ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance: Unit 1, The IPO Process 122 Views
Share It!
Description:
We'll walk you through the IPO process, using the example of our good friends at the Sauce Company. Well, they're acquaintances, really.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance ah la shmoop aipo process All right
- 00:05
So for our good friends already in bernie it's aipo
- 00:07
time here are the basic steps involved when i po
- 00:10
process and how they'd impact the sauce Company number one
- 00:14
the company decides to go public It hires the underwriters
Full Transcript
- 00:19
who are the midwife's for this birthing process The underwriters
- 00:23
buy the shares that the company wants to sell and
- 00:26
then like five minutes later resells them to the public
- 00:29
technically that's how they actually go public Easy This part's
- 00:32
done The sauce company has hired silver slacks and they
- 00:36
have an agreement in place to get the magic of
- 00:38
the sauce company to the portfolios of america and the
- 00:42
world for an appropriate amount of money Of course they
- 00:45
take a spread All right Process Item number two The
- 00:48
underwriters advise the company on matters that are relevant to
- 00:51
the whole process such as legal requirements pricing timing and
- 00:55
quantity of shares or ownership of the company to sell
- 00:59
on the offering Like are they going to sell five
- 01:01
percent Ten percent twenty percent of the company to the
- 01:03
public All right well we're good here to silver slacks
- 01:06
Is telling already in bernie all about what they must
- 01:08
dio and what the laws forbid them to do right
- 01:11
next number three due diligence and we have a whole
- 01:13
video on this anymore do means appropriate or proper The
- 01:18
underwriters reputation here is on the line so the sauce
- 01:21
company must turn its head and cough It'll be subject
- 01:24
to a detailed investigation of the company's financial picture its
- 01:27
product it's prospects its customers its financial health everything It
- 01:31
will also do a fair amount of investigation of the
- 01:34
company's management as well Just make sure that they don't
- 01:37
have any history of legal in proprieties you know like
- 01:41
a felony they didn't disclose Okay so this is a
- 01:43
work in process with the sauce Silver slacks analysts will
- 01:47
spend a lot of time poking around the sauce company
- 01:49
for the next few months Get used to it All
- 01:51
right Process number four documentation Assuming that the due diligence
- 01:56
doesn't reveal any major show stopping problem Yes And you
- 02:00
know they're almost always minor issues that must be resolved
- 02:03
while the next step is to get the lawyers involved
- 02:06
and start dotting all the legal i's and crossing the
- 02:09
legal tease the company can choose its own lawyers for
- 02:12
this process but in most cases the underwriter will gently
- 02:16
recommend that the company used lawyers that the underwriter has
- 02:19
worked with in the i asked that they typically come
- 02:21
from the sec or worked there or at least know
- 02:24
the drill The company can reject this gentle recommendation but
- 02:27
in most cases the underwriter will threaten walk away if
- 02:29
they don't go with lawyers they kind of know in
- 02:31
respect Usually the underwriter wins this battle next number five
- 02:35
the main activity of the lawyers is to prepare the
- 02:38
prospectus or the offering statement think about it like a
- 02:41
marketing memorandum Well this is required by the sec In
- 02:45
most instances the prospectus is a long exceedingly boring document
- 02:49
that describes in excruciating detail what the company does its
- 02:53
management and its prior financial history It doesn't have to
- 02:56
be omg long but one of the lawyers can't justify
- 02:59
their enormous fees if they don't make it long The
- 03:02
main faces of any prospectus is disclosure Investors must be
- 03:06
afforded sufficient information so that they can make an informed
- 03:10
decision and note this is not anyone recommending buying or
- 03:13
selling a stock it's simply informing them according to the
- 03:16
rules of how everyone else gets informed with lawyers for
- 03:19
the sauce company will prepare the prospectus in conjunction with
- 03:22
silver slacks which will provide the relevant financial info along
- 03:25
with the auditors All right next item number six disclosure
- 03:29
Well a big part of the prospectus will be devoted
- 03:32
to disclosing risks Lawyers sue people for a living They
- 03:36
sure don't like to be on the receiving end so
- 03:38
they try to protect themselves by disclosing any possible risk
- 03:42
that would result in an investor losing money and then
- 03:45
suing them for lack of disclosure The risk disclosure piece
- 03:49
of a prospectus can run many pages in length and
- 03:52
it basically just covers your well your hind quarters when
- 03:56
and or if you do get suit Alright Number seven
- 03:58
the sec review After preparing the prospectus it is sent
- 04:02
to the sec tio you know kind of read through
- 04:05
it Bear in mind the sec isn't in the business
- 04:07
of deciding how folks should invest their money Rather they
- 04:10
just determine if there's been sufficient disclosure especially regarding the
- 04:14
risks with the sec will send back the prospectus to
- 04:17
lawyers with their comments Some of those comments will be
- 04:19
nit picky stuff like you need a comma here while
- 04:22
others will be more substantial like esso all that offshore
- 04:26
revenue Where did it come from Right next number eight
- 04:30
approved preliminary prospectus while lawyers will send the revised prospectus
- 04:35
back to the sec where it might generate yet more
- 04:38
comments Two o three o for o but if the
- 04:41
sec is satisfied they will send the prospectus back with
- 04:43
a letter to the effect that it has approved it
- 04:45
as a preliminary prospectus also known in the trade as
- 04:49
a red herring because there must be language on the
- 04:52
face of the document Colored red is surprise surprise indicating
- 04:55
that this is not a final prospectus It turns black
- 04:59
when it is all right Number nine marketing Once the
- 05:01
red herring is in effect the underwriter can start drumming
- 05:04
up interest in the company The securities act of nineteen
- 05:08
thirty three requires at least twenty days to elapse beginning
- 05:11
with the date that the red herring is effective until
- 05:14
it can actually sell securities That is the company as
- 05:17
have the red herring out there for three weeks basically
- 05:19
Allowing investors to really look at it digest it Think
- 05:22
about it and all that stuff before it can actually
- 05:24
sell securities to the public Well silver slacks will start
- 05:27
the roadshow process This process works exactly as it sounds
- 05:32
The underwriter and assorted senior management of the sauce company
- 05:35
most definitely including mr wu will travel around the country
- 05:38
in the world wearing coats and ties Handing out saw
- 05:41
samples to present the story Two groups of potential investors
- 05:44
like mutual funds and hedge funds and pension funds and
- 05:47
other kinds of funds Alright next number ten holding period
- 05:51
it's Not about cuddling after lovemaking Although it could be
- 05:54
well after twenty days And assuming that the s e
- 05:56
c hasn't issued any further comments by pio is ready
- 05:59
to go Why twenty days Well maybe there were lawsuits
- 06:02
waiting to crawl out of the woodwork Maybe there were
- 06:04
claims by others that the sauce was in fact their
- 06:07
idea not bobby's Maybe a distributor felt wronged by the
- 06:11
company and was just alerted to the company going public
- 06:14
And they wanted to finally be paid Not an issue
- 06:17
with the sauce company But you can imagine unscrupulous companies
- 06:20
Eighty years ago selling toe uneducated farmers and well those
- 06:24
companies could have gotten away with murder If there wasn't
- 06:26
time for the wrong to step forward ideally carrying a
- 06:30
pitchfork Well that was the intent of the law anyway
- 06:32
to create time and awareness for there to be fairness
- 06:34
So you got a twenty days Alright Number eleven go
- 06:37
team By this time the underwriter will have assembled the
- 06:40
selling syndicate which is a group of other broker dealers
- 06:43
who commit to selling some or all of the underwriting
- 06:47
number twelve dates times and deliver bols But will the
- 06:50
underwriters determine the date to sell The red herring language
- 06:54
is removed from the prospectus and its gentlemen Start your
- 06:58
engines time So when the sauce company first officially hired
- 07:02
silver flax teo you know deal with all of this
- 07:05
While the various terms and contractual language was outlined it
- 07:09
is a nothing Bankers have more lawyers than companies do
- 07:12
but sauce company will outline and they will have negotiated
- 07:15
the spread that silver slacks will take how their fees
- 07:19
will be paid What happens if the aipo doesn't happen
- 07:22
for something that is clearly silver slacks Vault you know
- 07:25
Like it's discovered that one of their employees leaked to
- 07:27
the press that an i p o is happening before
- 07:29
it was in registration And that guy is now apartment
- 07:33
shopping in nairobi Because that's What happens when you leak
- 07:36
at an investment bank Kidding in practice and outline will
- 07:39
cover who gets what Here is well the lead manager
- 07:42
on the i p o deal gets paid the most
- 07:44
The syndicate partners who helps sell get less and subsequent
- 07:48
agents brought on board to sell any remaining cheryl's Well
- 07:51
just get a little tiny bit a tiny commission but
- 07:54
there is a spread here in that if the sauce
- 07:56
company is hoping to sell four million shares at twenty
- 07:59
bucks each to the public the underwriting group will be
- 08:01
buying them for less maybe nineteen dollars Well that buck
- 08:05
spread gives four million dollars in total gross spread to
- 08:09
schmeer around the partners on the deal Maybe there are
- 08:11
some incremental fees the company must pay as well But
- 08:15
it is the seventy six million dollars that will be
- 08:18
the underwriting proceeds that the sauce company will keep Not
- 08:21
the notional eighty million got it The lead manager of
- 08:24
the syndicate silver slacks keeps fifteen percent or so of
- 08:28
the spread off the top Then the underwriter that assumes
- 08:31
the risk of re selling keeps about twenty five percent
- 08:33
and the line players who actually do the direct selling
- 08:36
of the shares to the portfolio managers at the funds
- 08:39
while those guys keep roughly half or more all right
- 08:42
Well the sauce company will file the registration statement officially
- 08:46
with the sec and in the states in which it
- 08:48
will sell Those securities have to sell it state well
- 08:51
It will have to comply with blue sky laws which
- 08:54
for that group of you with goldfish like attention spans
- 08:57
to review our state regulations coined in kansas by a
- 09:01
judge who was trying to protect uneducated farmers from speculating
- 09:05
in business enterprise is worth no more than a few
- 09:09
feet of blue sky famous phrase no it those laws
- 09:13
were generally about disclosure and they require the seller of
- 09:16
the securities toe have lots of it As we've noted
- 09:19
silver slacks is committed to this i po as an
- 09:22
exercise in raising equity capital selling stock but it could
- 09:26
have been a debt offering or about a does in
- 09:29
Other ways of selling stock including strategic alignments or big
- 09:32
investments by a big company like general foods putting money
- 09:35
into the sauce company Instead this would have been called
- 09:38
a private placement by a strategic investor The shares would
- 09:42
have different structures Because general foods is considered you know
- 09:46
a big boy in the eyes of the government It
- 09:48
doesn't necessarily need the same handholding protections as john q
- 09:52
Public and private placements generally come outside of the long
- 09:56
arms of the nineteen thirty three act but mr wu
- 09:59
has grand plans and believes he will want to tap
- 10:01
the public markets for money for a decade So having
- 10:04
a liquid market out there of his securities trading all
- 10:07
day long in the public is key and general foods
- 10:10
while there are competitors so why would he want to
- 10:12
give them any special private investor window into how great
- 10:16
their businesses silver slacks and rest of syndicator committing to
- 10:19
pay nineteen bucks a share regardless of whether they can
- 10:22
resell some all or none of those shares And well
- 10:25
that's the aipo process in a nutshell kind of makes
- 10:27
you want to join the wu tang clan doesn't it
- 10:30
Sorry mister will you know we were going to do 00:10:32.776 --> [endTime] that Whoa
Up Next
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Related Videos
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...