Stub
In finance, a stub is a security that is created as a result of a corporate restructuring such as a spin-off, bankruptcy, or recapitalization in which a portion of a company's equity is separated from the parent company's stock. In finance, a stub is a security that is created as a result of a corporate restructuring such as a spin-off, bankruptcy, or recapitalization in which a portion of a company's equity is separated from the parent company's stock. The parent company may spin off 100% of the shares in its subsidiary, or it may spin off 80% to its shareholders and hold a minority interest of less than 20% in the subsidiary. A stub is a security created after spinning off a subsidiary from a parent company or as the result of a bankruptcy or restructuring. In a spin-off, the parent company distributes shares of the subsidiary that is being spun-off to its existing shareholders on a pro-rata basis, often in the form of a special dividend.

What Is a Stub?
In finance, a stub is a security that is created as a result of a corporate restructuring such as a spin-off, bankruptcy, or recapitalization in which a portion of a company's equity is separated from the parent company's stock. Stub stocks may also be created by converting a distressed company's bonds into equity.
The term stub may alternatively be used to refer to the balance part of a check, such as a paystub or from a receipt that is retained for record-keeping and audit trail purposes or as proof of payment.



Understanding Stubs
Stubs are commonly created through a spin-off. In a spin-off, the parent company distributes shares of the subsidiary that is being spun-off to its existing shareholders on a pro-rata basis, often in the form of a special dividend. The company that is spun-off is a distinct entity from the parent company and has its own management and board of directors. The parent company may spin off 100% of the shares in its subsidiary, or it may spin off 80% to its shareholders and hold a minority interest of less than 20% in the subsidiary. In a stub, the parent spins off most of the subsidiary. Because the parent company's stock may retain most of the attractive characteristics of the original investment, stub stocks are not typically viewed as desirable by investors.
Stubs may also arise from a corporate restructuring, such as when emerging from bankruptcy. Stub stock values typically represent only a small fraction of the price of the parent securities from which they have been created. Their lower prices can reflect the uncertainty that market participants perceive regarding the recapitalized company's prospects. That uncertainty makes stub stocks often speculative investments with significant positive return potential should the company's managers succeed in turning the firm around, but also greater risk. For example, investment firm Salomon Brothers had created an index of stub stocks in the 1980s. The index's value had steep swings in relation to the market's performance. In 1987, it crashed by 47.4% during that year's bear market. The S&P 500 fell by a more modest 33% in the same period.
To value stubs, analysts focus on the amount of their debt and capital available at the company to service the debt. The cash flow ratio becomes an important measure in this analysis because it provides a look into the amount of cash that the company has at its disposal to service debt. The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, an important metric for valuation in traditional analysis, is not as important because profits for stub companies are generally not high.
Example of a Stub: 3Com and Palm
Networking company 3Com, which manufactured the successful Palm Pilot device series in the 1990s, spun out 7% of its Palm subsidiary in 2000. 3Com still owned 95% of the new company after the separation and received a $200 million special dividend and tax rebates from the spin-off.
Palm also offered a limited number of shares to the public in 2000. Investors unable to get in on the action of the offering loaded up on 3Com's shares, driving up its valuation from $5 billion to $22 billion in a matter of months. Palm surged even higher, thanks to the dotcom mania around computing products. It had a closing price of $95 at the end of its first day of trading and a market capitalization of $54 billion, higher than that of its parent. It was even higher than that of established names like General Motors, Chevron, and McDonald's.
With the introduction of new portable computers and smartphones, the market for Palm's products dwindled. Eventually, the company was bought by Hewlett Packard in 2010, and its flagship product, the Palm Pilot, was discontinued in 2011.
Related terms:
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding for people or businesses that are unable to repay their outstanding debts. read more
De-Merger
A de-merger is a corporate restructuring in which a business is broken into components, either to operate on their own, to be sold or liquidated. read more
Divestment
Divestment is the partial or full disposal of a business unit through sale, exchange, closure, or bankruptcy. read more
Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio
The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings. read more
Propco (Property Company)
A propco is a subsidiary company that exists to hold or own a parent or operating company's income-generating real estate. read more
Receipt
A receipt is a written acknowledgment that something of value has been transferred from one party to another. read more
Security : How Securities Trading Works
A security is a fungible, negotiable financial instrument that represents some type of financial value, usually in the form of a stock, bond, or option. read more
Spinout
A spin out is a type of corporate realignment involving the separation of a division to form a new independent corporation. read more
Spinoff
A spinoff is the creation of an independent company through the sale or distribution of new shares of an existing business of a parent company. read more
Tax-Free Spinoff
Tax-free spinoff refers to a corporate action in which a publicly traded company spins off one of its business units as an entirely new company. read more