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Truth About Bonds

Autor:   •  September 25, 2013  •  Essay  •  495 Words (2 Pages)  •  1,204 Views

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1. Introduction

Recently, Singapore's largest bank, DBS, has taken the wraps off a $500 million preference share issue that qualifies for Tier 1 capital to retail investors. This is in spite of over-subscription from institutions. DBS has offered to pay 4.7% dividends on a semi-annual basis for this preference share which beats the meagre 0.125% interest offered on bank savings accounts. These preference shares are non-convertible, non-voting and unlike general preference shares, they are non-cumulative. The biggest attraction is the bank's proven track record leading to overwhelming demand from retail investors. This prompted DBS to increase its total offer size to $800 million from $500 million.

2. Reasons for Issuance of Preference Shares

2.1 Real Situation

The reason for DBS’s issuance of this preference share is to replace $2.2 billion worth of Tier 1 instruments issued in 2001 that can be redeemed next year. The proceeds from the offering will also be used to strengthen the bank's capital base and support its growth initiatives.

2.1 Signalling Effect

In the company’s perspective, when managers predict unfavourable future prospects, i.e. stock is overvalued; the firm will issue more stocks to split the losses with new shareholders. Moreover, there will be doubts from investors whether the issuance of preference shares is an alternative to raise capital (i.e. DBS is lacking capital). As such, investors who do not closely follow DBS may regard the share offering negatively and the problem of asymmetric information might arise, leading to negative responses. However this was adequately addressed by DBS, contributing to the overwhelming demand.

3. Risks

In

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