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  • Everything we've talked about so far with this startup

  • company selling socks and all of that, has been raising

  • money from an equity.

  • We raised private money-- when the company was private it

  • went to VCs and it went to angel investors, and maybe you

  • could go to your friends and family to raise money.

  • And then the company could go public and raise money from

  • the public markets.

  • But there's actually two ways that a

  • company can raise capital.

  • So this is why this playlist is called capital markets, or

  • it's part of it, the name of raise capital.

  • Capital is just essentially-- I mean the easy way to think

  • about it is you're raising cash that you want to invest

  • in some way to grow your business or to sustain your

  • business or start your business.

  • So everything we talked about so far was equity, and that's

  • essentially selling shares in your company to raise money.

  • And so that's all of those VC examples.

  • The equity investor-- so when you sell equity, you're

  • essentially selling-- you're kind of making that person

  • who's buying the stock-- you know, an equity is the same

  • thing as stock-- you're making the person who's buying a

  • stock kind of a partner in the company.

  • So if the company-- let's say there's two situations-- if

  • the company goes bankrupt-- and I'll talk a lot more about

  • what bankruptcy even means-- but if the company goes

  • bankrupt, all the shareholders end up with nothing.

  • They end up with nil.

  • But if the company has a lot of upside, the stock gets a

  • lot of upside.

  • Because they're partners in it.

  • If this was a company, that start-up that we talked about,

  • if it turns into Amazon.com and becomes a billion-dollar

  • company, everyone is going to do really well.

  • Everyone's going to share in that upside.

  • But there's another way to raise money, and actually this

  • is probably something that's more familiar at

  • the household level.

  • I mean at the household level you never raise equity.

  • You never say, you know what-- well you can, but you're not

  • going to say hey, I need to buy a house, why don't I go to

  • my rich friend and offer to sell 10% of the stake in my

  • house to him and he'll be kind of a partner in my house.

  • That could happen but for the most part it doesn't.

  • Usually when you do something on a personal level you raise

  • money through debt.

  • And that's interesting.

  • So what's good about debt is it's-- so let's think about it

  • from the point of view of the person who's lending

  • the money to you.

  • Debt is just borrowing money.

  • I think all of us know what borrowing money is.

  • I go to my rich friend and I say hey, could I borrow $1 and

  • I'll give you $1.25 in a year?

  • And he says, OK, you're good for it.

  • But I'm essentially promising I'm going to give the money

  • back at some future date.

  • If I sell equity, I'm not promising anything.

  • I'm like hey, I got a great business, why don't you give

  • $1 and then you get a 20% cut of my business.

  • If my business does awesome, you get 20% of all of the

  • profits of my business.

  • If my business does horrible, well you took a risk, you get

  • nothing and I get nothing.

  • Debt says regardless of how my business does, if it does

  • awesome all you're going to get is the interest.

  • That's kind of the upside.

  • So the upside's limited, right?

  • If I borrow money at 9% interest, all that person's

  • going to get is 9%.

  • Even if my company becomes the next Google or Microsoft or

  • whatever else, that person's just going to

  • get 9% on their money.

  • While this person might have gotten a hundred times their

  • money because they made a bet.

  • On the other hand, this downside is much lower.

  • So limited downside.

  • Because they're going to get their money back at a

  • certain-- you know, there's a certain payment schedule.

  • And they're going to get their money back before the

  • stockholders-- so let's say in a situation where the

  • company's going into difficulty-- and we'll do a

  • whole playlist on bankruptcy-- the people who lend money to

  • the company will see their money before the stockholders

  • see anything.

  • So how does all of this come out from the balance sheet?

  • So let's say we have a public company.

  • If you wonder what a CFO at a company does, this is really

  • the main decision that they're always making.

  • Do we raise money-- well, how do we raise money if we need

  • it, and do we raise money from the equity markets or from the

  • debt markets?

  • So let's come up with a company again.

  • Let's say that that's its current assets.

  • Not current-- I don't want to say current assets, it's the

  • assets that it currently has.

  • Current assets means something different, and we'll talk

  • about that in the future.

  • But let's say, so that's its assets.

  • You know it might have some cash here.

  • We'll go into more detail.

