Monthly archive: October, 2008

Visa IPO offering - I have 20k, but need 80k more for Full brokerage account, is this feasible?

IPO
Marty asks:

I have been thinking about investing in Visa’s IPO. They are leader in the market, and could very well pull a stunt like Mastercard did in 2006. I spoke with one of the brokers in the initial offering and they require 100K to open an account. I only have 20K, and have talked to a couple of friends who would like to do the same. I know we can open a Joint (multiple Investors) account and do it that way. Is this a common practice or are there other vehicles we could use to achieve the same result?

who can invest in an IPO?

IPO
Carmel asks:

Can corporates and Financial institutions invest in an IPO?

Why did Nymex IPO (NMX) underwriters leave so much on the table? It priced higher at $59 but opened at $120?

IPO
Merlene asks:

- Wouldnt underwriters want to maximize offer price, as opposed to open price?
- What are the implications for higher offer versus a big pop on trading day?

What should i do with the stock symbol opxt?

IPO
Ron asks:

Ive stuck with this stock since it was an ipo…. is it ever gona make a comeback should i be patient and hold on to it or sell..

Initial Public Offering Costs: What Are The Costs Involved In IPOs?

IPO
Otis asks:

In business, the benefits come with their costs.

For instance, consider the case of a person with a homemade meat business, you have to spend for raw materials like spices, meat and packing expenses and market your product, Then you have to rent a premises to sell your product. So, every business needs an initial investment of time and money for it to be successful.

The cost price is of course the total amount of funds you should use to buy something. Whatever the kind of business you are looking at, you have to spend a certain initial capital to produce a product and sell it later on a price that will give way to profit.

The common expenses that are included in the initial capital investment could be a few of the following:

1. Production costs (including raw materials, machine maintenance if any, and others)

2. maintenance costs like the office, manufacturing plants , vehicles, machines etc.

3. Personnel costs such as factory employees, staff and retailers

4. Advertising and PR costs

5. Miscellaneous expenses.

A cost that the company may face later is gathering funds to raise additional capital to support the growth of production or business expansion possible. One method used to raise additional funding for a company is the IPO, or initial public offering. It needs you have to prepare thousands of dollars for the process of selling the shares you issued in public.

Have you considered costs that you incur when your company will process the IPO?

An IPO is the 1st sale of a joint venture shares to the public. It calls for several investment banks, which will serve as underwriters for the procedure. The company who sell their shares will enter into agreement with the primary insurer to sell those shares to the investing public. The insurer, in exchange will offer shares to traders who want to buy at a price.

The long process of the IPO, you will certainly incur costs, which depends on the stage of the process. For example, one step in the IPO process is completion of the disclosure of documents, which is essential to convince investors about the viability of its IPO. The absence of any well-defined business plan that you need to submit to the yield to investors, difficulty in answering questions of disclosure of the document. In most cases, the business plan will run for 25 to 100 pages, and can cost you about $ 5000 to $ 20,000 on a single step alone.

To put it in a nutshell, the typical business company can spend more than $ 750,000 as direct costs related to the IPO. This is excluding indirect costs like management time spent with the IPO, like disruption of operation, when the company is under the IPO and a team of planners IPO-consultants , insurers, lawyers and specialists.

It’s really expensive to go to IPO. So if you are planning on that do make sure you have the finances associated to pay for the costs associated with your initial public offering.



in ipo what is fixed price and book building whats different between them?

IPO
Allene asks:

and why its have always two price like globus spirits 135 to 148 what profit or loss why i will apply on 148 if it is avaliabe on 135 also

Tata IPO Rights Issue?

IPO
Britni asks:

Can someone explain how the CCP will be converted to equityshares. of the 9 CCP shares, 6 are converted to equity in 2008,how will the other 3 shares be handled?

Is it possible to sell stock in your company that only has a plan for what it will do with the money?

IPO
Robert asks:

say I have a GREAT idea for a business…one that is guaranteed to make millions, if not billions a year. It will cost tens of millions of dollars in start up costs to start this business. Is it possible for me to draw up a plan, and have all my costs and everything outlined…including future customers…and then offer the stock of the company as an IPO to raise the money I would need for my business?

how do u buy a stock @ IPO price?

IPO
Kennith asks:

or is that just for the big boys and all of us normal ppl have to wait for the 1st day of out right trading

How EXACTLY does the stock market work?

IPO
Keiko asks:

Let’s say there’s a new company set to IPO, they are offering 1 Million shares at $20 a share in the hopes of raising $20M for new equipment, employees, etc. If only 300K shares sell the first year of it’s IPO, what causes the price during that time to fluctuate even though there are still outstanding shares? Who decides to bring the price per share up or down? If all 1M shares are sold at IPO, what causes the price to go up or down — is it simply supply and demand?

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