Hi this is going to sound really dumb but i'm doing the M&A course on here to prep for an interview and could someone clarify if equity financing involves selling shares of the target company or is the buyer selling shares of 'themselves' ?
Hi Dheepa, could you elaborate on why the company would do an IPO listing to raise finance for the acquisition? Thank you very much!Equity financing generally means that a company is choosing to sell a stake/part of its shares to raise money. I think the M&A course on TCLA is merely referring to the ways in which a company can choose to raise money (debt/equity). What they then do with that money as either a target company or a buyer in an M&A transaction (or just as a company not even looking to engage in an M&A transaction) is then entirely up to them. Also, buyers can choose to finance an acquisition using equity financing although I don't think this would typically involve selling a direct stake in the shares to investors but is more commonly done through an IPO listing.
I hope that makes sense let me know if you need any more clarification.
Hi Dheepa, could you elaborate on why the company would do an IPO listing to raise finance for the acquisition? Thank you very much!
Thank you, it’s more clear nowI've edited my initial response heavily as I think it was a bit confused and not very clear but as I've said an IPO is just a way to raise capital/money through a sale of shares. What the company chooses to do with that money could range from anything to reinvesting into the business immediately or saving that capital for down the line when they do want to acquire a company. In hindsight, I think I worded my initial answer pretty terribly because I don't actually think companies would go through the time consuming process of an IPO solely for an acquisition, but it would give them a large pool of capital for one.
Thank You!I've edited my initial response heavily as I think it was a bit confused and not very clear but as I've said an IPO is just one of many ways to raise capital/money through a sale of shares. What the company chooses to do with that money could range from reinvesting into the business immediately or saving that capital for down the line when they do want to acquire a company. In hindsight, I think I worded my initial answer pretty terribly because I don't actually think companies would go through the time consuming process of an IPO solely for an acquisition, but it would give them a large pool of capital for one.