Technology News
Home | Tech Store | Amazon Store | Game Store | Webmaster Tools | Safe Kids Links | Promotional Items
Site Sponsor
Recommended Products
Related Links



Christian InTech - Communication

 

 

Informative Articles

1-800-Get-Rich Can Toll Free 800 Number Domains Pay Off?
The toll free number 1-800-Get-Rich belongs to the Resorts Casino Hotel in Atlantic City. Perfect vanity number for a casino, right? Well apparently not. Their website shows the actual numbers, 1-800-438-7424 for the marketing department of...

3 Ways To Do More With Less Time
We live in a world where more is expected of us every day. First there were fax machines, now email and cell phones. Our number of communications daily from various sources is extreme. How can we get to all of it in a timely fashion and still get...

Present Your Message with Power and Pizzazz
If you’re ready to kick your career or business up to the next level, then make it a goal to become a powerful presenter. People view savvy communicators as being more capable, intelligent, and knowledgeable than those individuals who have...

Protecting Your Domain Names
Domain Dispute is no longer news unless a Madonna or Julia Roberts type of celebrity gets involved. However, greater now than ever is the risk for domain registrants to lose their domain names when they get involved in a domain dispute. The risk...

Why Conventional Wisdom Is Almost Always Wrong!
Dear Friend and Subscriber: I'd like to extend you a warm welcome to the first issue of my Quantum Leap Advantage®4® Internet Newsletter. From time to time this newsletter, in addition to exposing you to well-tested and proven precepts...

 
The Cost of Going Public in the United States

The following data is taken from "Going Public" by James B. Arkebauer (1994) and the IPO cost website at: http://www.intranet.ca/~tgil/p2.html

You should keep in mind that costs vary based upon the complexity, the size of the underwriting and the history of the private company.

The following IPO costs would be reasonable for a company with over $2 million in gross revenues and a 3-5 year operating history. A startup company would pay less than half this estimate to do an IPO.

In some cases one or both sources acknowledge a cost listed below, but fail to offer an estimate. In those cases, I've supplied an estimate based upon my IPO experience.

Pre-IPO Costs - $300,000

Legal Costs - $175,000

Accounting - $80,000

Printing & Mailing - $100,000

Translation - $30,000

Market Prep Costs - $90,000

Investment Bankers - $50,000

Consultants - $50,000

Moody's or S&P - $6,000

Blue Sky Fees - $20,000 (California only)

Transfer Agent - $2,000

Mgnt. & Admin. - $200,000

SEC Filing Fee - $5,000

Taxes - $15,000 (Estimated)

Total - $1,123,000

Underwriting Costs

The underwriting cost is a function of the money raised in the IPO. The NASD allows up to 18% in costs. If the gross revenue from the IPO is $10 million, this is an underwriting cost can be as high as $1.8 million.

Here's how the costs breakdown:

Non accountable Expense 3%

Accountable Expense 5%

Discount 10%

The Company insiders are often required to supply IPO buyers. The norm is the company insiders’ supply 50% of the IPO buyers. I’ve seen ranges of required buying from10% to over 100%.

The Client Brokerage Commission is often 5% on IPOs. It’s paid by the brokerage firm client and doesn't affect the money received by the company.

These costs rise by about six percent per year. As long as the present Bull Market persists, these costs will continue to rise. There are ways to reduce these costs. I offers one alternative at [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/]

Relatively few companies seek practical advice about the equity process. They rely on their attorneys, auditors and underwriters for help. This practice contributes to the fifty- percent failure rate among companies seeking to do an IPO. Taking a company public in the States is a costly project. You can cut your costs by using alternatives to doing an IPO. But, the costs remain high.

Seek to go


public based upon flat fees, not hourly rates. This limits your risk to the agreed upon fees. Find someone who can package the entire registration and listing service for you. It’s always cheaper to buy the complete service rather than the individual parts. The supplier is taking several companies public and gets better prices from professionals for their services.

It’s less costly for a non-American company to go public in the States than for any U. S. Domestic Company to become a U.S. public company in America. The money savings relate to lower levels of legal responsibility for the filing attorney doing a 20F filing rather than an SB2 filing. The non-American company can use an auditor and an audit method that is accepted in their local country. This saves money over paying an American Accounting Firm to do a GAAP audit.

There are other savings for non-American companies trading in the United States. They include the fact that the SEC does not require quarterly filings (called 10Qs), nor is an annual shareholders report or meeting. I believe that clear, concise communications with shareholders is vital. I believe that both positive and negative information needs to be shared in a timely manner. I doubt the SEC requirements for 10Qs and shareholder reports is the most cost effective way to achieve these goals.

Historically, the Over-the-Counter and Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board (OTCBB) are the easiest and cheapest places to list your shares. This market has a bad reputation. My advice is seek to list your shares on a Regional Stock Exchange as soon as your company meets the regional stock exchange’s listing requirements.

Epilog: Since March 2000, the Enron, Tyco International and WorldCom stock scandals have driven the cost of doing a GAAP audit upward. Inflation continues and the cost of doing an IPO has risen substantially in the past four years. (5/04)

You can contact William Cate at the Beowulf Investments website: [http://home.earthlink.net/~beowulfinvestments/]

William Cate has his BA & MA from St. Louis University. He has taught at several colleges and universities. He regularly lecutues on equity finance topics around the World. In 1981, he formed Beowulf Investments, a risk capital fund that has done PIPE finacings for over 20 years. He assists companies seeking to go public in the United States.


Beowulfinvestments@Yahoo.com