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Textbook
Introduction
1. Common stock
1.1 Basic characteristics
1.2 Rights of common stockholders
1.2.1 Pro-rata share of dividends
1.2.2 Board of Directors
1.2.3 Inspection of books and records
1.2.4 Maintaining proportionate ownership
1.2.5 Stock splits
1.2.6 Assets upon liquidation
1.2.7 Transfer ownership
1.3 Trading
1.4 Suitability
1.5 Fundamental analysis
2. Preferred stock
3. Debt securities
4. Corporate debt
5. Municipal debt
6. US government debt
7. Investment companies
8. Alternative pooled investments
9. Options
10. Taxes
11. The primary market
12. The secondary market
13. Brokerage accounts
14. Retirement & education plans
15. Rules & ethics
Wrapping up
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1.2.4 Maintaining proportionate ownership
Achievable SIE
1. Common stock
1.2. Rights of common stockholders

Maintaining proportionate ownership

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Assume you own 10% of ABC Company’s* shares. The company could dilute (reduce) your ownership to less than 10%. The SIE exam focuses mainly on two dilutive actions:

  • the issuance of new shares
  • the issuance of convertible securities

*ABC Company is a fictitious, made-up company.

Definitions
Security

A formal way of referring to an investment. For example, all of the following are securities:

  • stocks
  • bonds
  • mutual funds
  • options
  • ETFs

When a business is incorporated (becomes an official business), it establishes a specific number of authorized shares. Authorized shares are the maximum number of shares the company is allowed to offer to investors. If ABC Company authorizes 1 million shares, it may issue up to 1 million shares of stock.

Companies give up ownership (stock) in return for capital (money). Most companies sell only some of their authorized shares when they first offer stock to investors. That way, they can raise additional capital later by selling the authorized shares that remain.

Shares sold to investors are called issued shares. Once shares are issued, they trade in the secondary market among investors.

For example, suppose ABC Company authorizes 1 million shares but issues only 500,000 shares. If you purchase 50,000 shares, you have a 10% ownership position. In other words, you own 10% of the company’s outstanding shares.

Sidenote
Types of shares

Shares of stock are categorized into one of four buckets:

  • Authorized
  • Issued
  • Outstanding
  • Treasury

We’ve already discussed authorized stock, the amount of stock a company is permitted to sell to investors. For example, let’s assume ABC company has 1 million shares authorized.

Shares sold to investors are considered issued. Companies typically don’t sell all their authorized shares up-front, so let’s assume that ABC company issues 500,000 shares.

Shares owned by investors are known as outstanding. After the initial sale of shares, issued and outstanding shares are the same (both 500,000 in our example).

Sometimes companies repurchase their stock from investors (we’ll discuss share buybacks in a future chapter). For example, ABC company may buy back shares and give them to their officers or directors as a bonus. Regardless of the reason for the buyback, shares repurchased from the market are considered treasury stock.

Assume ABC Company repurchases 100,000 shares a few years after they were initially issued. Because shares were taken out of the market, there are now 100,000 fewer outstanding shares.

To end this sidenote, let’s summarize the numbers based on the scenario we discussed:

  • Authorized = 1,000,000 shares
  • Issued = 500,000 shares
  • Outstanding = 400,000 shares
  • Treasury = 100,000 shares

Let’s pick up where we left off before the sidenote. You purchase 50,000 shares of ABC Company, which is a 10% ownership position.

Several years pass, and the company needs to raise additional capital. It still has authorized shares available to issue, so suppose it decides to issue the remaining 500,000 shares. That increases the number of outstanding shares and dilutes your ownership from 10% to 5%.

Owned Outstanding Ownership
Before 50,000 500,000 10%
Diluted 50,000 1,000,000 5%

Your percentage ownership drops because the total number of outstanding shares increases while your share count stays the same. As a result, your voting power is cut in half.

