Asset Stripper

  

Categories: Banking, Entrepreneur

Colonel Electric, before it was demoted, used to have really great assets. A jet engine division. All kinds of finance. Real estate. It even owned NBC. But then everything kind of imploded and the stock price sank and it's likely that ASSET STRIPPERS are looking hungrily, hoping to buy the whole company for a song. Once they get it, the goal will be to auction off whatever key parts were left of the once-great conglomerate.

That process is called asset stripping (which is very different from what the process would be if the same term had the "et" removed).

For a more street-level example, think of buying a rundown junker of a car and selling it for parts. The amount you can get from the bits and pieces (the tires, the engine, even the airbags) is more than the whole car is worth...it's just a matter of putting in the work to strip it down.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Coupon Stripping?3 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is coupon stripping? burlesque bonds that's the [Burlesque bond dancer on stage]

00:08

ticket or maybe not okay okay when a coupon is

00:12

stripped it is removed from the principle of a bond so in this sense

00:18

think of a bond as having two components there's the interest that it pays in the

00:23

form of a semi-annual coupon and then there's well the principle when the

00:28

coupon is stripped off of the bond it is sold separately to investors who are [Bond sold to investor]

00:34

simply buying a stream of cash flows into the future of interest payments

00:38

only they're not worried about collecting the principal so in practice

00:42

investors will simply do a discounted cash flow model of an interest payment

00:46

of I'll say six grand a year for 20 years which would be a total set of

00:51

interest payments of $120,000 for which investors will obviously pay less than

00:56

that amount today to discount back for the time value of money and the risk

01:01

that the issuer of that bond goes belly-up and one day decides it can no

01:05

longer pay its coupons so maybe that number is half of the hundred twenty [120k halved]

01:10

grand or two-thirds or three-fourths or something like that but it's some

01:14

meaningful discount to the eventual total payout of 120 thousand dollars and

01:18

the calculation of the math when it looks something like this to be all Wall

01:22

Streety and all the way you would calculate the value here would be to

01:26

make twenty columns each representing one year forward of coupon payments and [Columns appear for cash flow calculation]

01:31

then discounting back by one plus the risk-free rate ie what the Fed pays for

01:36

an analogous time period plus some premium added in for risk alright for

01:41

example if one year fed paper pays two percent to discount back the coupons for

01:46

next year well you might add a hundred basis points to the risk-free rate to

01:51

then divide that $6,000 payment by 1.03 to the first power

01:55

cause this bond issuer is not risk free all right skipping forward five years

02:00

well you might note that federal paper at that point is paying four percent for

02:04

its five-year term and because it's further into the future well you might [Power of 5 highlighted in calculation]

02:08

need to discount 250 basis points added on to that risk-free rate to account for

02:13

much higher degree of risk that while the company issuing those bonds goes

02:16

bye-bye so in this case you would discount those five year out bonds by

02:20

that six thousand dollar payment then divide by one plus the risk-free rate of

02:25

4% then you'd add in the risk premium you've added on top that's two and a

02:29

half percent to come up with a total base of six and a half percent making

02:33

the calculation 1.065 to the fifth power in the denominator which

02:37

then makes the present risk adjusted value of six grand paid five years from [Calculation answer appears]

02:42

now to equal about forty five hundred ninety bucks so if you keep doing this

02:47

math for twenty years that's about how long it will take to do this problem you

02:51

will come up with a fairly sophisticated answer as to how much those stripped

02:55

coupon payments are worth cumulatively over the next twenty years so then what

03:01

happened to the principal off of which those coupons were you know stripped

03:05

well the principal amount is actually much easier to calculate if it was a [Man discussing principal amounts of stripped coupons]

03:08

hundred grand while that was yielding six percent for twenty years well then

03:13

that hundred thousand dollars of principal will need to be paid back

03:15

after 20 years once so calculating the present value of that 20 years from now

03:20

hundred grand payment is way easier than calculating the myriad coupon payments

03:25

we just did along the way in fact it's just this one calculation and we might [Man pressing calculator buttons]

03:29

note that federal paper coming due in 20 years is yielding four and a quarter

03:33

percent and we're gonna add quite a lot of risk for a bond 20 years forward

03:39

because well, bad things happen to good companies all the time and we remember

03:42

that about two decades ago Yahoo was the most highly valued company on the planet [Yahoo logo appears]

03:47

and Amazon was worth a fraction of what Sears was worth so yeah bad things so

03:53

we're gonna add three and a half percent or three hundred fifty basis points of

03:57

risk premium each year to that four and a quarter percent risk-free rate to come

04:01

up with a total discount rate of 7 and 3/4 percent okay almost done hang with

04:06

me so now we're gonna calculate what that hundred grand is worth today when

04:10

it's paid out 20 years from now by dividing it by the quantity one plus [New calculation appears]

04:15

0.0775 to the 20th power and all that math then says that the hundred

04:19

grand 20 years from now is only worth about 22 grand and change so why would a

04:23

company strip off coupon payments and principal

04:26

in the first place answer simply put because investors were willing to buy

04:31

that bifurcated stripped security well some investors want small payments all [Investor being paid small payments]

04:36

the time and they don't care about a final large lump sum payment other

04:39

investors think lovers of zero coupon style bonds don't need any cash today [Man in bed with coupon]

04:44

and instead are having taking one lump payment with a relatively high return

04:48

delivered away at the very end of a couple of decades of interest loving

04:52

compoundage-- like you could buy one of those hundred grand thingies 20 years

04:56

from now for only 22 grand today so yeah that's coupon stripping and as far as [Man discussing coupon stripping]

05:00

real stripping goes well this is about as g-rated as it gets people here what [Woman with coupon for head pole-dancing]

05:05

do you think we're running here at shmoop..

Up Next

Finance: What is a Corporate Raider?
37 Views

What is a Corporate Raider? A corporate raider is a predatory investor who purchases a significant bloc of stock or debt in a public company in ord...

Finance: What is Disintermediation?
9 Views

What is Disintermediation? The process by which an institutional investor withdraws its funds from intermediary financial companies, such as broker...

Finance: What is STRIPS?
2 Views

STRIPS are government-backed, zero coupon bonds. And yes, they keep their clothes on.

Finance: What is a Dutch Auction?
3 Views

What is a Dutch Auction? A Dutch Auction is either one where closed quantity and price bids are entered and the price is set at the highest price t...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)