|
IPO - A
Public Company is born
When a private
company reaches a point in it’s development that it requires an
injection of capital to expand the business, then the directors have a
couple of choices. One of the most popular methods is to FLOAT the
company.
Floating, also known
as Listing, involves taking a private company public to raise money for
company growth and expansion. Members of the public as well as fund
management institutions are invited to purchase shares in the Initial
Public Offering (IPO).
The Prospectus
Before any company
may solicit funds from the public, regulations require that it must draw
up an offer document called a prospectus, which needs to be registered
with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC). This
must present enough details and financial information on the company to
allow a prospective investor to make an informed choice on the
suitability of the shares for his or her portfolio.
The level of
information that must be provided (which can often seem overwhelming to
readers) is only one requirement that must accompany a listing
application. Government consumer protection legislation is one
consideration, but the stock exchange itself will have its own listing
criteria. Such things as fees, required documentation, reporting
requirements, size of the company and number of shareholders, etc. will
all figure in a listing decision. For example, one requirement of the
ASX is that a company has at least 400 holders of $2,000 each.
This sale of shares
has occurred on the Primary Market. The money raised from the sale of
shares has gone to the company to allow it to expand its operation. The
new shareholders will want to see that the company is well run,
professional and efficient. To do that, the shareholders will elect a
board of directors to oversee the day-to-day running of the company.
They do this by voting in accordance with the size of their
shareholdings. This might result in, say, the election of a six-person
board which selects its own chairman. Once a year, the board of
directors must conduct an annual general meeting (AGM) to report to the
shareholders on the company’s progress. Well in advance of the meeting,
a copy of the annual report will be provided to all shareholders. All
shareholders are welcome to attend the AGM’s.
Investors,
particularly share traders, purchased the shares in the float with a
view to selling them in the future to make a capital gain. They must
therefore have a market at which to sell the shares. This is where the
shareholders return once again to the stock market.
When the investor
sells his or her shares, the money raised does not go to the listed
company, instead, the money, minus broker commission (brokerage) goes to
the investor. This is known as the Secondary Market. The Secondary
Market is where the are shares are traded once they have been purchased
in the IPO.
This may seem
staggeringly obvious; however, it raises an important point. Many
people who invest in shares for the first time do not fully appreciate
that the value of a company’s shares is not directly related to the
performance of the company, or who the company is. Instead, the value
of the shares is based on the public’s perceived value of the company.
What Telstra does as a company is not as important as what the public
perceive the value of Telstra’s shares to be. There are many examples
of companies that are very sound and well run, but are undervalued by
the public. Alternatively, there are companies which don’t even produce
profits whose share prices have skyrocketed. You only have to think
back to some of the American Internet stocks such as Yahoo and
Amazon.com for examples. These two companies had not even produced
profits when they floated, yet their share prices rose incredibly fast,
making the original owners billionaires literally overnight! It is this
variance in share price and public perception that encourages share
investors and allows them to make consistently high returns from the
stock market.
The Bottom Line
The bottom line is
that you cannot expect to be consistently successful as a share trader
or investor by simply buying shares in companies that sound
interesting. You must know how to investigate the company and to study
the share price performance to determine which shares have the greatest
potential to perform.
This
has been an introductory lesson in covered calls. To learn more, attend
one of my seminars held every month at various locations around
Australia, New Zealand and South East Asia go to his websites below.
Daniel Kertcher is a
licensed stock market educator. Daniel has trained many people from
North America, Australia and Europe in various trading systems. Join his
trading mail list
http://www.platinumpursuits.com and read more about him at his
personal website
http://www.danielkertcher.com |