F2A - Chapter 1: Long-term finance Flashcards
What are some sources of external funding?
Capital markets - new shares issue, rights issue, issue of marketable debt
Banks and finance houses
Government and similar sources
What are shares?
A fix identifiable unit of capital in an entity
What are ordinary shares?
Pay dividends at the discretion of the directors.
Owners of the company that have the right to attend AGMs and vote.
What are preference shares?
Shares that pay a fix dividend, which is paid before ordinary share dividends.
What is a redeemable preference share?
Shareholder will be paid their capital at a future date
What is a irredeemable preference share?
Shareholders not repaid their capital in the future
What is a cumulative preference share?
Dividends must be rolled forward if company has insufficient reserves to be able to pay a dividend
What is a non-cumulative preference share?
Missed dividends do not have to be paid later
What is a participating preference share?
Shareholder receives fixed dividends plus extra variable dividends linked to performance
What is a convertible preference share?
Can be exchanged for a specified number of ordinary shares on a given fixed date
What are the three most commonly used methods of issuing new shares?
an IPO (initial public offering) or flotation
A placing
A rights issue
What is an initial public offering (IPO)?
IPOs occur when a company seeks to be listed on a stock market for the first time.
Shares are offered for sale to investors, through an issuing house.
Offers could be made at a fixed price set by the company or via a tender offer.
What is a rights issue?
A rights issue is where new shares are offered for sale only to existing shareholders, in proportion to the size of their shareholding.
They are cheaper to organise than a public share issue
Issue price must be set which is low enough to secure acceptance, not too low to avoid excessive dilution of the earnings per share.
What happens to the market price after issue?
After announcement of a rights issue there is a tendency for share prices to fall.
Temporary fall is due to uncertainty about consequences of the issue, future profits and future dividends.
After the actual issue the market price will normal fall again because there are more shares in issue and new shares were issued at a discount on market price
How do you calculate the theoretical ‘ex rights’ price (TERP)?
(N x cum rights price) + issue price
/
N + 1
N = number of shares required to be held in order to receive one rights issue share