goes out of business or is acquired, SP
    finds a replacement. In contrast to Russell which
    makes all index changes once a year (on June 30).
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