A Rights Offering (also known as a 'Rights Issue') is an invitation from a company to its existing shareholders to purchase additional shares of the company's stock, typically at a discounted price relative to the current market price. Think of it as a special, members-only sale. The company issues “rights” to each shareholder, with the number of rights received being proportional to the number of shares they already own. For example, a shareholder might receive one right for every ten shares they hold. These rights give the owner the option—but not the obligation—to buy new shares at a specified price (the 'subscription price') within a short timeframe, usually a few weeks. The primary goal for the company is to raise fresh capital without the hefty fees of a traditional secondary offering that involves underwriting banks. For shareholders, it’s a way to increase their stake in the company and, crucially, to protect their ownership percentage from the dilution that occurs when a company issues new stock.
Imagine a company as a pizza cut into 100 slices, and you own 10 of them (10% of the company). The company decides it needs more money to build a new, super-efficient pizza oven. To raise this cash, it decides to issue 20 new slices. A rights offering gives you the first crack at buying some of these new slices before they're offered to anyone else. The company will issue you “rights” based on your current holdings. For instance, you might need five rights to purchase one new share at the discounted subscription price. This mechanism is designed to be fair to existing owners. If you participate, you can maintain your 10% ownership stake. If you don't, and others do, the pizza will now have 120 slices, but you'll still only have 10. Your ownership has been diluted from 10% down to 8.3% (10 / 120). The value of your rights is meant to compensate you for this potential dilution. Companies turn to rights offerings for several reasons:
When you receive rights in your brokerage account, you have a decision to make. Doing nothing is almost always the wrong answer, as the rights themselves have value. Letting them expire is like throwing away a winning lottery ticket, even if it's only for a small prize.
You generally have three options, and you must act before the expiration date:
For a value investor, a rights offering isn't an automatic “buy” just because of the discount. The discount itself isn't free money; it's a mathematical adjustment to prevent your stake from being watered down. The real question is why the company needs the money and whether it remains a good investment. A true value investor must dig deeper:
A rights offering from a well-managed company with exciting growth prospects can be a fantastic opportunity. But one from a struggling company could be a signal to reconsider your entire investment.
People often confuse rights with warrants, but they are quite different animals.