Naked Warrant

Naked Warrant

A naked warrant, also known as a covered warrant, is a derivative that allows the holder to buy or sell a security, such as a bond or a share. Normal warrants are issued with an accompanying bond (a warrant-linked bond), giving the investor holding the warrant the right to exercise it and acquire shares of the company that issued the underlying bond. Unlike normal warrants which are issued with an accompanying bond, naked warrants can be backed by a variety of underlying securities, including stocks, which makes them a lot more flexible. An American style warrant enables the holder to exercise at any time before the warrant expires, while a holder of a European style warrant can only exercise at the expiration date. A naked warrant, also known as a covered warrant, is a derivative that allows the holder to buy or sell a security, such as a bond or a share.

A naked warrant, also known as a covered warrant, is a derivative that allows the holder to buy or sell a security, such as a bond or a share.

What Is a Naked Warrant?

A naked warrant, also known as a covered warrant, is a derivative that allows the holder to buy or sell a security, such as a bond or a share. Unlike a normal warrant, it is not attached to a newly issued bond or preferred stock. Naked warrants are issued by financial institutions and can be traded on major stock exchanges.

A naked warrant, also known as a covered warrant, is a derivative that allows the holder to buy or sell a security, such as a bond or a share.
Naked warrants are issued by private parties, not an exchange, and there is a much longer time to expiry.
Unlike normal warrants which are issued with an accompanying bond, naked warrants can be backed by a variety of underlying securities, including stocks, which makes them a lot more flexible.

How Naked Warrants Work

Companies often issue bonds and preferred stock with warrants attached to them to increase demand for an equity or debt offering — and lower their cost of capital. Warrants are securities that give the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy a certain number of underlying securities — usually the issuer's common stock — at a certain strike price.

An American style warrant enables the holder to exercise at any time before the warrant expires, while a holder of a European style warrant can only exercise at the expiration date.

Naked warrants are not the same as call options, because they are issued by private parties, not an exchange, and there is a much longer time to expiry. While options usually expire in less than a year, warrants generally expire in one or two years. And while similar to share purchase rights, share purchase rights only last a few weeks.

Normal warrants are issued with an accompanying bond (a warrant-linked bond), giving the investor holding the warrant the right to exercise it and acquire shares of the company that issued the underlying bond. The company writing the bond is typically the same company issuing the underlying bond.

Naked warrants, on the other hand, can be backed by a variety of underlying securities, including stocks, and are considered more flexible. They are sometimes called "covered" warrants because when an issuer sells a warrant to an investor, it will usually hedge (cover) its exposure by buying the underlying asset in the market.

Warrant exercise prices are typically above the market price at the time of issuance and usually trade at a premium to the stock price.

Pros and Cons of Warrants

Stock warrants provide investors with extra leverage, but that makes them risky investments. When the price of the underlying security rises, the percentage increase in the value of the warrant is greater than the percentage increase in the value of the underlying security. This is fine when the stock market is rising — when they are a less risky investment than options because they take longer to expire.

Conversely, when the share price falls below the strike price, the shareholder can lose some or all of their money.

Related terms:

Call Option

A call option is a contract that gives the option buyer the right to buy an underlying asset at a specified price within a specific time period. read more

Cashless Conversion

Cashless conversion is the direct conversion of ownership (from one ownership type to another) of an underlying asset without any initial cash outlay. read more

Cost of Capital : Formula & Calculation

Cost of capital is the required return a company needs in order to make a capital budgeting project, such as building a new factory, worthwhile. read more

Covered Warrant

Covered warrant is a security that offers the right, but not obligation, to buy or sell an asset at a specified price on or before a specified date. read more

Cum Warrant

Cum warrant, Latin for "with warrant," refers to a security where the buyer is entitled to the warrant even though it was declared prior to purchase. read more

Derivative

A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more

Detachable Warrant

A detachable warrant is a derivative that gives the holder the right to buy an underlying security at a specific price within a certain time. read more

Hedge

A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more

Leverage : What Is Financial Leverage?

Leverage results from using borrowed capital as a source of funding when investing to expand a firm's asset base and generate returns on risk capital. read more

Piggyback Warrants

Piggyback warrants are a sweetener and come into effect when a primary warrant is exercised. Warrants are dilutive in nature. read more