Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - How to operate the placement of convertible bonds

How to operate the placement of convertible bonds

Convertible bonds can be obtained through subscription, and there is another way to obtain them, that is, to participate in placement. Convertible bond allotment is also called allotment, which is also a financing behavior of listed companies, but investors still need to know the rules if they want to get allotment.

How to operate convertible bond placement?

First of all, we must get the right to allocate bonds. If a listed company wants to issue bonds, it will issue a corresponding announcement, which will indicate the base date. Investors only need to ensure that they still hold the company's shares after the close of the registration date, and they can get the right to buy the company's bonds first.

After obtaining the preemptive right of convertible bonds, a XX matching bond or code will appear in the investor's stock account position. On the premise of ensuring sufficient funds in the account, investors buy or sell XX matching bonds on the payment date, and the corresponding funds are deducted and distributed successfully after deduction.

After logging into the stock account, check the debt distribution rights and interests in Trading My Position (position). If you see the rights and interests of debt distribution in the position, you can operate debt distribution, select the bonds to be put in according to the account situation, enter the code and quantity and pay them in full.

The share of debt distribution is determined according to the proportion of debt distribution announced by listed companies. For example, the company announced that the debt distribution ratio was 65,438+00 to 3. If you hold 65,438+0,000 shares, you can allocate 300 bonds. If it pays the debt distribution, it can get the share of convertible bonds. If you don't pay, it is regarded as giving up your creditor's rights.

Debt matching is a financing behavior of listed companies. Selling shares on the debt matching payment date can still enjoy the debt matching rights. In fact, this is very similar to stock dividends, mainly to seize the benchmark date.