Warrant eSigning Request with airSlate SignNow

Eliminate paper and automate digital document processing for increased efficiency and endless possibilities. Experience the perfect strategy for running your business with airSlate SignNow.

Award-winning eSignature solution

Send my document for signature

Get your document eSigned by multiple recipients.
Send my document for signature

Sign my own document

Add your eSignature
to a document in a few clicks.
Sign my own document

Upgrade your document workflow with airSlate SignNow

Flexible eSignature workflows

airSlate SignNow is a scalable platform that evolves with your teams and organization. Build and customize eSignature workflows that fit all your company needs.

Instant visibility into document status

View and download a document’s history to monitor all alterations made to it. Get immediate notifications to understand who made what edits and when.

Simple and fast integration set up

airSlate SignNow effortlessly fits into your existing systems, allowing you to hit the ground running instantly. Use airSlate SignNow’s powerful eSignature features with hundreds of popular applications.

Warrant esigning request on any device

Eliminate the bottlenecks associated with waiting for eSignatures. With airSlate SignNow, you can eSign papers immediately using a desktop, tablet, or smartphone

Comprehensive Audit Trail

For your legal protection and general auditing purposes, airSlate SignNow includes a log of all changes made to your documents, offering timestamps, emails, and IP addresses.

Rigorous security requirements

Our top priorities are securing your records and sensitive information, and guaranteeing eSignature authentication and system protection. Remain compliant with market requirements and regulations with airSlate SignNow.

See airSlate SignNow eSignatures in action

Create secure and intuitive eSignature workflows on any device, track the status of documents right in your account, build online fillable forms – all within a single solution.

Try airSlate SignNow with a sample document

Complete a sample document online. Experience airSlate SignNow's intuitive interface and easy-to-use tools
in action. Open a sample document to add a signature, date, text, upload attachments, and test other useful functionality.

sample
Checkboxes and radio buttons
sample
Request an attachment
sample
Set up data validation

airSlate SignNow solutions for better efficiency

Keep contracts protected
Enhance your document security and keep contracts safe from unauthorized access with dual-factor authentication options. Ask your recipients to prove their identity before opening a contract to warrant esigning request.
Stay mobile while eSigning
Install the airSlate SignNow app on your iOS or Android device and close deals from anywhere, 24/7. Work with forms and contracts even offline and warrant esigning request later when your internet connection is restored.
Integrate eSignatures into your business apps
Incorporate airSlate SignNow into your business applications to quickly warrant esigning request without switching between windows and tabs. Benefit from airSlate SignNow integrations to save time and effort while eSigning forms in just a few clicks.
Generate fillable forms with smart fields
Update any document with fillable fields, make them required or optional, or add conditions for them to appear. Make sure signers complete your form correctly by assigning roles to fields.
Close deals and get paid promptly
Collect documents from clients and partners in minutes instead of weeks. Ask your signers to warrant esigning request and include a charge request field to your sample to automatically collect payments during the contract signing.
Collect signatures
24x
faster
Reduce costs by
$30
per document
Save up to
40h
per employee / month

Our user reviews speak for themselves

illustrations persone
Kodi-Marie Evans
Director of NetSuite Operations at Xerox
airSlate SignNow provides us with the flexibility needed to get the right signatures on the right documents, in the right formats, based on our integration with NetSuite.
illustrations reviews slider
illustrations persone
Samantha Jo
Enterprise Client Partner at Yelp
airSlate SignNow has made life easier for me. It has been huge to have the ability to sign contracts on-the-go! It is now less stressful to get things done efficiently and promptly.
illustrations reviews slider
illustrations persone
Megan Bond
Digital marketing management at Electrolux
This software has added to our business value. I have got rid of the repetitive tasks. I am capable of creating the mobile native web forms. Now I can easily make payment contracts through a fair channel and their management is very easy.
illustrations reviews slider
walmart logo
exonMobil logo
apple logo
comcast logo
facebook logo
FedEx logo
be ready to get more

Why choose airSlate SignNow

  • Free 7-day trial. Choose the plan you need and try it risk-free.
  • Honest pricing for full-featured plans. airSlate SignNow offers subscription plans with no overages or hidden fees at renewal.
  • Enterprise-grade security. airSlate SignNow helps you comply with global security standards.
illustrations signature

Your step-by-step guide — warrant esigning request

Access helpful tips and quick steps covering a variety of airSlate SignNow’s most popular features.

