Asset Swapped Convertible Option Transaction - ASCOT

  

Categories: Derivatives, Stocks, Bonds

Another Tom Wolfe special! (See: Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Fund Liquidity Facility)
Stocks and bonds offer different ways to invest in a company. They operate differently and have different pros and cons. Meanwhile, there are securities - called convertible bonds - that offer aspects of both types of investment. An asset swapped convertible option transaction re-separates these functions - splitting the bond and stock parts of a convertible bond.
A bond represents a loan. When you buy a bond, you are basically loaning money to a company, the grown-up version of spotting a buddy a few bucks for dinner. Eventually, hopefully, your buddy (or the company) will pay you back.
A stock, on the other hand, represents the purchase of ownership, or at least a part ownership. You aren't owed any money, as you would be with a bond, but you hope to make money as the company grows. As the company's value increases, the stock's value increases as well.
A convertible bond combines these investments. It is a bond, paying a yield and coming with a promise of repayment. However, the security also comes with an option to convert it into stock (hence the "convertible" part). So if you want, you can, under conditions laid out in the convertible bond, change the bond into a certain amount of stock at a certain price.
Here's the trade off, though: to convert into stock, you have to give up the bond. No more yield. No more guaranteed payments.
The ASCOT presents a "have your cake and eat it too" opportunity. The mechanics of the transaction are relatively complicated. But the result is splitting the bond part of the convertible bond from the stock part. You can hold the bond, with all the yield and guaranteed return, while still getting the upside available from owning stock.

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Finance: What is Forced Conversion?59 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what is forced conversion Okay this is

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forced conversion Yeah this is also forced conversion and so's

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this Yeah that is the issuer of this particular bond

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Like the company who borrowed money has the right as

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described in the indenture to force you to convert the

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bond either into and say twenty five shares of common

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stock or something else Which sort of implies that a

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stock price the over under price of breaking evens about

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forty bucks a share takes you get that thousand dollars

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divided by the twenty five shares Think it's you forty

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bucks a share or the issuer or company who sold

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the bond in the first place can simply call the

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bond and force converted into cash for the small conversion

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premium of ah two point five percent or that's twenty

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five bucks in this thousand dollars par value bond So

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in this sense essentially the break even Numbers actually 41

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dollars a share not forty there because you get an

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extra little premium bump there if they force you to

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force conversion in a bond sense is usually something cos

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do when they can either refinance the bond at cheaper

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interest rates or are doing so well operationally that they

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have enough cash Teo just retire their debt They call

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