Business angels are wealthy individuals or groups of wealthy individuals
who invest largely in start-up companies, generally at the beginning of the lives
of those companies or at their early stages. Business angel funding tends to be
categorised within the term private equity (see below). Business angels can bring
more than money, frequently also offering industry experience and useful contacts
as well as sometimes joining the board as non-executive directors.
Every company (public or private), has to hold
an Annual General Meeting (agm) every calendar year. There must be no more than
15 months between meetings. AGMs are designed to enable shareholders (particularly
smaller ones as opposed to major institutional ones who tend to be kept better
informed as a matter of course - certainly in the case of public companies) to
question the board of directors and propose resolutions; in theory at least, to
have their say. At the agm, the company's board of directors will usually explain
the company's performance for the past financial year and give an indication of
likely performance in the financial year to come. Shareholders in the company
must be given a minimum of 21 days' notice of the holding of the agm along with
a copy of the latest annual report and accounts. At the agm, the final share dividend
is approved, the company's directors are elected (or re-elected) and the company
auditors' fees agreed.
Stock Exchanges are places where shares
(securities, stock - see below) are bought and sold. The AIM is a junior cousin
of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) (see below). It is designed to enable smaller,
younger companies to raise new capital via a public listing without having to
meet all the considerable listing requirements and associated costs of the much
larger LSE. The AIM replaced the previous Unlisted Securities Market (USM) which
had been intended to carry out the same function but was less than successful.
Every company needs capital (money) to operate. Capital
comes in various forms - working capital, long-term debt, overdraft, et al, but
much of it is raised by issuing shares. The authorised share capital is the maximum
number of shares a company can issue. A company does not have to issue shares
to the total amount of authorised share capital agreed. It may keep some in reserve
though the total authorised share capital agreed can only be altered by a resolution
of the shareholders. This part of the authorised share capital which has been
paid for and issued to shareholders is known as issued share capital (see below)
and the part which has not been paid for and issued is known as the unissued share
capital.
The history of the term 'Bimbo' is interesting
- in American slang (c 1900) it originally meant a 'bozo' or tough guy, though
its use these days is less politically correct. In corporate life, it means a
combination of management buy-out (MBO) and management buy-in (MBI), see both,
below.
The BVCA is the body representing
most of the UK private equity (see below) industry. It provides training, research
and publications, holds events and acts as a lobbying body on behalf of the industry
and its members.
Conflicts of interest must always be avoided when advice is
being offered. And 'insider dealing' is illegal. But in major financial institutions
such as securities houses, particularly where there may be a number of departmental
functions such as stockbroking, fund management, or market making, the possibility
of conflicts is a real one in a given transaction. Chinese walls are the theoretical
barriers erected between departments to try and avoid any such conflicts arising.
Their effectiveness is questionable at times - as some recent headlines have demonstrated
- in spite of their being patrolled by compliance officers rather than heavily
armed Chinese guards keeping a weather eye out for Mongol hordes.
The world of corporate finance is littered with unusual and
occasionally colourful terms. Dead cat bounce is one of those and is based on
the somewhat unsavoury if obvious premise that, assuming it is dropped from a
sufficient height, even a dead cat will bounce when it hits the ground. The term
refers to a temporary recovery in a falling stock market which does not mean that
the downward trend is about to reverse. In other words, movement can be mistaken
for signs of life.
Companies can raise money by a variety of means from issuing shares,
to overdrafts, to long-term debt. Anything other than the issue of shares generally
comprises borrowing in one form or another. Debentures are simply a form of long-term
borrowing either secured against some of the company's assets or, sometimes, unsecured.
Debentures do not change value in line with a company's performance as shares
generally do.
Those elements of a company's earnings that are distributed to
shareholders, in this country for listed companies, usually twice a year. The
final dividend is approved at the company's agm (see above). Payment of ordinary
dividends is not automatic and is recommended by the board of directors.
Caveat emptor (buyer beware) holds true in any financial transaction.
It would be a foolish investor who did not carry out some form of investigation
(due diligence) into the risks attached to a proposed investment. Where someone
is investing in a new or existing company or if a company is being taken over
by another, then investigations are carried out to identify the potential risks
involved in the particular transaction. Usually diligence will be undertaken on
the financial performance and legal framework of the relevant business and, depending
on the nature of the business may extend to environmental, pensions, market and
other sector specific areas.