Adopting airSlate SignNow’s eSignature any business can accelerate signature workflows and sign online in real-time, supplying a greater experience to clients and workers. warrant esigning Request in a couple of easy steps. Our mobile apps make working on the move possible, even while offline! eSign documents from any place worldwide and close up deals faster.

Take a stepwise instruction to warrant esigning Request:

  1. Sign in to your airSlate SignNow account.
  2. Locate your needed form in your folders or import a new one.
  3. the document and make edits using the Tools menu.
  4. Drag & drop fillable boxes, add text and eSign it.
  5. Include several signers by emails configure the signing order.
  6. Indicate which recipients will get an executed version.
  7. Use Advanced Options to restrict access to the template add an expiration date.
  8. Tap Save and Close when finished.

Furthermore, there are more enhanced features open to warrant esigning Request. Include users to your shared workspace, browse teams, and keep track of collaboration. Numerous consumers all over the US and Europe concur that a system that brings everything together in one holistic digital location, is exactly what companies need to keep workflows performing smoothly. The airSlate SignNow REST API allows you to embed eSignatures into your application, internet site, CRM or cloud storage. Try out airSlate SignNow and enjoy quicker, smoother and overall more productive eSignature workflows!

How it works

Upload a document
Edit & sign it from anywhere
Save your changes and share

airSlate SignNow features that users love

Speed up your paper-based processes with an easy-to-use eSignature solution.

Edit PDFs
online
Generate templates of your most used documents for signing and completion.
Create a signing link
Share a document via a link without the need to add recipient emails.
Assign roles to signers
Organize complex signing workflows by adding multiple signers and assigning roles.
Create a document template
Create teams to collaborate on documents and templates in real time.
Add Signature fields
Get accurate signatures exactly where you need them using signature fields.
Archive documents in bulk
Save time by archiving multiple documents at once.

See exceptional results warrant esigning Request with airSlate SignNow

Get signatures on any document, manage contracts centrally and collaborate with customers, employees, and partners more efficiently.

How to Sign a PDF Online How to Sign a PDF Online

How to submit and eSign a document online

Try out the fastest way to warrant esigning Request. Avoid paper-based workflows and manage documents right from airSlate SignNow. Complete and share your forms from the office or seamlessly work on-the-go. No installation or additional software required. All features are available online, just go to signnow.com and create your own eSignature flow.

A brief guide on how to warrant esigning Request in minutes

  1. Create an airSlate SignNow account (if you haven’t registered yet) or log in using your Google or Facebook.
  2. Click Upload and select one of your documents.
  3. Use the My Signature tool to create your unique signature.
  4. Turn the document into a dynamic PDF with fillable fields.
  5. Fill out your new form and click Done.

Once finished, send an invite to sign to multiple recipients. Get an enforceable contract in minutes using any device. Explore more features for making professional PDFs; add fillable fields warrant esigning Request and collaborate in teams. The eSignature solution gives a secure workflow and functions in accordance with SOC 2 Type II Certification. Make sure that all your records are guarded and therefore no person can edit them.

How to Sign a PDF Using Google Chrome How to Sign a PDF Using Google Chrome

How to eSign a PDF template in Google Chrome

Are you looking for a solution to warrant esigning Request directly from Chrome? The airSlate SignNow extension for Google is here to help. Find a document and right from your browser easily open it in the editor. Add fillable fields for text and signature. Sign the PDF and share it safely according to GDPR, SOC 2 Type II Certification and more.

Using this brief how-to guide below, expand your eSignature workflow into Google and warrant esigning Request:

  1. Go to the Chrome web store and find the airSlate SignNow extension.
  2. Click Add to Chrome.
  3. Log in to your account or register a new one.
  4. Upload a document and click Open in airSlate SignNow.
  5. Modify the document.
  6. Sign the PDF using the My Signature tool.
  7. Click Done to save your edits.
  8. Invite other participants to sign by clicking Invite to Sign and selecting their emails/names.