  • We'll actually look at real company balance sheets and

  • decipher what all of the terms on the balance sheet mean.

  • But that's its assets for now.

  • And let's say right now all of its money it's raised so far

  • has been equity.

  • And let's say it's a publicly listed company.

  • It doesn't have to be.

  • Let's say that's all of its equity, and let's say it has,

  • I don't know, 10 million shares.

  • And the other interesting thing about when a company's

  • public-- remember, every time when a company was private and

  • it took an investor, when it took equity investors, they

  • had to sit and have a negotiation saying what is

  • this worth?

  • What are these assets worth?

  • But what's cool is, is when you have a publicly traded

  • company, these shares are traded on an exchange, right?

  • These shares are on, let's say it's on the

  • New York Stock Exchange.

  • So every day you could go to Yahoo!

  • Finance or wherever and you can look at a chart.

  • Let me draw a chart.

  • You can draw a chart.

  • And we've all seen stock charts, I think.

  • So let's say that this is this could have been its IPO date

  • or it could just be the start that we're looking at, and

  • let's say the stock IPO went up, and then the whole market

  • went down a little bit.

  • But the stock-- maybe it's there, right?

  • But on any given, really almost any given second,

  • there's a price that somebody traded that stock at and it

  • might not be the best price, but it is a price.

  • And we'll talk about why that happens, because you might

  • have 10 million shares, and if only, I don't know, 100 shares

  • get traded at any second, or let's say only 100 shares get

  • traded in the day, is that an indicative price?

  • Because that's not a huge percentage

  • of all of the shares.

  • But anyway, we'll talk more about what volume means

  • relative to the total float and all of that.

  • But let's say at this split second the company shares

  • traded at $15 a share.

  • This is $15, right, at this second in time.

  • This is like right now.

  • Traded at $15 a share, and you could look it up on your

  • Bloomberg terminal or whatever else.

  • So essentially the market is providing us a

  • value for this company.

  • The market is saying wow, the market is willing to trade the

  • share at $15.

  • There was a willing buyer and a willing seller at exactly

  • $15 a share.

  • So that means that the market at that moment is valuing this

  • company at $15 per share times 10 million shares.

  • So $15 per share times 10 million shares-- not

  • necessarily a dollar sign.

  • So the market is assigning a, 15 times 10 is 100.

  • $150 million market cap.

  • Market capitalization for the company.

  • And you could look on the kind of, I think it's the key

  • statistics tab on Yahoo!

  • Finance, and you'll see market capitalization for a company.

  • And it's just the number of shares times the

  • price of the shares.

  • This is essentially what the market's value

  • of the equity is.

  • The market is saying that this piece right here

  • is worth $150 million.

  • And since this piece is the same size as the assets, we

  • have nothing else on the right-hand side, the market's

  • essentially saying that the assets right now are worth

  • $150 million.

  • And these aren't always going to be equal.

  • We'll see probably in a few videos when you start raising

  • debt you have to do an extra calculation to figure out what

  • the asset value or-- and I'll throw out a new term here, the

  • enterprise value of the firm is.

  • The enterprise value's essentially the asset value

  • minus excess cash.

  • The cash the company really doesn't need to operate.

  • And we'll go into more detail of that.

  • But we'll just view it as the assets for now.

  • So if I'm the CFO of this company, and let's say we need

  • to raise another, I don't know, $15 million.

  • I have two options.

  • I could say OK, the company is trading at $15 per share, I

  • need to raise $15 million, so I could issue

  • another million shares.

  • It wouldn't be the initial public offering because I'm

  • already public.

  • It would be a follow-on offering, or sometimes it's

  • called a secondary offering.

  • Although the word secondary has kind of two connotations.

  • But it would be a follow-on offering where I would issue,

  • I'd go to the board, we would essentially create another

  • million shares, and then sell them into the market, and

  • hopefully people will buy it at $15 a share or probably a

  • little bit less because we're kind of flooding the market

  • with a ton of shares.

  • Maybe they buy it at $14 per share, and we

  • would raise $14 million.

  • And that would be a follow-on offering.

  • So we can always use the public markets as a way to

  • raise more money.

  • We didn't have to go to all this-- I mean, for the most

  • part we didn't have to do this huge valuation exercise and

  • negotiations and do all of this, hire banks and all that.

