Flotation Cost

  

Categories: IPO, Banking

See: IPO. See: Underwriting fees. See: Underwriter.

Floating securities means "taking them public." And that carries a cost. Banks get something like 5% of the amount taken public, plus they get to do a bunch of trading work for the company, making a market in their stock for a while after the IPO.

The banks also usually manage (at high fees) the money of the founders and insiders who will gradually sell and diversify their holdings. And the banks also get to pitch for merger and acquisition business.

All of these numbers should go into the cost of being public. But they don't. Most investors just think about the actual cost of taking the company public and that's it. Big numbers, regardless.

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Finance: What is a managing underwriter,...1 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is a managing underwriter

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and what is the selling group well the managing underwriter isn't just a person

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it's a group and it's very different from this guy the managing Undertaker [Gravestones appear]

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after that Ebola outbreak well the key word here is managing in

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that the manager is the backstop the fiduciary the risk taker the one who

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loses his shirt should the offering go awry in a way that can be proven in a [Hoover sucks shirt off man]

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court of law with 12 angry jurors that it was the

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evil banks fault specifically the managing underwriter is

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the QB in a securities offering such that the company designates this group

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as their primary point of contact in selling a chunk of themselves or raising

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debt from the kindly loving mutual and hedge fund investors on Wall Street at [Person holding cup on Wall Street]

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issue is risk when an underwriting happens usually for a few brief moments

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in time the managing underwriter actually owns the shares that it's [Pile of stocks appear]

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offering to the public or whoever's buying them it buys them at some

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discount from the company you know something like oh no 24 bucks a share

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and then turns around and sells them for 25 bucks a share a few minutes later

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making a nice living on that dollar spread for 20 million shares that they

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just placed well they don't keep all this money there are usually other

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underwriters not managing the process involved in the sale of the securities [Underwriters appear]

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to the street so they get their piece of the offering this other group is called

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the selling group and they essentially work under the direction of the managing

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underwriter and serve a very simple but important role in getting early [Cash transfers to selling group]

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commitments for mutual and hedge funds to buy a given volume at a given price

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at a given level of certainty you know all else being equal think of the

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selling group as a gaggle of ex cheerleaders and football quarterbacks [Cheerleaders and football players appear on a field]

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top before anyone else gets anything in this case the managing underwriter would

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get in a 15% of that 20 million-dollar spread or 3 million bucks and more or

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less just for showing up they might then get

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third piece of the remaining 85% or 17 million bucks to sell that than to the [Piechart appears for gross sales]

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street and that five or six million dollars generally goes directly to their

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sales force in return for winning the hundred-meter client ass-kissing at the [Men running on a track]

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entire career in Wall Street today purposely missed putts on the golf [Golfer putting a ball]

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course aggressive fawning about their butt hair

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looking hair transplants that make the portfolio manager truly look 21 again [Guys look at man with hair transplant]

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