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Jordan Broadcasting Company is going public at \(50 net per share to the company. There also are founding stockholders that are selling part of their shares at the same price. Prior to the offering, the firm had \)26 million in earnings divided over 11 million shares. The public offering will be for 5 million shares; 3 million will be new corporate shares and 2 million will be shares currently owned by the founding stockholders.

  1. What is the immediate dilution based on the new corporate shares that are being offered?
  2. If the stock has a P/E of 30 immediately after the offering, what will the stock price be?
  3. Should the founding stockholders be pleased with the $50 they received for their shares?

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Immediate dilution is $0.5.
  2. The stock price will be $55.80.
  3. No, the founding stockholders should not be pleased.

Step by step solution

01

Computation of immediate dilution 

E arnings per share before stock issue=EarningsOutstanding shares=$26,000,00011,000,000=$2.36Earnings per share after stock issue=EarningsOutstanding shares + Additional shares=$26,000,00011,000,000+3,000,000=$1.86Dilution = EPS before stock issue-EPS after stock issue=$2.36-$1.86=$0.5

02

Computation of stock price

Stock price=EPSafter stock issue×P/E=$1.86×30=$55.80

03

Computation of decline in EPS

DilutioninEPS= EPS before stock issue-EPS after stock issue=$2.36-$1.86=$0.5

Conclusion: Hence, the founding stockholders should not be pleased with $50 because the earnings per share will decline by=$0.5

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Question: The Bowman Corporation has a \(18 million bond obligation outstanding, which it is considering refunding. Though the bonds were initially issued at 10 percent, the interest rates on similar issues have declined to 8.5 percent. The bonds were originally issued for 20 years and have 10 years remaining. The new issue would be for 10 years. There is a 9 percent call premium on the old issue. The underwriting cost on the new \)18,000,000 issue is \(530,000, and the underwriting cost on the old issue was \)380,000. The company is in a 35 percent tax bracket, and it will use an 8 percent discount rate (rounded after-tax cost of debt) to analyze the refunding decision.

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