To address this, companies generally can’t dilute existing owners without first giving current stockholders the chance to maintain their proportionate ownership.

This is the pre-emptive right. It gives you the right to buy newly issued shares before they’re offered to the public. If you owned 10% of the outstanding shares before the new issuance, you’ll have the opportunity to buy 10% of the new shares so you can keep the same ownership percentage.

How pre-emptive rights work

The company distributes pre-emptive rights to current stockholders. Investors receive one right for every share of stock owned.

If you own 50,000 shares, you receive 50,000 rights. Each right has a specific value, and the offering will state how many rights are needed to buy one new share (for example, 5 rights per new share). You won’t be asked to infer missing information on the exam - questions will provide what you need.

For this rights distribution, we’ll keep it simple and assume:

  • 1 right needed to purchase 1 new share
  • Current market price of stock = $50
  • Rights exercise price = $40

Rights are issued with intrinsic value, meaning they provide an immediate economic benefit. Here, each right lets you buy a new share for $40 when the market price is $50. That’s a $10 discount, so each right has $10 of intrinsic value.

One reason companies can offer this discount is that they may avoid hiring an underwriter (an investment bank) to market and sell the new shares.

Sidenote
Fractional shares & rights offerings

Let’s assume an investor owns 100 common stock shares, and the issuer performs a rights offering. The offering states the investor can obtain a new share of stock for every 40 rights tendered. 1 right is granted per share of stock owned, so an investor holding 100 shares receives 100 rights. Doing some quick math, 100 rights allow the investor to buy 2.5 new shares (100 rights / 40 rights needed per new share).

In many rights offerings, the issuer includes this language in the offering:

Any fractional rights may be rounded up to purchase a full additional share.

Although it initially seems the investor is granted the right to buy 2.5 new shares, they can round up to the next whole number and buy 3 new shares.

It doesn’t matter how low the initial fractional right is. Let’s tweak the example and assume instead of 100 shares, the investor owns 81 shares. With 81 rights received, they are granted the right to purchase 2.025 new shares (81 rights / 40 rights needed per new share). If the fractional rights language above is included in the rights offering, the investor can purchase 3 new shares (2.025 rounded up to the next whole number is 3).

Underwriters help organizations market and sell their securities to investors. For example, when Facebook went public in 2012, it hired Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan, and Goldman Sachs as lead underwriters.

As a social media company, Facebook (now known as Meta Platforms, Inc.) didn’t have the resources or distribution network to sell its stock broadly in the securities markets. That’s why it hired large investment banks (underwriters). Underwriters are expensive; Facebook’s underwriters collected hundreds of millions of dollars for their services.

If a company can sell newly issued shares directly to current shareholders through a rights offering, it may not need to hire an underwriter. In effect, some of the savings can be passed to stockholders through a discounted purchase price.

What you can do with rights

Investors who receive rights generally have three choices:

  • Exercise the rights and buy new shares at the exercise price ($40 in our example)
  • Sell the rights in the market (since rights have intrinsic value, other investors may be willing to buy them)
  • Let the rights expire

Rights last for a short period and typically expire within 60-90 days of issuance. If you let them expire, you receive no benefit.

By offering pre-emptive rights, companies allow stockholders to maintain their percentage ownership of outstanding shares. A stockholder won’t be diluted if they exercise all their rights.

Sidenote
Warrants

Warrants are similar to rights because they give the holder the right to purchase shares from a publicly traded company at a fixed price. Let’s look at how warrants work, then compare them to rights.

Assume a company’s stock is trading at $50. Warrants have a fixed exercise price, but they’re often issued at a premium to the current market price. For example, a warrant might have an exercise price of $60. At issuance, exercising wouldn’t make sense - why pay $60 for a share you can buy in the market for $50?

Warrants have time value, meaning their longer life can make them valuable even if they’re not attractive to exercise right away. Warrants often don’t expire for five or more years. The $60 exercise price stays fixed, but the market price can rise. If the market price increases to $80 after a few years, the $60 exercise price becomes attractive.

