Undivided Account

Undivided Account

An undivided account is an initial public offering (IPO) for which there are multiple underwriters, each taking responsibility for placing any shares that remain unsold. The eastern account is the most common arrangement as an underwriter who participates in an eastern account with a consortium can share in a percentage of the profits while committing a relatively small amount of money in advance. In addition to the money the syndicate member receives when selling shares or bonds, the agreement specifies the percentage of shares or bonds that each syndicate member commits to selling. Types of underwriting agreements vary and include firm commitment agreement, best efforts agreement, mini-max agreement, all or none agreement, and standby agreement. In an undivided or eastern account, each underwriter accepts responsibility for selling any shares that remain unsold by other members of the syndicate.

In an undivided or eastern account, each underwriter accepts responsibility for selling any shares that remain unsold by other members of the syndicate.

What Is an Undivided Account?

An undivided account is an initial public offering (IPO) for which there are multiple underwriters, each taking responsibility for placing any shares that remain unsold. That is, each firm agrees to pick up the slack if other underwriters fail to sell the portion of the total number of shares that they have been allocated.

This type of account is sometimes called an eastern account. Naturally, there is a variation called a western account.

In an undivided or eastern account, each underwriter accepts responsibility for selling any shares that remain unsold by other members of the syndicate.
Underwriters are the financial firms that manage the process of preparing the IPO, up to and including establishing a price for the shares and selling them.
In a western account, each underwriter takes responsibility only for its own share of the total.
The risks and potential rewards are greater in an undivided account.
The eastern account is the most common arrangement as an underwriter who participates in an eastern account with a consortium can share in a percentage of the profits while committing a relatively small amount of money in advance.

Understanding Undivided Accounts

When a company prepares to launch an IPO of stock or bonds, it hands off responsibility for marketing its shares to one or more underwriters. These are the financial firms that manage the process of preparing the IPO, up to and including establishing a price for the shares and selling them. Those first buyers include large financial institutions and brokerages.

In an undivided or eastern account, one underwriter might be responsible for placing 15% of an issue while others take up the rest. If the entire issue is not placed, the firm with 15% must assist in placing the remainder.

In a western account, each underwriter takes responsibility only for placing the percentage of shares it was assigned. The share of liability is divided among the underwriters according to the size of their allotment of the total shares available.

Underwriting Accounts and Agreements

Underwriters in investment brokerages assume considerable risk in managing new issues of bonds or stocks. The underwriter agrees to upfront to pay the issuer a certain amount of money regardless of the sale price at issue.

To offset some of this risk, many firms enter into syndication agreements that spread the risks and rewards of underwriting the new issue. Most syndicates are administered by one of the participating firms, and the eastern account is the most common arrangement. Both the risks and the rewards are greater than they are with western accounts. An underwriter who participates in an eastern account with a consortium can share in a percentage of the profits while committing a relatively small amount of money in advance.

Terms of an Eastern Agreement

Underwriters may include a market-out clause in the agreement. This clause frees the underwriter from the purchase obligation in case of a development that impairs the quality of the securities or that adversely affects the issuer. The clause is limited in its application, however. Poor market conditions or over-pricing do not qualify.

The terms are specified in the syndicate agreement, which also is called the underwriting agreement. The syndicate agreement details the fee structure. In addition to the money the syndicate member receives when selling shares or bonds, the agreement specifies the percentage of shares or bonds that each syndicate member commits to selling.

The syndicate manager can set up an underwriting on a western or eastern account basis. Types of underwriting agreements vary and include firm commitment agreement, best efforts agreement, mini-max agreement, all or none agreement, and standby agreement.

Related terms:

Firm Commitment

A firm commitment generally refers to an underwriter's agreement to assume all inventory risk and purchase all securities directly from the issuer for sale to the public. 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

Market Out Clause

A market out clause is a stipulation in an underwriting agreement that allows the underwriter to cancel the agreement without penalty. read more

Selling Group

A selling group comprises all financial institutions involved in selling or marketing a new or secondary issue of debt or equity.  read more

Standby Underwriting

Standby underwriting is an IPO sales agreement in which the underwriter agrees to purchase all shares remaining after the public sale.  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

Underwriting Agreement

An underwriting agreement is a contract between an underwriting syndicate of investment bankers and the issuer of a new securities offering. read more

Western Account

A western account is an agreement among underwriters (AAU) in which each party shares responsibility for only a specific portion of the new issuance. read more