Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Gross Proceeds====== Gross Proceeds are the total sum of money a company or individual receives from a sale or transaction //before// any costs, fees, or expenses are taken out. Think of it as the headline number or the sticker price. When a company launches an [[Initial Public Offering (IPO)]], the Gross Proceeds are the total cash raised from selling all the shares at the offer price. For example, if a company sells 10 million shares at $20 each, the Gross Proceeds are a cool $200 million (10 million x $20). It’s the full, unvarnished amount generated from the deal. This figure is crucial because it represents the total market appetite for the offering or the total value of an asset being sold. However, it’s only the first half of the story. The real magic for a company's treasury—and for the discerning investor—happens after the deductions are made, which leads us to its close cousin, [[Net Proceeds]]. ===== Why Gross Proceeds Matter to Investors ===== ==== The Big Picture Number ==== Gross Proceeds are the starting point. This figure gives you a quick snapshot of the scale and significance of a financial event. A blockbuster IPO with billions in gross proceeds signals immense market interest and can significantly alter a company’s financial landscape overnight. Similarly, when a company sells a factory or a division, the gross proceeds tell you the raw value the market placed on that asset. It's the bold, public-facing number that often makes the headlines. It’s useful for gauging the overall size of a deal, but it's not the number that pays the bills or funds new projects. ==== The Crucial 'But': Introducing Net Proceeds ==== Here’s the catch: a company never gets to keep the full gross amount. The difference between Gross Proceeds and what the company actually pockets (Net Proceeds) can be substantial. This gap is filled with a variety of costs. For a [[Value Investor]], understanding this difference is paramount. A high gross figure is exciting, but if it’s eaten away by exorbitant fees, the actual benefit to the company—and by extension, its shareholders—is diminished. The real question isn't "How much did they raise?" but "How much did they //keep//?" ===== From Gross to Net: A Trail of Expenses ===== The journey from Gross to Net Proceeds is paved with necessary expenses. These costs vary depending on the type of transaction but typically include: * **[[Underwriting Fees]]:** This is often the biggest slice of the pie, especially in stock or bond offerings. Investment banks that manage the sale take a commission, usually a percentage of the gross proceeds, for their services. * **Legal and Accounting Fees:** Armies of lawyers and accountants are needed to ensure everything is above board. They draft the [[Prospectus]], check the financials, and navigate complex regulations, and their services don't come cheap. * **Filing and Administrative Costs:** There are fees for filing documents with regulatory bodies like the [[Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)]] in the U.S. There are also costs for printing, roadshows (promotional tours), and other administrative tasks. * **Taxes:** In the case of an asset sale, the company may have to pay capital gains tax on the profit, which is taken from the proceeds. ===== A Value Investor's Perspective ===== Headlines love big, round numbers, and Gross Proceeds certainly fits the bill. But a shrewd value investor knows to look past the glamour. The true measure of a capital-raising event's success is its efficiency. The key insight is this: **Net Proceeds are what create shareholder value.** This is the cash that a company can use to: * Invest in new, profitable projects (expanding factories, R&D). * Pay down expensive [[Debt]], strengthening the balance sheet. * Return capital to shareholders through [[Dividends]] or [[Share Buybacks]]. A value investor compares the gross proceeds to the net proceeds to judge management's effectiveness. If a company raises $500 million but spends $50 million (10%) in fees to do so, it’s far less impressive than a company that raises $400 million but only spends $12 million (3%) in fees. The latter has been a more efficient steward of its ability to raise capital. Always follow the money—not just where it comes from, but where it actually ends up. The net amount is what truly fuels the business engine.