• Home
  • Blog
  • News
  • Tender Offers – US
  • Going Private Transactions
  • Special Situations
  • Tender Offers – Canada
Odd Lot Arbitrage
Tender Offer
Announcements and Archive
  • Home
  • Blog
  • News
  • Tender Offers – US
  • Going Private Transactions
  • Special Situations
  • Tender Offers – Canada

What is a Dutch Auction Tender Offer?

Blog 2 Comments

Dutch auctions, as the name suggests, have their origins in Holland during the 17th century. At the time, the Dutch tulip mania led to a range of financial innovations facilitating trading and speculating on tulips, including rudimentary derivatives and the Dutch auction.

An unlikely inspiration for financial engineering

A Dutch auction is traditionally conducted by the auctioneer starting at the highest asking price and lowering it until it reaches a price level at which the bids received cover the offer quantity. This is the price level the auction will clear at for all bidders, lending it the alternative name of a uniform price auction. This is an example of selling via Dutch auction, and is sometimes used for pricing IPOs, albeit without the presence of an auctioneer.

When conducting a tender offer to buy shares via Dutch auction, a firm will declare the intention to repurchase a quantity or fixed dollar value of shares at a price within a given range. Stockholders are invited to respond with the price withing the range at which they are willing to sell their shares. The firm will aggregate these bids to form a supply curve, and the lowest price at which the desired value or number of shares will be tendered at is the price the offer will clear at.

Graph showing a supply curve for a Dutch auction tender offer pricing from $800 – $880

All participants in the offer will receive the same price; those who indicated a willingness to sell their shares at a lower price will still receive the price at which the offer clears. Those who indicated a higher price will be left holding their shares, taking the risk of the share price falling after the offer expires. On the above graph, a tender for 50,000 shares would clear at $850.

Participants should therefore offer at the lowest amount they are willing to part with their shares for; if buying at market price in the hopes of getting a higher price when tendering the shares this could be the market price as any clearing price above this will result in a profit, which participating if the auction clears at a lower price is undesirable as it would incur a loss. A participant is still subject to price risk on the shares should their offer not be accepted and the price subsequently falls, although this risk can be managed by hedging.

Example

Say a company offers to repurchase 50,000 of its shares at a price between $825 and $875 dollars. The offer prices for shareholders come in as follows:

Investor A: offers 30,000 shares at $850

Investor B: offers 99 shares at $860

Investor C: offers 30,000 shares at $865

Investor D: offers 20,000 shares at $870

In this example, enough shares are offered to fill the offer at $865 per share (60,099 in total). Investors A, B and C will have their shares taken off them at $865. As more shares are offered at this price than the target size of the offer, these investors will each be subject to proration as have approximately 83% of their shares bought.

If the offer contains an odd lot priority provision, investor B as the holder of an odd lot will not be prorated, selling all 99 shares at the clearing price of $865, while investors A & C will be subject to slightly higher proration and sell slightly fewer shares than before to keep the total sold at 50,000. This means investor B will likely receive a higher average sale price for their total holding than large investors A & C – the arbitrage opportunity we track here at oddlotarbitrage.com.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
2 Comments
Share
2

2 Comments

Leave your reply.
  • Anonymous
    · Reply

    November 9, 2024 at 2:04 PM

    Hola, Ustedes avisan de las tender offers odd lots que van saliendo o solo comentan las tender offers odd lots ya ejecutadas como material de estudio
    Gracias.
    Salud

    • Admin
      · Reply

      Author
      November 16, 2024 at 7:05 PM

      Hi. We do send out notifications of up coming offers to people who subscribe to the mailing list (it’s free) or follow us on X at https://x.com/OddLotArbitrage.

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

FOLLOW ODD LOT ARBITRAGE

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new odd lot tender offers by email.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

SUPPORT VIA PAYPAL

Find this information useful? Profit from one of our notifications? Thank us by supporting us!

Support

FOLLOW US ON X

Follow @oddlotarbitrage

Contact Us

Let us know if you have any feedback or suggestions.

Send Message

© 2025 · OddLotArbitrage.com. All rights reserved.
All information is provided "as-is" and does not constitute an investment recommendation or advice. We encourage everyone to do their own due diligence and review of the filings listed.
The site owners may have positions in any stocks whose filings are documented here.

Prev Next