Equity Dilution
Equity Dilution occurs when a company issues additional shares, reducing each existing shareholder's percentage ownership of the company. While the absolute number of shares you hold stays the same, your slice of the total ownership pie shrinks. Comm
Equity Dilution occurs when a company issues additional shares, reducing each existing shareholder's percentage ownership of the company. While the absolute number of shares you hold stays the same, your slice of the total ownership pie shrinks.
Common causes of dilution:
- Follow-on Public Offer (FPO) / Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP)
- Preferential allotment to a strategic investor
- Conversion of Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCBs) or Compulsorily Convertible Debentures (CCDs)
- Exercise of Employee Stock Options (ESOPs)
- Issue of warrants
Example: A small-cap with 10 crore shares outstanding does a QIP and issues 2 crore new shares to institutional investors at Rs 200 to raise Rs 400 crore. Total shares now = 12 crore. If you held 1 lakh shares (1% pre-issue), you now hold 1 lakh / 12 crore = 0.83% — a 17% dilution of your stake.
Per-share metrics impact: EPS, dividend per share, book value per share all fall in proportion (assuming no immediate accretive use of capital).
When dilution is good vs bad:
- Good: Capital is raised at a high P/E or P/B and deployed into accretive growth (acquisitions, capacity expansion, debt reduction).
- Bad: Repeated dilution at depressed prices indicates a cash-hungry, profit-poor business, or excessive ESOP grants enriching management at shareholder expense.
Watch the "fully diluted" share count in annual reports — it includes all potential dilutive securities and is the right base for forward EPS.
Related: Buyback, EPS, Book Value, Bonus Issue.
Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process.