Create a signature that’s built in to your workflow to warrant esigning Request and get PDFs eSigned in minutes. Say goodbye to the piles of papers on your desk and start saving money and time for more crucial duties. Picking out the airSlate SignNow Google extension is a great handy decision with many different advantages.

How to Sign a PDF in Gmail How to Sign a PDF in Gmail How to Sign a PDF in Gmail

How to sign an attachment in Gmail

If you’re like most, you’re used to downloading the attachments you get, printing them out and then signing them, right? Well, we have good news for you. Signing documents in your inbox just got a lot easier. The airSlate SignNow add-on for Gmail allows you to warrant esigning Request without leaving your mailbox. Do everything you need; add fillable fields and send signing requests in clicks.

How to warrant esigning Request in Gmail:

  1. Find airSlate SignNow for Gmail in the G Suite Marketplace and click Install.
  2. Log in to your airSlate SignNow account or create a new one.
  3. Open up your email with the PDF you need to sign.
  4. Click Upload to save the document to your airSlate SignNow account.
  5. Click Open document to open the editor.
  6. Sign the PDF using My Signature.
  7. Send a signing request to the other participants with the Send to Sign button.
  8. Enter their email and press OK.

As a result, the other participants will receive notifications telling them to sign the document. No need to download the PDF file over and over again, just warrant esigning Request in clicks. This add-one is suitable for those who like focusing on more significant aims as an alternative to burning up time for practically nothing. Increase your day-to-day compulsory labour with the award-winning eSignature application.

How to Sign a PDF on a Mobile Device How to Sign a PDF on a Mobile Device How to Sign a PDF on a Mobile Device

How to eSign a PDF template on the go with no mobile app

For many products, getting deals done on the go means installing an app on your phone. We’re happy to say at airSlate SignNow we’ve made singing on the go faster and easier by eliminating the need for a mobile app. To eSign, open your browser (any mobile browser) and get direct access to airSlate SignNow and all its powerful eSignature tools. Edit docs, warrant esigning Request and more. No installation or additional software required. Close your deal from anywhere.

Take a look at our step-by-step instructions that teach you how to warrant esigning Request.

  1. Open your browser and go to signnow.com.
  2. Log in or register a new account.
  3. Upload or open the document you want to edit.
  4. Add fillable fields for text, signature and date.
  5. Draw, type or upload your signature.
  6. Click Save and Close.
  7. Click Invite to Sign and enter a recipient’s email if you need others to sign the PDF.

Working on mobile is no different than on a desktop: create a reusable template, warrant esigning Request and manage the flow as you would normally. In a couple of clicks, get an enforceable contract that you can download to your device and send to others. Yet, if you want a software, download the airSlate SignNow app. It’s secure, quick and has an intuitive design. Try out effortless eSignature workflows from your business office, in a taxi or on an airplane.

How to Sign a PDF on iPhone How to Sign a PDF on iPhone

How to sign a PDF file having an iPad

iOS is a very popular operating system packed with native tools. It allows you to sign and edit PDFs using Preview without any additional software. However, as great as Apple’s solution is, it doesn't provide any automation. Enhance your iPhone’s capabilities by taking advantage of the airSlate SignNow app. Utilize your iPhone or iPad to warrant esigning Request and more. Introduce eSignature automation to your mobile workflow.

Signing on an iPhone has never been easier:

  1. Find the airSlate SignNow app in the AppStore and install it.
  2. Create a new account or log in with your Facebook or Google.
  3. Click Plus and upload the PDF file you want to sign.
  4. Tap on the document where you want to insert your signature.
  5. Explore other features: add fillable fields or warrant esigning Request.
  6. Use the Save button to apply the changes.
  7. Share your documents via email or a singing link.

Make a professional PDFs right from your airSlate SignNow app. Get the most out of your time and work from anywhere; at home, in the office, on a bus or plane, and even at the beach. Manage an entire record workflow effortlessly: build reusable templates, warrant esigning Request and work on documents with partners. Turn your device into a potent organization for executing contracts.

How to Sign a PDF on Android How to Sign a PDF on Android

How to sign a PDF file taking advantage of an Android

For Android users to manage documents from their phone, they have to install additional software. The Play Market is vast and plump with options, so finding a good application isn’t too hard if you have time to browse through hundreds of apps. To save time and prevent frustration, we suggest airSlate SignNow for Android. Store and edit documents, create signing roles, and even warrant esigning Request.

