Involuntary Conversion

  

Categories: Bonds, Stocks

See: The Inquisition. They were good at that.

In this venue, it doesn't apply to the marketing of Catholicism, but rather the forced conversion of one security into another, usually a bond, into shares of stock.

A prototypical example might run such that investors bought convertible bonds with par value of $1,000. Those bonds were mandatorially convertible into 40 shares of stock, should the stock "trade for $25 or better for the trailing 20 trading days." Or something like that.

And this involuntary conversion makes sense, right? If the shares were trading at $25 or better, then 40 of them would be worth more than the $1,000 bond par value, so why wouldn't an investor want to convert them? They could just sell and do better than the grand they're owed n years away when the bond matures.

As the Inquisition asked, "What would Jesus do?"

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Finance: What are Convertible Bonds?9 Views

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Inquisition in here somewhere or maybe something about Cossacks and 17th

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century Russia what do you think animated musical or maybe a King Henry [King Henry VIII appears]

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thing but yeah all that's different kind of conversion way more pedantically a

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company might be having a hard time selling or issuing its bonds to Wall [Man with company briefcase for head meets man with Wall Street briefcase for a head]

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Street in order for them to close the deal with their stock trading today at

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shares of our stock that is they would have a single thousand dollar unit of

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that bond and it would convert into 20 shares which would then value the shares

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at 50 bucks either thousand divided by 20 there's 50 it's an advanced calculus

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sorry if you didn't have it which would sort of be you know the over/under price

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at which bondholders would start to seriously look at converting their nice

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safe bonds into those risky pesky equities well why would a company offer

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convertible bonds instead of you know just vanilla bonds well if they were [Man discussing convertible bonds]

01:12

stuck paying 6% interest on just bonds but really could only afford to pay 4%

01:18

well they might get the interest rate discount by throwing in that equity

01:23

kicker in the bonds having that convertibility feature yes they would

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suffer dilution at 50 bucks a share but that price is double and change where

01:32

the stocks out here so the company is probably thinking that it wouldn't mind

01:36

some dilution from these bonds being converted up there in stock price right [Arrow points to stock value mark on graph]

01:42

and remember the bonds pay the 4% interest along the way until they are

01:47

converted the moment those bonds are converted into equity well then the debt

01:51

on the balance sheet of the company and its obligation to pay that 4% yearly [Company balance sheet and interest highlighted]

01:56

interest goes mercifully away they print 20 more shares for each bond converted

02:02

and yes those shares may pay a dividend but as far as the convertible bonds go

02:07

they are thereafter converted and saved and remember Jesus Saves but Moses

02:15

invests

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