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. ====== Residual ====== Residual refers to what’s left over after all higher-priority claims have been satisfied. In the world of investing, this is the slice of the pie that belongs to the owners of a business—the [[Shareholders]]—after the company has paid all its bills. Think of a company's earnings or [[Assets]]. Before shareholders see a dime, the company must pay its employees, suppliers, lenders ([[Creditors]] and [[Bondholders]]), and the government (taxes). What remains is the residual. This concept is the very heart of [[Equity]] ownership. As a holder of [[Common Stock]], you are a **residual claimant**. This means you are last in line to get paid, which carries significant risk. However, it also means you have a claim on all the potential upside. If the company thrives and generates profits far beyond its obligations, that entire surplus belongs to you and your fellow shareholders. It’s the ultimate high-risk, high-reward position in a company’s [[Capital Structure]]. ===== The Pecking Order of Payments ===== The concept of a residual claim is most starkly illustrated when a company is in financial trouble. A company's capital structure creates a clear hierarchy, or "pecking order," for who gets paid back and when. ==== Who Gets Paid First? ==== When a company faces financial distress or [[Liquidation]], a legally mandated pecking order determines who gets paid from the remaining assets. Understanding your place in this queue is critical for any equity investor. The order is generally as follows: * **Secured Creditors:** Lenders who hold a claim against specific collateral (e.g., a mortgage on a building). They are first in line to be paid from the proceeds of that collateral. * **Unsecured Creditors:** Employees (for wages), suppliers, and bondholders who lent money to the company without a claim on a specific asset. * **[[Preferred Stock]] Holders:** A hybrid class of owners who have priority over common stockholders for [[Dividend]] payments and in liquidation. Their potential return is usually capped at a fixed rate. * **Common Stock Holders:** As the residual claimants, they get whatever is left over. In a [[Bankruptcy]] scenario, this is often nothing at all. ==== The Risk and Reward Trade-off ==== Being last in line sounds scary, and it can be. This is the fundamental **risk** of equity investing. If a company fails, common shareholders are very likely to lose their entire investment. But here’s the flip side: the **reward**. Unlike creditors or preferred stockholders, whose returns are typically capped at a fixed interest or dividend rate, the potential return for a common stockholder is theoretically unlimited. Once all the fixed obligations are paid, every single dollar of additional profit and growth in value belongs to the residual claimants. This is why a small, innovative company can turn early investors into millionaires—they owned the residual claim on explosive growth. ===== Residual in Action: From Earnings to Value ===== The concept of 'residual' is not just for doomsday scenarios; it's a powerful tool for valuing healthy, growing companies. ==== Residual Income and Cash Flow ==== The idea of 'what's left' is so important it forms the basis of sophisticated valuation models. The [[Residual Income]] model, for example, calculates a company's value by estimating the earnings it generates above and beyond the required return on its capital. In simpler terms, it measures the profit that's truly left for shareholders to enjoy. More practically, a value investor pores over a company's ability to generate [[Free Cash Flow]]—the cash remaining after all operational expenses and capital expenditures are paid. This residual cash is the lifeblood of shareholder value. It's what management can use to pay dividends, buy back shares, or reinvest for future growth, all of which directly benefit you, the residual owner. ==== The Value Investor's Perspective ==== For a disciple of [[Value Investing]], the residual claim is everything. You aren't just buying a stock ticker; you are buying a fractional ownership of a business and its future stream of residual profits. The goal is to buy this claim for far less than you believe it is intrinsically worth, creating a [[Margin of Safety]]. When you analyze a company, you are forecasting its ability to generate earnings and cash flow far in excess of its obligations for years to come. The bigger and more durable that expected residual stream is, the more valuable the company. While others may chase market trends, the value investor focuses on the fundamental question: **After everyone else gets paid, how much will be left for me, the owner?**