Preferred shares to common equity: an analogy
A followup to my previous post. Here’s how I think about it: you started a business with a bunch of borrowed money, but of course had to put some of your own money in. Now, actually some of the money you put in was borrowed from your mother, but the original lenders don’t care about that, since they have prior claim.
Eventually you run into some business difficulties, and your creditworthiness is in doubt — which in turn is making it hard for you to do business. What you need is evidence of ability to repay the money you already owe.
So does it help if your mother converts her loan into a share of the business? Not really, because she won’t get repaid anyway unless all your other creditors get paid first. So the terms of her agreement with you don’t affect their prospects of payment.
And in this case, the TARP is your mother."
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“So does it help if your mother converts her loan into a share of the business? ”
It does if she wants to run the business. Some people, well, beings, would rather rule in Hell than serve in Heaven. Go figure.
— Don the libertarian Democrat
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