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. ======Stock Issuance====== Stock Issuance (also known as an Equity Offering) is the process by which a company creates and sells new shares of its stock to raise money. Think of it as a company literally printing new ownership certificates and selling them for cash. This process is a fundamental tool for corporate finance and can happen at two key stages. The first is when a private company decides to sell shares to the public for the first time in an [[Initial Public Offering (IPO)]]. The second is when an already public company creates and sells additional shares in what's known as a [[Secondary Offering]]. The money raised, called [[capital]], can be used for exciting growth projects like building factories, funding research, or acquiring a competitor. However, for existing shareholders, a new stock issuance isn't always a cause for celebration. It forces investors to confront a critical concept that every [[value investing]] enthusiast must master: the risk of [[shareholder dilution]]. ===== Why Do Companies Issue Stock? ===== The primary reason a company issues stock is to raise money through [[equity]] financing. Unlike taking out a loan from a bank, this capital doesn't come with a legal obligation for repayment or fixed interest payments. Instead, the new investors who buy the shares become part-owners of the business and expect to share in its future success and profits. Common reasons for a company to issue new stock include: * **Fueling Growth:** Funding expansion into new markets, building new facilities, or investing heavily in research and development (R&D). * **Paying Down Debt:** Swapping debt for equity can strengthen a company's [[balance sheet]] and reduce interest expenses. * **Making Acquisitions:** Using its own stock as a currency to buy another company. * **Improving Financial Health:** Simply adding cash to the coffers to weather a downturn or provide a cushion for future operations. ===== The Main Flavors of Stock Issuance ===== Stock issuances generally come in two main varieties, each with different implications for investors. ==== Initial Public Offering (IPO) ==== This is the big debut! An IPO is the milestone event where a private company offers its shares to the general public for the very first time, listing them on a stock exchange like the NYSE or Nasdaq. It’s a massive fundraising event that transforms the company's ownership structure and public profile. While often surrounded by intense media hype and excitement, [[value investing]] practitioners are typically very cautious of IPOs. The offering price is often set to maximize the cash raised for the company and its early private investors, not to offer a bargain to new public shareholders. ==== Secondary Offering ==== Also called a //follow-on offering//, this is when a company that is already publicly traded decides to create and sell more shares. This is the type of issuance that should really make an investor sit up and take notice. Why does the company, which already has access to public markets, suddenly need more money? Is it a sign of a fantastic new opportunity (strength) or an inability to fund its current operations (weakness)? The answer is crucial, as it leads directly to the risk of dilution. ===== A Value Investor's Red Flag: The Perils of Dilution ===== Imagine you and a friend co-own a pizza cut into 8 slices. You each have 4 slices, giving you a 50% ownership stake. To raise money for more toppings, you decide to cut the pizza into 16 slices and sell the 8 new slices to other people. You still only have your original 4 slices, but your ownership has just been //diluted// from 50% (4 / 8) down to 25% (4 / 16). This is exactly what happens with [[shareholder dilution]]. When a company issues new stock, each existing shareholder's percentage of ownership shrinks. More importantly, the company's total profits are now spread across a larger number of shares. This directly reduces a key performance metric: [[Earnings Per Share (EPS)]]. === A Simple Example === - **Before Issuance:** A company earns $10 million and has 10 million shares outstanding. Its EPS is $10 million / 10 million shares = **$1.00 per share**. - **The Issuance:** The company sells 2 million new shares to raise capital. It now has a total of 12 million shares outstanding. - **After Issuance:** Assuming earnings are the same in the short term, the new EPS is $10 million / 12 million shares = **$0.83 per share**. Your claim on the company's earnings pie just got smaller! === Good vs. Bad Dilution === Dilution is not //always// a four-letter word. * **Good Dilution:** If management brilliantly invests the newly raised cash into a project with a very high rate of return, total earnings could grow so much that they more than offset the increase in the share count. In this **accretive** scenario, all shareholders can end up better off. * **Bad Dilution:** If the money is squandered on a low-return project, an overpriced acquisition, or is simply used to plug holes in a failing business, the dilution is **destructive**. Management has permanently reduced your ownership stake for little or no benefit. Great management teams treat the company's shares like gold and are extremely reluctant to issue more unless the opportunity is truly compelling. ===== What to Look For ===== As an investor, you must act as a detective. When you see a company announce a secondary offering, it's time to put on your skeptic's hat and ask some tough questions. * **Why?** Read the official filing documents for the offering, such as the [[prospectus]] or reports like the [[10-K]] in the U.S. Management must state the reason for raising the funds. Is it for a specific, exciting growth plan or for vague "general corporate purposes," which can be a red flag? * **At what price?** Is the company issuing shares when its stock price is high (a strategically smart move) or when its price is beaten down (often a sign of desperation)? Issuing stock at a low price is especially harmful to existing owners. * **What's their track record?** Look at the company's history of shares outstanding. Has management been a "serial diluter," constantly issuing new shares and eroding shareholder value? Or are they disciplined stewards of capital? A company that consistently buys back its own stock via a [[Share Repurchase]] program often signals a management team that is aligned with shareholders—the complete opposite of a value-destroying diluter. As the legendary [[Warren Buffett]] has often said, the best businesses can fund their own growth without constantly having to ask their owners for more money.