The 9 simple steps to optimizing your mobile workflow:

  1. Open the app.
  2. Log in using your Facebook or Google accounts or register if you haven’t authorized already.
  3. Click on + to add a new document using your camera, internal or cloud storages.
  4. Tap anywhere on your PDF and insert your eSignature.
  5. Click OK to confirm and sign.
  6. Try more editing features; add images, warrant esigning Request, create a reusable template, etc.
  7. Click Save to apply changes once you finish.
  8. Download the PDF or share it via email.
  9. Use the Invite to sign function if you want to set & send a signing order to recipients.

Turn the mundane and routine into easy and smooth with the airSlate SignNow app for Android. Sign and send documents for signature from any place you’re connected to the internet. Generate professional-looking PDFs and warrant esigning Request with a few clicks. Created a faultless eSignature workflow with only your mobile phone and enhance your total productiveness.

be ready to get more

Get legally-binding signatures now!

FAQs

Here is a list of the most common customer questions. If you can’t find an answer to your question, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.

Need help? Contact support

What active users are saying — warrant esigning request

Get access to airSlate SignNow’s reviews, our customers’ advice, and their stories. Hear from real users and what they say about features for generating and signing docs.

This service is really great! It has helped...
5
anonymous

This service is really great! It has helped us enormously by ensuring we are fully covered in our agreements. We are on a 100% for collecting on our jobs, from a previous 60-70%. I recommend this to everyone.

Read full review
I've been using airSlate SignNow for years (since it...
5
Susan S

I've been using airSlate SignNow for years (since it was CudaSign). I started using airSlate SignNow for real estate as it was easier for my clients to use. I now use it in my business for employement and onboarding docs.

Read full review
Everything has been great, really easy to incorporate...
5
Liam R

Everything has been great, really easy to incorporate into my business. And the clients who have used your software so far have said it is very easy to complete the necessary signatures.

Read full review

Related searches to warrant esigning Request with airSlate airSlate SignNow

airSlate SignNow
airSlate SignNow legal issues
airSlate SignNow trust center
airSlate SignNow agreement
airSlate SignNow legally binding
e signature laws around the world
airSlate SignNow legality guide
airSlate SignNow, privacy policy
video background

