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Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Ownership and Control 14 Views


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So how does the ownership and control of a company... work? Well, first there's a Board of Directors. These folks are elected by the common stockholders, and are in charge of deciding whether or not they should raise money, how they should raise money, whether or not they should raise that money Catholic, or... well, you get the picture.

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Transcript

00:00

Principles of finance ah la shmoop ownership and control Okay

00:06

back to the friendly folks at the sauce company it's

00:08

Time to form the board of directors Will these guys

00:12

and gals are elected by the common stockholders But for

00:16

protections sake reed has a contractually obligated board seat as

00:23

part of his investment as long as he owns ten

00:26

percent or more of the company Unless he wants to

00:28

resign or is convicted of financial fraud But not if

00:32

he just kills someone Financial regulatory laws air very uptight

00:36

about thieves Not so much about murderers right Well the

00:38

common stock has one key weapon in the protection of

00:41

itself The common stock can vote In fact it is

00:45

the common stock that hires the board decides keep policy

00:49

issues and so on It answers should we raise money

00:52

And oh the laws are extra picky about board control

00:55

when a financing dilutes or could dilute common shareholders That

00:59

is for things like convertible dead or preferred stock Common

01:03

shareholders have specific control over whether or not that's cool

01:07

for the company Two d'oh should we buy x y

01:10

z corporation Or should we sell to google Should we

01:13

Split our stock in one way or another Should we

01:16

serve coffee or tea at the next annual meeting This

01:19

last one's Not technically a financing activity Unless there's a

01:22

boston sized part there are two flavors of voting in

01:25

the land of common stock Cumulative and statutory cumulative just

01:31

kind of somehow sounds cooler It allows teams to join

01:35

forces and pull their votes for target candidates like they

01:39

can pull their votes pick one or two people and

01:41

just elect them If a shareholder has one percent of

01:44

the common shares outstanding of a company and cumulative voting

01:48

is allowed and there are five candidates being elected that

01:51

shareholder can vote effectively five percent of the total shares

01:56

for any one candidate said graphically With blood and guts

02:00

it looks like this cumulative voting helps the little guy

02:03

to have a big presence or at least some say

02:05

in how the company is run With only one percent

02:08

of the shares the little guy can be felt as

02:10

a five percent holder which makes him a relatively major

02:14

player It also encourages boards to rotate seats gradually That

02:18

is if there were seven seats coming up for election

02:21

Well that one percent could feel like seven percent Which

02:24

starts to get dangerous in a contentious board and company

02:27

situation Right Well the other flavour is statutory voting which

02:31

is just boring One share one vote Board members need

02:34

a simple majority to be elected and well that's it

02:37

Okay Say you're a rabble rouser who needs work on

02:40

his putting in short game and mostly wedges from forty

02:43

yards You don't want to slap to the annual meeting

02:46

So you send in your proxy a virtual version of

02:50

you being there with all the boxes filled out your

02:53

an absentee voter in a proxy If it rains and

02:56

you show up at the meeting the proxy forms air

02:59

shredded and you can change your mind when the votes

03:02

are called For Companies like to save money on coffee

03:04

and cookies at the annual so they generally encouraged proxy

03:08

voting by sending out eve i ts and toe asked

03:10

for proxies and that's a proxy solicitation are well those

03:14

solicitations have to first be stamped by the sec for

03:18

the good housekeeping seal of approval I'ii disclosure is done

03:22

properly All issues are vetted clearly and explain if things

03:26

air contentious such that a block of shareholders wants the

03:29

company to sell out to the man or the google

03:33

or whomever than the proxy people legally must file their

03:36

intent with the sec it's literally a crime to not

03:40

do so and for good reason Companies don't want to

03:42

be suddenly blindsided by a takeover that they couldn't prepare

03:45

care for and the registration requirements are high Even the

03:49

bankers advising a dissident group of shareholders must register with

03:53

the sec to avoid the above problems Management's sometimes issues

03:57

nonvoting stock or stock with inferior control writes the infamous

04:02

super voting stock like it might have equal economic participation

04:06

everything but not equal vote arrogant founders think that they

04:10

have better knowledge of the markets than the markets do

04:13

so they want to be able to control the company

04:16

in various high impact conflict laden situations The new york

04:21

times is perhaps the most famous of the disaster supervoting

04:24

situations Supervoting control stock owned by the founding family made

04:28

the company impossible for an outsider to buy for the 00:04:31.383 --> [endTime] last few decades and well here's their stock chart

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