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Principles of Finance: Unit 1, The IPO Checklist 29 Views
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Description:
There are many items on the IPO checklist, having to do with earnings, shares, spread, etc. Everyone get your pencils ready.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop. the IPO checklist. short operating
- 00:07
history .no dividends, often no earnings. so why do investors love IPOs so much? [checklist shown]
- 00:14
and because so often the stock prices of IPOs are under priced dramatically on
- 00:20
purpose. the shares zoom upwards that first day of trading in a few cases eBay
- 00:25
Yahoo LinkedIn Tesla and others the stock price is way more than doubled in
Full Transcript
- 00:30
the first day or three of trading. that's the good the bad is that most IPOs are [charts]
- 00:35
actually terrible, but investors love lottery tickets and they'll keep putting
- 00:39
5 bucks on red 32 on the roulette wheel until somebody forces them to you know
- 00:44
stop. so why do i POS zoom? well a lot of it is about unknowns. investment banks
- 00:50
technically owned the entire company for a brief moment in time and they don't
- 00:54
like to take a risk before they turn around and sell it to the public. think
- 00:57
about it. works like this. the bank is taking the company public and they buy [flow chart]
- 01:01
all the shares it's selling to the public for let's say 15 dollars and 50 cents a
- 01:06
share, and like five minutes later they turn around and dump them at sixteen
- 01:10
bucks. 50 cent spread their got it if the bank has done a great job marketing the
- 01:15
IPO to mutual funds and hedge funds and private investors buying them
- 01:19
well then demand for those shares is often a multiple of the supply of those
- 01:23
shares available to buy. got it ?demand higher than supply so stock prices go up.
- 01:28
alright and this is not done by accident or out of the banks kindly goodwill. by [man gives presentation]
- 01:32
having demand 3 for 20 times the supply the certainty that the bank will be able
- 01:38
to fully sell out all of its shares that it bought for 15 .50 or whatever the
- 01:43
price was will be very high. and in most IPO deals there is what's called a
- 01:48
greenshoe option, or over allotment option for the bank. that is if the bank
- 01:54
is supposed to be selling 10 million shares of a given company.com in an IPO [flow chart]
- 01:59
well the bank has the option to sell 12 million shares if the demand is there to
- 02:03
give it price. meaning they could sell 2 million more and that's why you'll read
- 02:06
about here about or see on CNBC initial red herring whisper prices that always
- 02:12
start out it's crazy low number like 10 bucks a share
- 02:15
and then magically seemed to creep upwards toward 15.50 well banks start low [definitions on a white board]
- 02:20
gain interest from early adopter investors and if demand is for well 80
- 02:25
million shares on a 10 million share base at 14 bucks while the bank likely
- 02:30
has little risk in raising the final IPO offering price to 15.50 and
- 02:35
having some cheapskates go away so that there is a ventral demand for 60 million
- 02:40
shares at the higher 15.50 going on $16 price and at that price. the bank can
- 02:46
sell 12 million shares instead of 10 million shares and on the margin that's [definitions on screen]
- 02:50
a big deal to the banking team who brought public the company. they're
- 02:54
making 50 cents a share spread on the shares right so on 10 million shares
- 02:58
they make 5 million and well for almost no extra effort or at least very little
- 03:02
extra effort they make an additional million bucks selling 2 million more
- 03:07
shares at 50 Cent's spread in the green shoe effort. and the companies love this [equations]
- 03:11
because they raise more capital at a higher price gives a little more cushion
- 03:15
a little more dough to go by that water fountain with the cores neon sign thingy
- 03:20
in the lobby. alright well note that IPO teams usually
- 03:23
comprised four or five individuals who tap into many resources along the way
- 03:28
mostly in the form of lawyers and accountants and other suit-wearing [man in suit frowns]
- 03:31
bureaucrats. so an extra million bucks goes a long way toward paying the
- 03:35
bonuses of the group at the end of the year, like if you think if you could do
- 03:38
one of those each month yeah that'd be grand. well being able to sell more
- 03:41
shares rather than less is a good thing for the company as we've noted. the [equations]
- 03:45
company has more shares trading in the public market which adds liquidity
- 03:49
making it easier for buyers to buy and sellers to sell the stock. and the big
- 03:54
investors love that. well that liquidity lowers the
- 03:57
transaction costs of trading in the stock, that is like there's lots of
- 04:01
shares so you don't need five cents Commission to keep everyone happy per [flow chart]
- 04:04
share it could be like four cents or three cents but you got a lot of shares
- 04:08
trading it's a lot of spread it's good for all the traders and that transaction
- 04:11
cost is essentially a tax on the trade and lower taxes are always good for
- 04:16
commerce. I'm looking at you Congress. all right well the heat the bank generates
- 04:20
is good for another reason as well the company had originally budgeted to spend [fire in a pit]
- 04:24
based on a raise ten million chairs at ten bucks are a
- 04:28
hundred million dollars of new capital, but for only modestly more dilution well
- 04:33
they'll have sold 12 million shares at 15.50 net to them -remember the bank sells
- 04:38
it at sixteenth of company keeps fifteen fifty. or said another way they've just [equations]
- 04:42
raised a hundred eighty six million instead of a hundred million and that's
- 04:45
a good thing it'll be a really nice holiday party in year one as a public
- 04:49
company so that's the reward. all right what about the risk ?well there's lots of
- 04:53
it you can imagine a situation where a company is only marginally
- 04:56
oversubscribed like demand for twenty million in their supply of 15 million.
- 05:01
and the bank is unable to raise prices along the journey of its IPO marketing [flow chart]
- 05:06
Roadshow. the bank could in theory find itself holding 10 million shares of
- 05:11
piece-of-crap.com when skittish investors 8 minutes before the IPO
- 05:15
decide to call in sell at any price orders to their traders in many deal
- 05:21
cases. in order to win the IPO the bank has to agree to buy and hold the set of
- 05:26
number of shares itself like as a proprietary trading in its own coffers
- 05:30
the bank's money is at risk. so if the deal was bought by the bank at 10 bucks [flow chart]
- 05:35
a share and it sold down to 5 bucks a share and by the way people that's about
- 05:39
what happened to Amazon on its IPO. while the bank could be left holding a heavy
- 05:44
lead filled bag in the ocean and oh by the way that's also not good for the
- 05:49
clients of the bank who rely on it to only give them "good deals" in quotes and
- 05:54
we chuckle at that. a few piece-of-crap.coms and while most banks capital [man gives presentation]
- 05:58
markets teams are out of business.
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