Archive for the ‘Financing’ Category

Medium To Long Term Finance(Part3)

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

This 3rd part article seeks to look at Long term sources of fund which include the following:

Share capital (covered in Part 2 of 3)

Fixed Income Securities

Notes and

Bonds

FIXED INCOME SECURITIES:

The holders of the fixed income securities are creditors of the company rather than shareholders:

Have no rights in the company beyond the payment of a fixed interest on their loans and repayment of the loans in accordance with the terms on which they were issued.

Fixed income securities may be secured or unsecured, with the secured fixed income securities ranking before the unsecured.

 

The two (2) principal types of fixed income securities are debentures and loan stocks.

DEBENTURES/DEBENTURE STOCKS

A debenture is similar to a mortgage;

It is a long-term loan secured on certain fixed or floating assets of a company;

A debenture stock is a debenture issued as a fixed-interest stock;

Such securities are issued under trust deeds, and in the event of the borrower defaulting on the interest or capital repayment, the debenture holder has the right to appoint a receiver to sell the company’s assets and secure repayment of the loan;

LOAN STOCKS

A loan stock is a security issued by a company in respect of a loan made by investors;

Loan stocks may be secured, unsecured, convertible or non-convertible, but are often unsecured, unlike debentures;

Unsecured loan stocks

carry higher risk than debentures, and in the event of a winding-up, unsecured loan stock holders rank alongside all other unsecured creditors.

 

Convertible loan stocks

carry the right to convert into ordinary shares of the company on pre-arranged terms and within a limited period. The objective of issuing a convertible loan stock is to obtain fixed interest finance at a relatively low rate of interest and at the same time make it attractive to potential holders by the offer of equity participation at a later date.

 

NOTES

These are also fixed income securities with a maturity date, and may or may not be redeemable.

 

BONDS

Like debentures, bonds are fixed income securities issued to lenders of long-term loans, and with a maturity date.

 

Medium To Long Term Finance(Part2)

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

This 2 nd part article seeks to look at Long term sources of fund which include the following:

  • Share capital and
  • Fixed Income Securities

SHARE CAPITAL:

A share is a security which represents a portion of the owner’s capital in a business. Shareholders are the owners of the business. They share in the success or failure of the business. This can be measured by the amount of dividends that they receive and by the price of the share, quoted on the stock market. (In the U.S., shares are referred to as common stock.)

 

There are several types of share capital:

 

(1) ORDINARY Share Capital

· Also known as equity shares, this is the risk capital of a company;

· Ordinary shares give holders the rights of ownership in the company, such as the right to share in the profits, the right to vote in general meeting and to elect and dismiss directors;

· Obligations of ownership are also conferred and this may result in the loss of an investor’s money if the company is unsuccessful;

· Ordinary shares usually form the bulk of a company’s capital and have no special rights over other shares and

· In the event of liquidation, ordinary shares rank after all other liabilities of the company.

 

(2) PREFERENCE Shares

·  Shares which carry the right to dividend (normally fixed) which ranks for payment before that of ordinary shareholders;

·  Preference shares may be preferred also as regards distribution of assets upon dissolution of the company;

·  Generally carry no voting rights, but voting rights may be made contingent upon failure to pay dividends on preference shares for a certain period of time

·  There are several types of preference shares which are as follows.

(a) Participating preference shares

are entitled to participate in the profits beyond the fixed dividends, by way of an additional fluctuating dividend if the company is successful.

(b) Cumulative preference shares

are preference shares which, apart from having a preferential right to receive a fixed dividend ahead of ordinary shares, also carry the right of any arrears of the preference dividends which may have built up.

 © Non-cumulative preference shares

are preference shares which are not entitled to any arrears in dividends.

(d) Redeemable preference shares

may be redeemed by the company at a stated redemption price on advance notice of a period of time. It is usual to set a redemption price above the par value to compensate the owner for the involuntary loss of his investment.