  • Although the banks will still collect fees.

  • We actually would have to hire banks to do this.

  • So that's one option.

  • Or the other option is we're an established company, we're

  • generating cash, we could make interest

  • payments if we want to.

  • We could go to a bank.

  • And actually there's a lot of different ways to do this.

  • But we could essentially borrow money.

  • And let's just say we do that.

  • Instead of doing this-- let's say we do both.

  • So let's say we did a $1 million follow-on offering,

  • that gave us $14 million.

  • And let's say we want another $2 million, but this time

  • instead of selling shares-- so right now how many

  • shares do we have?

  • We sold 1 million, we had 10 million, we

  • have 11 million shares.

  • Let's say, you know what, let's say as a CFO I feel like

  • our shares are going to move up a lot more.

  • So we don't like selling them at this low price.

  • And let's say interest rates are really low.

  • Instead we're going to borrow money.

  • That's essentially raising debt.

  • So let's say we borrow another $3 million because we need it.

  • So actually this would be debt, $3 million of debt, and

  • we would get $3 million of cash.

  • So now our assets are all of this stuff on

  • the left-hand side.

  • And what are our liabilities now?

  • Now, we didn't have liabilities before because

  • everything we had were equities.

  • But now we do.

  • Now we owe somebody $3 million right here.

  • And I'll talk more about all the different ways to kind of

  • borrow money.

  • But it's essentially, it could just literally be a bank loan.

  • They might have just gone to Bank of America and said hey,

  • we're a big company and we're good for the money, why don't

  • you lend us $3 million.

  • And maybe it would be $3 million at a low interest

  • rate, at maybe 6% per year.

  • And Bank of America feels good because you have a high--

  • we'll talk more about credit ratings and all of that-- but

  • they say oh, you have essentially a good company

  • credit score.

  • So we'll give it to you at a low interest rate.

  • So what happens in the future is, these assets are going to

  • generate, hopefully, some cash.

  • And before these guys see it-- let me do to it in the--

  • before these equity holders-- this is the equity holders

  • right now-- before the equity holders see anything, these

  • guys have to get paid their interest. And I'll show you

  • all of that on a line-by-line basis in an income statement.

  • Everything we've done so far has been a balance sheet.

  • But something interesting is happening now.

  • Now all of a sudden your assets, which is that side-- I

  • know I just keep writing over the same drawing-- your assets

  • are now larger than your equity.

  • I think now, and this is just kind of a review of the

  • balance sheet video, you see that the assets are equal to

  • your equity, which is this right here, your equity plus

  • your liabilities.

  • Your liabilities now are $3 million.

  • Plus liabilities.

  • So if you wanted to know what your assets are worth, because

  • your assets are equal to your equity.

  • So what's your market value of your equity?

  • Well, we figured that out already.

  • We have 11 million shares now.

  • And let's say the stock plummets to $10 a share for

  • some strange reason or for a not-strange reason.

  • So what's the market cap? $10 a share, 11 million shares, we

  • have a $110 million market cap.

  • We're doing a market value.

  • And we'll talk more about the difference between market and

  • book value.

  • But this is the market value of your equity.

  • And then what is your liabilities?

  • Well we owe $3 million, so plus 3 million.

  • So we could say that for the most part the market value of

  • our assets, the market thinks that this entire left-hand

  • side is going to be worth the value of our equity, the

  • market cap of the company, plus the amount of debt, which

  • is equal to $113 million.

  • So the value of these assets are $113 million, and that for

  • the most part is the enterprise

  • value of the company.

  • What is the company's assets worth?

  • And we'll talk-- there's a little bit of a tweak we'll do

  • in the future on enterprise value.

  • But that's essentially how you kind of can value what the

  • company's worth.

  • A lot of people when they do a market capitalization

  • calculation they say oh, that's what

  • the company's worth.

  • Well no, that's what the equity is worth.

  • Market cap is what the equity's worth.

  • If you want to know what the company's worth, you have to

  • take the market cap and then add the debt.

  • Another way-- well, I won't get too complicated because I

  • just realized I've run out of time again.

  • See you in the next video.

Everything we've talked about so far with this startup

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