Initial warrant

hello everyone welcome back today i've got an educational video for you and this is the most frequently requested topic which is warrants this year is the year of the spax and there's a lot of money that can be made but between the units the shares and the warrants people have a lot of questions well today we're going to be talking about the warrants specifically for beginners if you guys have been investing in them for a while and you feel like you really know what you're talking about then this video might not be the best for you but if you've had a lot of questions and trust me i've received a lot of questions about the warrants just follow this video it's going to answer all the basic questions so you understand when to use them and what exactly they do some of the topics that we're going to be covering are what are warrants exactly and then the redemption price how long they last some of the risks and then cash versus cashless redemptions so i'm going to go into more details with all these and answer some of the other questions but these are the main topics so please like and subscribe usually these videos aren't really uh don't gain a lot of traction so it would be very nice if you guys liked it and kind of shared it if you know someone that needs this information and that kind of shows me that people actually enjoy this type of content so let's get started now thank you for watching [Music] all right guys so let's get started with the basics when it comes to specs there are shares units and warrants today we're only going to focus on the warrants and what are they well they give you the option but not the obligation of purchasing shares from the company for a certain price now they are very similar to call options but a little bit different when it comes to call options you would actually redeem shares from another investor when it comes to warrants you're redeeming shares right from the company itself so you're basically paying the company to get some shares from them in exchange for your warrants usually the warrants are exchanged for eleven fifty dollars but not always the case when it comes to a company like pstas pershing square tontine holdings then everything is doubled and the redemption is 23. but usually it's 11.50 and also when it comes to the ratio of warrants to shares it's usually one warrant to one share so if you have 100 warrants then you could be converting them into 100 shares at 11.50 per warrant now again that's not always the case if you think of a company like graph velodyne for them the ratio was four to three so you would need four warrants to get three shares so again i'll show you where you can find all this information you'll have to like do your own research for every single spag that you look at of course you can look online to find more details or when i talk about them in the videos but you will have to look into the filings to see the specifics for your spec now what's the main benefit of the warrants versus actually just buying shares well the main one is that you get leverage and lower risk so by leverage i mean that when you buy shares for 12 dollars right for every share you have to spend twelve dollars well the warrants are much cheaper at that same time that the shares are twelve dollars the warrants might be two dollars and fifty cents or three dollars well that means that you'll be able to buy more exposure to that stock for the same amount of money in your account so let's say that the stocks at 12 and the warrants are three dollars well at that time you can buy four warrants right so four options to buy those shares for the price of one stock so you have more leverage right as the stock goes up your warrants are going to go up and gain value faster but at the same time you're risking less per share because if you buy a hundred shares at 12 then you're into this stock for 1200 as opposed to if you're buying the option of purchasing these stocks for 11.50 each then you would be into it for 300 so if it goes up right there's unlimited potential but if things don't go your way and it really crashes well then your capped loss is that 300 versus 1200 for someone that goes with shares so they both have pros and cons as we'll talk about in this video but that tells you the really really basic information as to how they work so where do you find all this information well go into google and type in the name of your spac plus filings something like this now one of the first results is going to be the sec click on it if you scroll down find the s1 document you're just going to click on it then it's going to bring this document up which has all the information about the spec right you should be researching this every time but if you keep going down you'll see something like this this tells you that they're trying to raise 287 million 500 000 and as you scroll down you'll find all the information now i want you to scroll down to the section that's talking about the warrants in this case for this spec they say that there's going to be 9 19 million 250 000 outstanding warrants so that tells you the pool of warrants that's going to be in the market so you're going to be buying some of those now exercisability tells you what's the ratio so each whole warrant is exercisable to purchase one share of our class a common stock so this one is one to one right so it's not like graph four to three or ten to one this one is each warrant lets you get one share and the exercise price is 11.50 so let's say that you have 100 warrants it gives you the option of buying 100 shares and to do that it's going to cost you 11.50 per share all right so next we'll look at your cost basis if you were to exercise your warrants and redeem them for shares so we'll talk about them in terms of premium versus discount and if you guys watch my videos every week you know that i often talk about arbitrage opportunities well this is what i mean what is your cost basis it's going to be the price that you paid for the warrants plus the price that we saw in the document which is often 11.50 so in this case if you paid two dollars right for the warrants then you would add that to 11.50 that would mean that your redeemable value right the cost basis that you would have would be 13.50 but is that a good deal or a bad deal well that really depends on what the share price is going to be when the warrants become exercisable it's about 30 days after the merger in that case what you're going to do is you're going to compare your redeemable value what your cost basis would be with what you anticipate the price of the shares are going to be so let's say that your cost basis is 13.50 and you anticipate that the price of the stock is going to be 12 well then you would have had a bad deal you would have paid a premium of a dollar fifty now that's not good in that case you would have just you should have bought shares instead of warrants but it's not always the case very frequently the price of the warrant plus 1150 is actually smaller than the current price of the shares so in that case if you're into this stock long term and you just want to buy and hold it that makes more sense to buy the warrants convert them and then you get a discount which is