Warrant Premium

Categories: Investing, Derivatives

A warrant works much like an option, providing the holder with the right to buy or sell a security (if they want to...the warrant holder can choose whether or not to exercise them). The warrant comes with a pre-set price, known as the exercise price.

There are two measures that get the name "warrant premium." (We know, a little confusing...like if you have two cousins named "Joey.")

The first figure measures the difference in value between the warrant's price (meaning the amount you'd have to buy the warrant in the open market) and what's called the minimum value of the underlying security (sometimes called intrinsic value).

So what's minimum value? This figure gets determined by calculating the difference between the exercise price and the current trading price for the underlying stock. If the warrant is “in the money,” meaning the exercise price is below the current trading price, the minimum value would represent the amount you could make by exercising the warrant immediately.

You have a warrant to buy 100 shares of JumpCo, maker of fine jump ropes. The exercise price of the warrant is $50 a share. Which means that, if you choose to use the warrant, you can buy 100 shares of JumpCo at $50 a share. JumpCo is currently trading at $55 a share. The minimum value is $5 a share, or $500 total for the 100 shares included in the warrant..

Say this warrant for JumpCo is selling for $700 in the open market. Then the warrant premium equals $200 (the $700 warrant price minus the $500 minimum value). Okay, that's one calculation of warrant premium.

The second way provides a variation on the same idea. It gives a percentage difference between the cost of buying the warrant versus just buying shares in the open market.

The warrant costs $700, plus the 100 shares at $50 dollars each. Buying the warrant, then immediately turning it into shares, would cost $5,700. You have to spend $700 on the warrant; then, exercising it for the shares would cost $5,000 ($50 times the 100 shares).

Meanwhile, JumpCo is trading at $55 a share. One hundred shares would cost $5,500 to buy. The warrant costs $200 more. As a percentage of the current share price, that equates to 3.6%.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Warrant?8 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is ah warrant Oh it's Acute

00:07

option Like kind of a stock option Light Yeah That's

00:11

How to think about it anyway Okay Okay It pretty

00:12

much feels just like a stock option And yes there

00:16

are put warrants and call warrants in the same vein

00:19

as put options and call options So then what's the

00:22

diff why don't we just call a warrant a stock

00:24

option Well warrants have you know their own little characteristics

00:27

here and they're usually issued by the company itself where

00:31

a stock options on say microsoft will They can be

00:34

issued by anyone who deals in options like goldman morgan

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ups sumitomo whoever whatever investment bank that makes capital markets

00:42

trading happened they can issue options trade him have a

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spread and then make profits in them and there's nothing

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the company can really do about it They can all

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create derivative securities on stocks or bonds of their own

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volition And the company itself just kind of stands there

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looking by and wondering why they didn't get into the

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investment banking business Well goldman morgan and the others then

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offer trading in those options on exchanges in regular form

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Such that many buyers and sellers generally come together liquid

01:10

lee to trade and you know generate profit margins for

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the desks of the bank's trading the securities right The

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banks are basically the casino house and they end up

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making most the money most of time Got that Okay

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another difference warrants and options here Warming's can last five

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ten twenty years that's Usually how many weeks options last

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and the question remains Why would a company issue what

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are essentially cheap stock options too Others to buy slices

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of its own pie While the answer as with most

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of these types of company deals is that the company

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has to issue those warrants to get a deal done

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like you know to settle a patent dispute or created

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distribution or manufacturing partnership or some of their tactical arrangement

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to make the good better and to make the problems

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go away well warrants generally or simply held for the

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duration of the partnership or of the company's existence is

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an independent and city well and conversely options are traded

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liquid leon exchanges all over the world and they can

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be sold without a whole lot of discussion with company

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Here this kind of warrant which gives you the right

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to throw a piece of paper in your own financial

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asset jail Very different kind of warrant than this one 00:02:18.383 --> [endTime] You stay away from the arrest warrants

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