Source: https://www.accountingscholar.com/debt-equity-instruments.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 23:01:35
Document Index: 497147153

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Chapter 8.1® - Complex Debt & Equity Instruments - the Debt-To-Equity Continuum, Convertible Debt, Income Bonds & Redeemable Preferred Shares
Part 8.1 - Complex Debt & Equity Instruments - the Debt-To-Equity Continuum, Convertible Debt, Income Bonds & Redeemable Preferred Shares
Part 8.2 - Financial Assets & Liabilities - Debt & Equity Problem - Examples of Financial Instrument Classification & Retractable Preferred Shares
Part 8.3 - Reasons for Issuance of Retractable Preferred Shares - Perpetual & Convertible Debt
Part 8.4 - Characteristics of Convertible Bonds - Value of Conversions, Recognition of Convertible Debt & Associated Journal Entries & Measurement of Net Income
Part 8.5 - Conversion of Bond Debt using Book Value & Market Value Methods & Examples to Illustrate - Repayment of Bonds & Credit to Contributed Capital - Common Shares
Part 8.6 - Issuing Convertible Debt at Issuer's Option & Terms - Stock Options & Warrants, Accounting for Stock Rights, Generating Cash Flow Statements of Debt Activities
In this chapter, we will study and analyze instruments used for raising capital that do not fit neatly into the debt and share equity categories.
The Debt-To-Equity Continuum:
Traditionally, accountants relied on the legal description of capital instruments for classification. If there was a stock certificate, the instrument was accounted for as equity; if there was a debt contract or agreement, the instrument was accounted for as liability. This rule worked well as long as debt and equity conformed to expectations: that is,
Debt carried firm commitment to interest payments and repayment of capital at maturity;
Equity was a residual interest in net assets with rights only to dividends as declared and no guaranteed return of capital.
But there were too many forms of financing that did not fit into these categories. Following are the categories:
Income bonds are bonds that pay interest, but only when the corporation has earned a certain amount of income, or operating cash flow in the year. The interest flow is contingent on performance, and doesn’t really meet the liability definition.
In this category, a corporation has to be bought back for cash, they are more like a liability.
The convertible debt, convertible at the investor’s option, presents another accounting dilemma. The issuing company allows the investor to convert the principal portion of the bond into a certain number of common shares on certain dates. The issuing company usually hopes that the bond will be converted prior to maturity, but cannot force conversion. Investors will convert only if the shares are worth more money. So, may be the company will avoid having to repay principal, if share price increase, but may be they’ll have to repay the debt, if share prices are soft. This is a contingency, and obviously hard to place into debt-or-equity slots.
The financial market supports a continuum of investments, with features that range from pure debt to pure equity, with a lot of grey in the middle. We can take a look at the features of investment vehicles as follows:
This diagram above shows that corporations can finance their activities by raising debt (such as issuing bonds payable) or by issuing common shares (equity) or do a little bit of both.
Corporations (and the capital markets) have been very inventive in designing not only new types of derivative instruments, but also new types of primary securities that have characteristics of both debt and equity. These new types of securities are called ‘hybrid securities or investment vehicles’.
The old method of classifying debt and equity on the balance sheet doesn’t work very well when the formerly clear boundary between debt and equity is bridged by hybrid securities.
Derivatives and Hybrids:
Corporations issue certain types of securities that are neither debt nor equity in themselves, but that represent the right to acquire securities (usually common shares) at a pre-determined price in the future. A stock right is a form of stock option, which in turn is one category of a broader classifications known as derivative instruments. By themselves, stock rights represent neither an obligation of the corporation nor a share interest in the corporation; their value is derived from the value of the underlying security that can be acquired by exercising rights.
Financial Instruments – General Principles
There are some examples of innovative financial instruments which are as:
- Amortization extended term loan (AXELS)
- Bull & Bear bonds
- Capped floating rate note
- Convertible bonds with a premium put
- Covered Option securities (COPs)
- Euro-Commercial paper
- Floating rate notes
- Gold-indexed bonds
- Indexed currency option notes (ICONs)
- Junk Commercial paper
- Liquid yield option notes (LYONs)
- Note issuance facility (NIF)
- Principal exchange-rate-linked securities (PERLs)
- Standard and poor’s indexed notes (SPINs)
- Stripped bonds
- Variable duration bonds
- Yankee bonds
- Convertible money market preferred (MMP) stock
- Dutch-auction rate transferable securities (DARTs)
- Exchangeable PIK (Pay in Kind) preferred stock