Warrants are often issued as a sweetener when selling another security. For example, if a company is having difficulty selling a bond*, it may attach a warrant to make the bond more appealing. It’s similar to an infomercial offer: buy this product, and you get an extra item included.

*A bond is a debt security that allows investors to loan funds to organizations in return for interest. We’ll discuss this type of security later in these materials.

Issuing warrants is a dilutive action. If a publicly traded company issues warrants, it’s creating the potential for new shares to be issued, but not necessarily to all existing stockholders. Because of that, issuing warrants generally requires stockholder approval*.

*Companies performing dilutive actions without offering the opportunity to maintain proportionate ownership (e.g., rights offerings) generally must obtain majority shareholder approval first.

In conclusion, warrants are similar to rights but have important differences. Here are the key exam points:

Rights

  • Right to purchase new shares at a fixed price
  • Intrinsic value at issuance
  • Little time value
  • Short-term (typically 90 days or less)
  • Possible outcomes for rights:
    • Exercise
    • Trade
    • Expire

Warrants

  • Right to purchase new shares at a fixed price
  • No intrinsic value at issuance
  • Time value exists
  • Long-term (typically 5 years or longer)
  • Possible outcomes for warrants:
    • Exercise
    • Trade
    • Expire

Additionally, here’s a video that will help you understand the type of question to expect on rights and warrants:

Now that we’ve covered how rights can help avoid dilution, let’s focus on convertible securities. In future sections, you’ll learn about convertible preferred stock and convertible bonds. For now, the key idea is that both can be converted into the issuer’s common stock.

Assume you own an ABC Company bond. Bonds pay interest to investors, which is one reason they’re valuable. If your bond is a convertible bond, you can exchange (convert) that interest-paying bond into ABC Company common stock.

If you choose to convert, you receive new shares of ABC Company, while other common stockholders do not. That’s why issuing convertible securities is considered a dilutive action.

Companies typically must obtain majority shareholder approval before issuing convertible securities. Why would stockholders approve dilution? The basic reason is cost savings.

Companies that issue bonds and preferred stock typically make semi-annual payments to investors. If those securities include a conversion feature, the issuer can often offer lower payment rates because investors are receiving an added benefit (most bonds and preferred stock are not convertible). Some refer to this as the “push and pull” of the securities markets: the issuer “pushes” an added benefit to investors (the conversion feature) and then “pulls” back by reducing the payments made to investors. The less a company pays on its bonds or preferred stock, the more earnings (profits) it keeps.

One last dilutive action worth mentioning is when corporate issuers grant stock options to employees as part of executive compensation (for officers and directors). An option allows the purchase of stock at a fixed price. For example, a director might receive stock options that allow the purchase of company stock at $60 when the market price is $40. There’s no reason to exercise at that moment, but options are typically issued to encourage employees to increase productivity and sales.

If the stock price later rises above $60, the option becomes valuable (it gains intrinsic value). If this feels unclear, you’ll learn more about options in a future chapter. For now, remember that issuing stock options to employees is a dilutive action.

In conclusion, when a publicly traded company takes actions that dilute ownership, it must either offer a way to maintain proportionate ownership (such as pre-emptive rights) or obtain majority shareholder approval.

Key points

Characteristics of rights

  • Right to purchase new shares at a fixed price

  • Intrinsic value exists at issuance

  • Low time value at issuance

  • Short-term (typically 60-90 days or less)

  • Can be exercised, traded, or expire

  • Stockholders receive one right for every share owned

Characteristics of warrants

  • Right to purchase new shares at a fixed price
  • No intrinsic value at issuance
  • High time value at issuance
  • Long-term (typically 5 years or longer)
  • Can be exercised, traded, or expire

Dilutive actions

  • Any action reducing percent ownership
  • Examples:
    • Issuing new shares
    • Issuing convertible securities

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