(e) Convertible preference shares

are preference shares which carry the right to be made convertible, at the option of the holder, into another class of shares, normally into ordinary shares.

Short Term Finance(Part1)

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

In this financing section, we learn about the various sources of finance. The various sources of finance can be categorized as:-

  • SHORT TERM FINANCE is generally borrowings that repayable within ONE year;(PART1)
  • Medium- term finance are those repayable within 2 to 5 years (Part2) and
  • Long-term finance repayable after more than 5 years(Part3)

You may asked what’s so important to differentiate finance into its various period namely short to medium to long term finance.

The main rationale is that if a company has long term investments where returns are not yet forthcoming, the project/investment should strictly be bridged by long term sources of finance. Just imagine that as the manager who is in charge of getting the finance, you manage to finance it with short term financing facilities like bank overdraft ,etc- the financial interest will shoot sky-high for many years with no returns/cash in-flow.

Append below is a table of the various type of short term finance:

Sources Of Short-term finance

Description

Bank Overdrafts

 

  • Simplest and most flexible type of short term finance for most business;
  • Given a maximum limit;
  • Interest is charged only on those utilized;
  • Unutilized amount might be charged a small % of commitment fee;
  • This facility is given on top of what the owner has in his/her current account;
  • Generally about 2%-5% above the lender bank’s base lending rate. Premium spread like 0.25% to 0.75% are given by the lender bank to their high valued customers;
  • Flexible because the borrower can reduce his overdraft as and when he wants by merely banking into his current account which has the overdrawn amount;
  • The main disadvantages are this type of facility is repayable on demand and normally the borrower need to provide security/collateral for the overdraft facility.

 

 

Short-term loans

 

  • Fixed amount and have a fixed period of time to repay the loan;
  • Interest rate is fixed;
  • Duration from few months to few years;
  • Repayments either in installments or bullet type meaning one lump sum repayment;
  • Interest is charge on the amount borrowed;
  • Like bank overdraft, need to provide security or collateral for the lender bank;
  • Advantage - the company does not need to pay back immediately especially when they embark on medium to long term projects/investments. So it is more secure than bank overdraft;
  • Disadvantage - the interest rate is fixed. Un-conducive particularly when interest rates trends are moving downward;

 

Revolving Credit

  • Borrowing for a short period of time say ninety days but renewable when expiry date is due;
  • Has the feature of both short-term and medium-term loans as the borrower can keep repaying and borrowing for a few years

Bridging loans

  • Normally applies to property based or project financing
  • Loans are given for a specified period of time and coincides with the date the funds to repay. For example, in a housing project, a bridging loan of $XXmillion is repayable when the house owners commence to pay the housing developer.

Debt Factoring

  • The lender bank or finance company takes over the company’s trade debts in return for a commission;
  • Services offered include debt collection and administration, credit insurance and finance provision;
  • Debt collection and administration includes taking over all the trade debts and manages the collection of debts for a fee/commission;
  • Credit insurance is the paying in advance certain portion of the face value of the debts say 85%. Two types: recourse and non-recourse factoring arrangement. Recourse means that in the event of bad debts, the company will absorb it whilst non-recourse is that the factoring company will absorb the bad debts but will charge a higher commission for doing so;
  • Finance provision is similar to recourse factoring.

Invoice discounting

 

  • Similar to factoring. The lender will advance a percentage of the trade debt;
  • The collection and management of the trade debt is done by the company and not the lending institution;
  • The borrower to repay amount advanced plus interest charged.

Trade credits

 

  • Credit extended by the supplier of goods and/ services;
  • Normally for a period of 30 to 90 days;
  • Credit term given by suppliers will depend on the company’s financial position and whether discount is taken or not;
  • Interest free unless if supplier offers discount and borrower did not pay to enjoy the discount benefit;
  • Therefore, the “cheapest” source of finance but should be handled properly otherwise company’s reputation might be ruined if it overstretch the credit term given by the suppliers.