Sources of Finance - Equity Flashcards

1
Q

Firms need finance to:

A

Invest in non-current assets
Provide working capital for operations

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2
Q

Criteria for choosing type of finance

A

Cost - debt cheaper than equity
Duration - long-term more expensive, but more secure than long-term
Interest rates - short term usually cheaper but depends on current conditions
Gearing - current gearing level of firm - debt is cheaper but riskier due to repayments, but too much equity means that EPS goes down due to amount of shares issued
Accessibility - ability to get long-term finance

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3
Q

Risk versus return

A

Higher risk taken by an investor requires a greater return, e.g. cost of finance increases

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4
Q

Equity choices

A

Internally generated funds - retained earnings - cheapest (liquidity vs profitability)
Rights issues - cheaper than public share issue, can be made solely by directors, rarely fails
Public share issue - offering

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5
Q

TERP

A

Market value of shares in issue + proceeds of new issue of shares
Divided by:
Number of new shares in issue

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6
Q

Value of a right, and per existing share

A

TERP - issue price of new shares
per existing share, divide by the 2/5

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7
Q

Equity Finance

A

Investment in a company by ordinary shareholders:
Ordinary share capital and reserves

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8
Q

Ordinary shares

A

Rank after all creditors and preference shares. Paid at discretion of directors, right to all retained earnings

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9
Q

Cumulative preference shares

A

Voting rights only at general meeting when dividend in arrears or change of legal rights to the shares, rank after creditors but before ordinary shares.
Fixed amount, arrears accumulate.

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10
Q

Non-cumulative preference shares

A

Some voting rights if dividend not paid in three years. Fixed amount, must be paid, no arrears accumulation

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11
Q

Quoted or unquoted shares

A

Rights issue

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12
Q

Unquoted or quoted shares

A

Public offer/stock exchange or placing from a bank (25% public ownership), public, pension funds, insurance funds

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13
Q

Unquoted

A

private negotiation, e.g. private equity through banks, finance corporations and individual investors

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14
Q

Choosing between sources of equity

A

Accessibility - quoted companies can use any source, unquoted restricted to rights issues and private placings. Could go with a flotation and go public - but expensive
Amount of finance - Limited to the resources of shareholders for unquoted companies, less problematic if can sell the rights
Cost - public issue very expensive
Pricing of the issue - hard to price, can deal with undersubscription, or oversubscription and the benefits going to new investors. Less problematic for rights issues
Control - shareholders will likely want to retain control

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15
Q

TERP

A

Can also be calculated as Market price prior to rights issue - value of a right per existing share

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16
Q

Value of a right

A

TERP - issue price of shares

17
Q

Calculating shares from SoFP

A

Take ordinary shares and divide by nominal value and then multiply by market rate or share price on announcement