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 STRIPS?2 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What are strips Well they're just government

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back zero coupon bonds They pay no interest along the

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way And then at the very end after being sold

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at a meaningful discount to par well they pay far

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and everyone goes away Happy ish All right well strips

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stands for separate trading Registered interest principle of securities strips

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Yeah and not nearly as exciting as you were hoping

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right Well strips became a thing in nineteen eighty five

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as the government zero coupon vehicle of choice Replacing older

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forms of money raising The basic idea was to feed

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and ever more complex hunger among investors wanting different flavors

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of debt food and stripping principle in various forms Help

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to at least partially feed that beast well in this

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case the coupons can be stripped from the principle So

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in the case of say fifteen year paper there are

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thirty one elements of payment or thirty one payments to

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be made where thirty of them are coupons or semi

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annual interest payments And those can be packaged as one

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suite of a product And then there is a final

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payment of principle That's the thirty first flavor there you

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know like baskin robbins you know investors can buy them

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separately or combined as it suits their needs And you

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can imagine having just bought a building which carries a

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tax deductible interest costs via debt procured to buy it

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That interest cost to the company's in one hundred grand

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a month Well in order to defeat ease that interest

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costs five dollar word there The company might also by

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strips where they're just buying the coupons from it for

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an offering that pace a four hundred grand twice a

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year in stripped coupons Well that way eight hundred thousand

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boxes with one point two million owed in those monthly

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pay payments on the building are defused and the company

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only has to stress about the remaining four hundred grand

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to cover their brand spanking new building interest costs Well

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at the other end of the liquidity spectrum a company

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might not need any cash for fifteen years and they're

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happy just getting very safe Us government backed interest in

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buying the principal at a discount and then fifteen years

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later cashing in getting the cash getting back to par

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Well either way it's Nice to have a little bit

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Of cash left at the end of the day Especially

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if you're planning to stop by the zero coupon bondage

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parlor That's A different kind of stripping But we didn't

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go there because we're just doing fifty shades of shmoop 00:02:20.83 --> [endTime] here A while

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