Overallotment

Overallotment

An overallotment is an option commonly available to underwriters that allows the sale of additional shares that a company plans to issue in an initial public offering or secondary/follow-on offering. If the stock rises above the offering price, the overallotment agreement allows the underwriters to buy back the excess shares at the offering price, so that they don't lose money. An overallotment is an option commonly available to underwriters that allows the sale of additional shares that a company plans to issue in an initial public offering or secondary/follow-on offering. If the stock price drops below the offering price, the underwriters can buy back some of the shares for less than they were sold for, decreasing the supply and hopefully increasing the price. Other times, the purpose of issuing extra shares is to stabilize the price of the stock and prevent it from going below the offering price.

What Is an Overallotment?

An overallotment is an option commonly available to underwriters that allows the sale of additional shares that a company plans to issue in an initial public offering or secondary/follow-on offering. An overallotment option allows underwriters to issue as many as 15% more shares than originally planned. The option can be exercised within 30 days of the offering, and it does not have to be exercised on the same day.

It is also called a "greenshoe option."

Overallotment Explained

The underwriters of such an offering may elect to exercise the overallotment option when demand for shares is high and shares are trading above the offering price. This scenario allows the issuing company to raise additional capital.

Other times, the purpose of issuing extra shares is to stabilize the price of the stock and prevent it from going below the offering price. If the stock price drops below the offering price, the underwriters can buy back some of the shares for less than they were sold for, decreasing the supply and hopefully increasing the price. If the stock rises above the offering price, the overallotment agreement allows the underwriters to buy back the excess shares at the offering price, so that they don't lose money.

Example of an Overallotment

In March 2017, Snap Inc. offered 200 million shares at $17.00 per share in a much-anticipated IPO. Shortly after placing the original 200 million shares, the underwriters exercised their overallotment option to push another 30 million shares in the market.

Related terms:

Greenshoe Option and Example

A greenshoe option is a provision in an IPO underwriting agreement that grants the underwriter the right to sell more shares than originally planned.  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

Lock-Up Agreement

A lock-up agreement is a contractual provision preventing insiders of a company from selling their shares for a specified period of time. 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

Reverse Greenshoe Option

A reverse greenshoe option is a provision used by underwriters in the initial public offering (IPO) process. read more

Stabilizing Bid

A stabilizing bid is a stock purchase by underwriters to stabilize or support the secondary market price of a security after an initial public offering (IPO). read more

Undersubscribed

"Undersubscribed" refers to a situation in which demand for IPO securities is less than the number of shares issued, also known as an "undercooking." read more

Underwriter

An underwriter is any party that evaluates and assumes another party's risk for a fee in the form of a commission, premium, spread, or interest. read more