Accelerated Bookbuild

Accelerated Bookbuild

An accelerated bookbuild is a form of offering in the equity capital markets. In simplified terms, when a company is unable to obtain additional financing for a short-term project or acquisition due to its high debt obligations, it can use an alternative route of obtaining quick financing from the equity market through a process known as accelerated bookbuild. Accelerated bookbuilding is a form of offering in which companies offer shares during a very small time window, generally lasting between 24 hours to 48 hours, to institutional investors. Book building is the security price discovery process that involves generating and recording investor demand for shares during an initial public offering (IPO) or other issuance stages. Hence, lead managers must rely on experience to quickly assess the offering initially and trust the market during the subsequent stage, in which they receive bids from top-tier financial institutions, to determine the accurate price.

Accelerated bookbuilding is a form of offering in which companies offer shares during a very small time window, generally lasting between 24 hours to 48 hours, to institutional investors.

What is an Accelerated Bookbuild?

An accelerated bookbuild is a form of offering in the equity capital markets. It involves offering shares in a short time period, with little to no marketing. The bookbuild of the offering is done very quickly in one or two days. Underwriters may sometimes guarantee a minimum price and sale proceeds to the firm.

Accelerated bookbuilding is a form of offering in which companies offer shares during a very small time window, generally lasting between 24 hours to 48 hours, to institutional investors.
The share of accelerated bookbuilds has increased over the years because they allow firms to raise capital quickly, while dividing risk between them and underwriters.

Understanding Accelerated Bookbuild

An accelerated bookbuild is often used when a company is in immediate need of financing, in which case debt financing is out of the question. This can be true when a firm is looking to make an offer to acquire another firm. In simplified terms, when a company is unable to obtain additional financing for a short-term project or acquisition due to its high debt obligations, it can use an alternative route of obtaining quick financing from the equity market through a process known as accelerated bookbuild.

Book building is the security price discovery process that involves generating and recording investor demand for shares during an initial public offering (IPO) or other issuance stages. The issuing company hires an investment bank to act as underwriter. The underwriter determines the price range the of the security and sends out the draft prospectus to multiple investors. The investors bid the number of shares that they are willing to buy, given the price range. The book is open for a fixed period of time, during which the bidder can revise the price offered. After a predetermined period of time, the book is closed and the aggregate demand for the issue can be evaluated so that a value is placed on the security. The final price chosen is simply the weighted average of all the bids that have been received by the investment banker.

With an accelerated bookbuild, the offer period is open for only one or two days and with little to no marketing. In other words, the time between pricing and issuance is 48 hours or less. A bookbuild that is accelerated is frequently implemented overnight, with the issuing company contacting a number of investment banks that can serve as underwriters on the evening prior to the intended placement. The issuer solicits bids in an auction-type process and awards the underwriting contract to the bank that commits to the highest back stop price. The underwriter submits the proposal with the price range to institutional investors. In effect, placement with investors happens overnight with the security pricing occurring most often within 24 to 48 hours.

The share of accelerated bookbuilds as a percentage of overall offering numbers has dramatically increased in the last couple of years. This is primarily because they allow established institutions to raise capital quickly by dividing up the market risk between the issuing firm or shareholder and the underwriting institution. That said, an accelerated bookbuild is not exempt from risk because the time available for due diligence of an offering is reduced. Hence, lead managers must rely on experience to quickly assess the offering initially and trust the market during the subsequent stage, in which they receive bids from top-tier financial institutions, to determine the accurate price.

Example of Accelerated Bookbuilding

In 2017, Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Private Limited sold 2.4% of its outstanding shares and voting rights in Swiss bank UBS Group. The offer was made only to qualified persons, such as high net worth companies. The deal was covered in 20 minutes and allocations reflected strong support from some investors, with the top 10 orders receiving half the shares. There were around 140 lines in the book. The sale, which was conducted by UBS as sole underwriter, wrapped up in two and a half hours.

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Accredited Investor

An accredited investor has the financial sophistication and capacity to take the high-risk, high-reward path of investing in unregistered securities sans certain protections of the SEC. read more

Back Stop

A back stop provides last-resort support or security in a securities offering for the unsubscribed portion of shares. read more

Book Building

Book building is the process by which an underwriter attempts to determine the price at which an initial public offering (IPO) will be offered. read more

Debt Financing

Debt financing occurs when a firm raises money for working capital or capital expenditures by selling debt instruments to individuals and institutional investors. read more

Hot IPO

A hot IPO is an initial public offering of strong interest to prospective shareholders such that they stand a reasonable chance of being oversubscribed. read more

Institutional Investor

An institutional investor is a nonbank person or organization trading securities in quantities large enough to qualify for preferential treatment. read more

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

An initial public offering (IPO) refers to the process of offering shares of a private corporation to the public in a new stock issuance. read more

Issue

An issue is the process of offering securities to raise funds from investors. read more

Offering Price

An offering price is the per-share value at which publicly issued securities are made available for purchase by the investment bank underwriting the issue. read more