Pecking Order
Pecking Order
Pecking Order
Taxes
Distress Costs
Transaction Costs
The manager may know more about the firm than investors.
[Pecking Order]
Hybrid securities (e.g., convertible debt) are between debt and equity.
The information asymmetry between the firm and the market makes:
External finance more costly than internal funds.
Equity more costly than debt.
There may be good and bad times to issue equity depending on the
degree of information asymmetry.
What do you infer about the share price if the CEO tries to sell his shares?
If the CEO agrees to sell at $70, then you infer it must be worth...
Foreseeing this, the CEO will only try to sell if the stock is worth...
In some cases, managers may even forgo positive NPV projects that
would have been financed with new equity.
Will the manager undertake the project if funded with cash? With equity?
Yes:
Raise $12m today and repay 1.1 $12m = $13.2m next year
Good firms (e.g., those with assets in place of $150m) will not want
to issue equity. They will finance with debt.
Investors infer that equity issues are from bad firms (e.g., those with
assets in place of $50m).
The manager knows that the assets-in-place are worth $150m, while
investors still assign equal probabilities to the value of those assets
being $150m or $50m.
Consider again the example with the $18m investment outlay, where the
firm has no cash and cannot issue debt.
If assets are worth $150m, the firm does not invest.
Upon seeing the firm issue equity, the market infers that assets in
place are worth only $50m.
Given the markets ex-ante expectation that the firm is worth $100m,
the firms market value drops to $50m + $20m when the firm
announces the equity issue that will fund the investment project.
Convertible debt: 2%
Debt: 0%
How?
Open market repurchase
Fixed-price tender offer
Dutch auction
Takes a long time, about 2-3 years, because the SEC restricts
repurchases to be no more than 25% of the daily trading volume
No premium
Like it says, theres only one price at which shares can be bought.