ACST252 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Macquarie Group, Angel Investor, Underwriting

46 views6 pages
Equity Capital and Debt Financing
Private Equity
Sources of funding:
Angel investors
o Individual investors who buy equity in small private firms.
o They leave the company
o The first round of outside private equity financing is often obtained from angels.
Venture capital firms
o Specialise in raising money to invest in the private equity of young firms.
o In return, venture capitalists often demand a great deal of control of the company.
(constitution, policies and procedures, structured management, appoint managers
in the company)
o They hope at least 20% of companies succeed (proceed to IPO)
Institutional investors
o Pension funds, insurance companies, endowments, and foundations:
May invest directly.
May invest indirectly by becoming limited partners in venture capital firms.
Corporate investors
o Many established corporations purchase equity in younger, private companies:
Corporate strategic objectives.
Desire for investment returns.
Securities and valuation:
When a company decides to sell equity to outside investors for the first time, it is typical to
issue preferred share rather than common share to raise capital.
Exiting an investment in a private company
Acquisition
Public offering:
o Advantages:
Greater liquidity.
Better access to capital.
o Disadvantages:
Equity holders more dispersed.
Must satisfy requirements of public companies.
o Underwriters and the syndicate:
Usually an investment bank (e.g. Macquarie Bank in Australia)
Manage the offering, marketing, design of structure
Lead underwriter
IPOS
ASIC and ASX filings
Lodgement of prospectus
o Long, complicated process takes about a year
Listing application with ASX
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-2 of the document.
Unlock all 6 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in
o Compliance requirements
Valuation
Underwriters work with the company to come up with a price:
o Estimate the future cash flows and compute the present value.
o Use market multiples approach.
Road Show
Book Building
Using comparables:
o Estimate the value of the company using comparable companies assume sales
factors (e.g. market) are similar
A P/E Ratio with the earnings will give the total value of equity. Divide this
by the number of shares outstanding to get the per share IPO price.
A P/R Ratio with the revenues will also give total value of equity. Divide this
by the number of shares outstanding to get the per share IPO price.
Different methods can produce a range of estimates
Pricing the deal, and managing risk - must be detailed in the prospectus
Firm commitment IPO: the underwriter guarantees that it will sell all of the share at the offer
price.
Best-Efforts Basis: the underwriter does not guarantee that the share will be sold, but
instead tries to sell the share for the best possible price.
Auction IPO / French Auction: The company or its investment bankers auction off the shares,
allowing the market to determine the price of the share.
Over-allotment allocation, or Greenshoe provision: allows the underwriter to issue more
share, amounting to 15% of the original offer size, at the IPO offer price.
IPO Puzzles
Four IPO puzzles:
Underpricing of IPOs:
o On average, between 1960 and 2003, the price in the U.S. aftermarket was 18.3%
higher at the end of the first day of trading.
o Who wins and who loses because of underpricing?
o In Australia, several studies have found that IPOs are underpriced by 10 to 15%.
o This creates great demand for IPOS, which means that the good companies have
very high demand. This means that investors are more likely to end up with few
shares from good companies (lots of competition to buy) and many from lower
quality companies resulting in greater risk .
Hot ad Cold IPO markets
o It appears that the number of IPOs is not solely driven by the demand for capital.
o Sometimes firms and investors seem to favour IPOs; at other times firms appear to
rely on alternative sources of capital.
High underwriting costs
o In Australia, the typical spread is 4%.
o This fee is large, especially considering the additional cost to the firm associated
with underpricing.
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-2 of the document.
Unlock all 6 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in

Document Summary

In return, venture capitalists often demand a great deal of control of the company. (constitution, policies and procedures, structured management, appoint managers in the company: they hope at least 20% of companies succeed (proceed to ipo) Securities and valuation: when a company decides to sell equity to outside investors for the first time, it is typical to issue preferred share rather than common share to raise capital. Lodgement of prospectus: long, complicated process takes about a year. Divide this by the number of shares outstanding to get the per share ipo price: a p/r ratio with the revenues will also give total value of equity. Divide this by the number of shares outstanding to get the per share ipo price: different methods can produce a range of estimates. In australia, several studies have found that ipos are underpriced by 10 to 15%: this creates great demand for ipos, which means that the good companies have very high demand.

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers
Class+
$30 USD/m
Billed monthly
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
7 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions