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Principles of Finance Videos 156 videos

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Alex, That’s Finance Potpourri for $500
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Okay, so you want to be a company financial manager. It's basically up to you to make money for the shareholders. It would also be swell if you mad...

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Company Formation, Structure, Inception
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Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Income Statements: Margin, Operating Profits, and More
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What is an income statement, and why do we need it in our lives? Well, let's take a look at an income statement for Year 1 of the Sauce Company, an...

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Principles of Finance: Unit 1, The Sauce Kings 11 Views


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Description:

Why do Artie and Bernie get common stock, but Reid gets preferred stock? What's the difference, and how will this affect their friendship?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

principles of finance. a la shmoop. the sauce Kings. common versus preferred

00:06

stock. and a few other flavors of shares thrown in for rest spice. yep we're back

00:12

to the sauce Kings. let's see how things are looking for them Artie and Bernie [Artie and Bernie in the kitchen]

00:16

shake hands with Reed but then notice something odd in the contract. reads

00:21

$500,000 buys a different class of stock than the stock that Artie and Bernie own.

00:27

hmm well Reed stock is preferred and while theirs is just common. feeling

00:33

gently insulted they ask Reid about this and he explains that this flavor of

00:38

preferred stock doesn't pay a dividend and has no fancy terms really. in many

00:43

venture deals preferred stock at this stage will carry other terms usually

00:47

favorable to the investor. the most common of which is liquidity preference

00:52

multiples. for example for a 2x lick prep the investor gets double his money back

00:57

before the common shareholders get a dime. in this story Reid owns convertible

01:02

preferred stock and the founders own common stock. so that means when he wants

01:07

to Reed can convert his preferred into common. also in most cases and especially

01:12

in public firms preferred shares don't vote or have any pre-emptive rights like

01:18

anti-dilution provisions, and like us for food stocks don't mature. they just sit

01:23

there paying out dividends twice a year until they're called ie bought back by

01:27

the company or disposed of another way right?

01:29

so as Reid points out since he's risking his own cash and has little control over [amazon tries to eat the sauce kings]

01:33

the day-to-day operations of the business he deserves to get his cash out

01:38

preferentially before they do. it's the only protection he has though you know

01:43

that's it if things go great well then who's prefers convertible into common,

01:46

like at an IPO, or if they sell the company to Google, and then everything is

01:51

all the same common flavor of stock but if things go awry and Reid must step in

01:57

and liquidate the company, because Artie and Bernie missed their profitability target

02:02

numbers and have to raise more money diluting themselves and diluting Reid

02:06

well then Reid should have a preference over that right? if bad things happen in

02:11

Reid can sell the company for only 3 hundred a grand well then Reid keeps all that [pie chart]

02:15

300 grand. he still lost money. by the way Artie and Bernie well they get nothing.

02:19

if Reid can sell the company for only 600 grand and some eBay style auction

02:24

well then Reed gets back his full 500 grand first, then of the remaining

02:28

hundred grand while the guy, split the proceeds a third third third.

02:32

alright well Reid wrote a sharp term sheet he's done this before. the claim

02:36

that the common stockholders would have against this kind of liquidation is

02:40

called a residual claim to assets. its last thing the breadline soup kitchen

02:45

should things go awry that's common stock. well Artie and Burnie consider

02:49

the various options and recognize that Reid is one smart cookie. the first thing

02:53

he points out is how poorly the portable barbecue business scales. it requires

02:59

huge amount of labor, it can't operate on rainy days, it carries all kinds of risk

03:03

of an explosion or a customer burning himself on the grill and other possible

03:08

disasters. right? Reid suggests they put a barbecue set up in the top thousand [flaming BBQ]

03:13

malls in the country just so that the smoky smell of their awesome sauce acts

03:19

as a marketing agent. the way mrs. Fields Cookies did in the 80s the baking

03:23

chocolate smell in those days filled the air ducts and the halls of malls and

03:27

lured people to the kiosks like mosquitos to that little buzzing purple

03:31

light thingy. well the guys thought wow what a great idea.

