Bank Of America Shares Now Worth Less
By Charles Rotblut on May 20, 2009 | More Posts By Charles Rotblut | Author's Website
Bank of America Corp. (BAC) shareholders, your shares are now worth less than they were just two weeks ago.
Yesterday, the banking conglomerate announced that it sold 1.25 billion shares at an average price of $10.77.
The most obvious takeaway is that the sales were transacted at below market prices, or at least below the average closing price of the past 2 weeks. In other words, the buyers didn’t think that BAC shares were worth the current price of $11.25. That’s not good, but it gets worse.
Thanks to the secondary offering, existing shareholders now own less of BAC. To fully understand the implications, let’s look at the math.
As of April 30, Bank of America had 6.40 billion shares outstanding. Multiplying this number by the consensus earnings estimate of 44 cents per share gives us a projected net income figure of $2.816 billion.
The net income figure does not change, whether there is 1 share outstanding or if there are 10 billion shares outstanding. What does change, however, is what portion of income each shareholder is entitled to.
The secondary offering increases shares outstanding to 7.65 billion shares. Dividing this number into the net income figure of $2.816 results in earnings per share of 37 cents per share — a 15% decrease.
Remember, the net income pie has not change, just your slice of it. And your slice is now 15% less than what it was just 2 weeks ago.
Worse yet, BAC still remains far short of meeting the funding requirements required by the stress tests. None of this is good news for shareholders.
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Bailout 2008
Like a bloodied warrior,
laying broken and torn.
Like a dying soldier, hopeless and forlorn.
But the blood, it be green,
the color of money.
And the soldier is an economy,
and it is anything but funny.
Broken are it’s people and shattered are their dreams.
Thanks to the ultra rich and their full proof schemes.
It is a tragedy with more pain to come.
Finance will be Hell, and their wills will be done.