Date of issue


 

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Date of issue

Used in the context of bonds to refer to the date on which a bond is issued and when interest accrues to the bondholder. Used in the context of stocks to refer to the date trading begins on a new stock issued to the public.



Date of issue

Similar Matches

Seasoned issue

Seasoned issue

Issue of a security for which there is an existing market. Related: Unseasoned issue.


Issuer

Issuer

A company or public sector entity which has shares, bonds or other security listed on a stock exchange.


Current issue

Current issue

In Treasury securities, the most recently auctioned issue. Trading is more active in current issues than in off-the-run issues.


Scrip issue

Scrip issue

Scrip issues are born out of an accounting quirk. When a company has retained profits, these appear on its balance sheet as 'Profit and Loss Account Reserves'. If the company has been trading profitably for some time, the reserves can far outweigh the Ordinary Share Capital of the company as a proportion of total Shareholders' Funds.For instance, a company might have Shareholders' Funds as follows:Ordinary share capital (10p par value x 500 million shares in issue) = £50 millionProfit and Loss Account reserves = £250 millionSuppose that this company has a share price of 900p which is quite 'heavy' for a UK company. The directors of the company might decide that the shares would be more marketable if the share price was lower. One way to achieve this is to have a scrip issue, the basis of which is that part of the P&L Reserves are converted into new share capital.In the above example, the company might convert £50 million of Reserves into new shares.It creates 500 million new shares at 10p par valueIt uses £50 million from the Reserve account to make them 'fully paid'.It distributes the new shares to existing shareholders pro rata to their existing holdingIn this case, there were 500 million shares before the scrip and 500 million new shares have been created, so shareholders would get one new share for every share they already hold.After the scrip issue shareholders funds would look like this:Ordinary share capital (10p par value x 1 billion shares in issue) = £100 millionProfit and Loss Account reserves = £200 millionShareholders should not pop the champagne corks though. True, individually they have twice as many shares as they had before. But total shareholders funds haven't changed. They are still £300 million. All that has happened is that £50 million has been moved from one row in the balance sheet to another. The price of the shares will be adjusted to reflect the fact that there are twice as many in issue. Instead of being 900p it will halve to 450p.The other point to note is that if the company pays the same dividend per share after a scrip issue as it did the previous year, it will in fact be paying out a lot more. So the dividend per share will usually drop after a scrip issue.


House of issue

House of issue

An investment banking firm whose business it is to underwrite stock or bond issues and offer the securities to the public.


Further Suggestions

Benchmark issue
Currency no longer issued
Small issues exemption
Specific issues market
When issued (WI)
Pre sold issue
New issue
unissued stock
New issues market
Last Mile Issue
Current coupon issues
Unseasoned issue
issued share capital
Issue
Vanilla issue
Cheapest to deliver issue
issue
capitalisation issue
Foreign targeted issue
seasoned issue
Original Issue Discount securities (OIDS)
Euroequity issues
rights issue
Junior issue
Original issue discount debt (OID debt)


 
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