03:34

and they agreed to just bottle the sauce and sell it as their only product the

03:39

same way wd-40 and well really Google is a one product company. Artie and Burney

03:43

dream a bit and realized that as young 21 year olds well they have more greed

03:48

than fear about this opportunity. they think that there is a company worth

03:52

millions in here somewhere and they want to ferret it out. well at this juncture

03:56

the guys shake hands and assess their situation. consigliere hy does the legal

04:01

work to create the sauce company corporation out of thin air by filling

04:06

out a few forms with government and registering the company in Delaware.

04:09

forming the sauce company into a corporation is a really good idea

04:12

because it protects Artie burney and bubby and likely anyone else remotely attached

04:18

to the company from liabilities arising from say a bankruptcy. if company went

04:23

bust only its assets would be lost the assets [bankruptcy defined]

04:26

from a A and B's bar mitzva savings would be left intact. like lawyers couldn't

04:30

touch it. this is called limited liability and it's good if you're a

04:35

founder owner and it exists to protect founder owners from you know getting

04:40

sued into it living in a station wagon or something. there's a fair amount of

04:43

record-keeping that must be done here how many tons of onions will be bought

04:47

how much will they will cost how much will be collected from the sale of sauce

04:51

bottles to Safeway etc. well a and B know that if they produce great results in

04:55

some day go public ,well they'll live under the scrutiny of public investment

04:59

regulators way stricter than private ones and we'll have to annually produce

05:04

conforming financial statements give lists of stockholders and so on, as a

05:08

private company it'll have these obligations but in

05:10

order to go public in the future well they'll need to have an auditable trail

05:14

of years of Records. so Reid's advice is heard they start the record-keeping now

05:18

the company high creates has a million shares outstanding at first which he

05:23

normally sets as being worth one penny each . Artie and Bernie by five hundred

05:27

thousand shares each for five grand they made this much just from their one

05:31

barbeque stand. in the three months during which it operated. they are the

05:35

founders right ?that penny a share is the initial par value of the stock. it really

05:41

doesn't mean anything for future investors but there needs to be some [man in checkered suit]

05:44

value assigned to that stock when a company is formed. that term by the way

05:48

also has nothing to do with golf. for par value stock you get a pretty piece of

05:52

paper that's supposed to feel like it was printed on the McCobb dead skin of a

05:57

sheep .it's called the stock certificate. but the company sold read convertible

06:01

preferred stock for a buck a share. well the preferred is worth way more

06:05

than the common at this point but the common is clearly worth more than a

06:09

penny. so what's it worth? a nickel a dime? well the company will have to place a

06:13

value on that comment at some point with the help of the bank's lawyers. to 409a

06:18

evaluation that's what it's called 409 a/ if it's a nickel well then the four cent [409a valuation defined]

06:23

theoretical gain is now a balance sheet asset yay for them they have assets/ and

06:28

it's called paid in capital or capital surplus/ yep something like that /all

06:33

right well then a and B turn around and sell the preferred stock to read at a

06:37

hundred times the price next week/ how can this be

06:40

you may reasonably ask? well the odds of the sauce company going bankrupt at this

06:45

point are extremely high. if it does there really no assets to sell. so it is

06:50

in fact reasonable that the common stock is worth a small fraction of what the

06:55

preferred stock is worth. at this point anyway the dream of Dreams in times gone

06:59

by is that while someday the two classes of stock convert into that one class and

07:04

that common truly does become worth about to share. the company realizes that [common and preferred stock pictured]

07:08

it will need to raise more capital over time and that many more shares will have

07:12

to be printed over time for other investors.

07:14

so it has authorized another 10 million shares to be printed in the future.

07:19

they're just authorized or like provisionally optionally okey dokey that

07:24

is if company needs to bring them out of the back vault of buddy's garage it can.

07:29

but while they sit there they mean almost nothing as far as valuation or

07:33

ownership of the company goes. they're that nerdy guy who watches Star Trek on

07:37

DVD Saturday nights if ever needed he's a phone call away from being a drinking

07:42

buddy or a date you know depending on your persuasion. [man answers phone]

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