Asset Backed Credit Default Swap - ABCDS

  

Categories: Bonds, Accounting, Metrics

Two companies owe money. Their debt is insured by somebody else, such that, if they default and can't pay, then the insurer of their debt is on the hook. This practice is common in home mortgage packages traded among institutional bond investors. Shouting out that these are asset backed as opposed to handshake backed (debentures) simply implies that there is a single identifiable asset that serves as collateral backing the credit and/or trust of either side involved in the swap.

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Finance: What is Dilution?77 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what is dilution? ownership is a pie.

00:08

here's 100% of pie. it's divided into 20 million slices, there there you just [man holds pie]

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can't see them. each is a share of ownership in the company whatever.com

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well one day the CEO of whatever.com decided she wanted to buy her hated

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competitor something.com for 2 million shares. then she wanted to buy her

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marketing vendor sell my butt off.com for a million shares. well her stock had

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been trading at 12 bucks a share for a total market valuation of 240 million

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dollars .see we get that 12 times 20 million. but then after printing 3 [equation]

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million more shares to buy her competitors,

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well she now has 23 million slices of pie .and yes that's how it works!

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companies can essentially just go to the Xerox machine and print shares of their

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own stock, that they didn't formerly own. but now she has 23 million shares [printer prints shares]

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outstanding and not 20 million. so at $12 a share the stock market is valuing her

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company at a meaningfully higher price. 12 times 23 million is 276 million. it's

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saying that the value of the three million share dilutions she took in

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buying something dot-com and Sell my butt off.com [woman waves to camera]

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was the difference between the 276 million in the 240 million or 36 million

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bucks. but let's say the market value had stayed flat at 240 million. well now with

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23 million shares out the stock is only worth 10 dollars and 43 cents a share,

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instead of the previous $12 a share. in other words shares have been diluted

01:37

each share of whatever com is no longer worth as much as it used to be. that pie

01:42

isn't looking quite as appetizing now is it? [man frowns in kitchen wearing apron]

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