also called the arbitrage so let's say that the discount is five dollars well then you can say that you have a five dollar arbitrage opportunity and i'm going to show you examples now so here's an example this is ccxx which as of me filming this is going to be voting on the merger fairly soon so this company is trading at 10 25 right now and the warrants are trading at two dollars so is this a good deal are you getting a premium or a discount if you buy warrants right now well what you're going to do is first you have to look at wow what's the ratio and i looked it up already it's one to one ratio and the redeemable price is 11.50 so what you're going to do is you're going to look at the warrant price two dollars and you're going to add the 1150 which gives you a redeemable value of 13.50 then you compare it with the current price of 1025 and you can see that you pay a significant premium for the warrants right now however they're not exercisable yet they're going to be exercisable in about 30 days after the merger so we don't know what the price is going to be at that time right maybe at that time the stock price is going to go up tremendously and it's going to be a discount the warrants but for now you know that they're you're paying a premium if you buy the warrants so another example which would be the total opposite is highly on ticker symbol shll so in this case you would get a significant discount by buying the warrants instead of the shares so as i've been filming this after hours the shares are at 50 25 and the warrants are 25 30. so in this case if you add 11.50 then you get a redeemable price of 36.80 which is a significant discount over the current after-hours price of 50.25 so if you're not too concerned about the risks which i'll talk about in later on in the video right the the movement in the next few weeks of the share price well if you were only going to buy shares right now that you want to owe long term well it would make sense to go with the warrants wait until you can exercise them get your shares and then you would get a significant discount your cost basis would be the 36 3680 versus if you were to buy today your shares would be at 50 25. so i hope you guys understand this right this is the arbitrage opportunity that i was talking about and right now it's pretty severe this is about 14 difference so one last example is going to be uts which already merge so in this case as we can see as we get closer to when the warrants can be exercisable that arbitrage opportunity is going to shrink and there's going to be equilibrium where the warrant plus 1150 becomes the same amount or approximately as a share price so in this case the share price is 1790 and if we go with the us warrant at 654 if you add 1150 to them you get 1804 which as i mentioned is almost the same as the share price so that arbitrage opportunity shrinks as time goes on and then either the warrant goes up or the the price of the shares has to come down to reach that equilibrium usually it's going to be a little a little bit of both and they're going to kind of meet in the middle so now that we're talking about timing i figured i'd mention it here this is what we were talking about earlier one of the main questions that people ask all the time is when can these warrants actually be exercised and usually it's about 30 days after the merger so i'm referring you back to the s1 we were looking at earlier for spartacus right a new spec well exercise period right if you look 30 days after the completion of our initial business combination so this is when you could exercise these warrants if you were buying them for this company as usual you want to look at the filings for this pack you're trying to buy warrants for all right guys this is absolutely crucial you need to pay attention to this because this is something you absolutely need to know how long do the warrants last so as we just saw in theory 30 days after the merger happens you have the option of exercising your warrants to redeem shares but you're not forced to it's an option you're not obligated to in theory you have up to five years to do so but here's the problem is that in almost all of the specs they have a provision in the document that says that if the share price trades above a certain amount usually 18 for 20 trading days out of 30 they have the option of calling all the warrants due they just don't want to have these warrants floating around for years so if the share price is above a certain amount they're just going to call them due if you don't exercise your warrants when they force you to they're just going to be worthless after that you won't have the option of redeeming them so this has happened before people have lost money with it so that's why i'm stressing it out so much especially if the share price above 18 this is something you need to pay attention to so this is what it looks like in the document redemption of warrants once the warrants becomings are sizeable we may redeem the outstanding warrants if and only if the reported last sale price of the class a common stock equals or exceeds 18 per share for any 20 trading days within 30 trading day period so there you have it guys they spell it out in the document right they can force you to exercise your shares so you need to pay attention to it but they will give you a 30-day period where i mean they're they're going to tell you ahead of time that you have to do it all right so we have one last thing talk about when it comes to how long the warrants last and goes back to our discussion earlier about paying a premium or getting a discount so what about a stock like ccxx that's currently trading at 1025 but the warrant's at two dollars does that mean that you should never buy warrants no not necessarily there is a good case to be made and that is if you're bullish on the company long term but in the short term you're really not sure what it's going to do so let's say that you're not sure in the next three months is this not going to go to nine dollars after the merger or is it going to go to 14 but not really spike to 25 30 like one of the other meme stocks but that doesn't mean that you don't believe in the company what if you think that in two years the company is going to be 25 it's going to have a lot of growth it's going to be well established big investors are going to pour in and like buy a lot of shares well in that case like this it could make sense to buy some warrants short term and pay that premium and then you have that long-term exposure to the stock because since it's under 18 dollars it's not going to get called by the company so you have two years three years four years five years for this stock to actually go up significantly and you have exposure to it so you don't necessarily want to invest your 10 25 per share because you're not really sure that it's going to go up quickly but at the same time you want to have exposure to it well that is when it would make sense for you to buy some warrants and then you have exposure to share price if it goes up over time all right guys next up we've got what are some of the main risks involved with investing in warrants so warrants are speculative you can lose some money and here are some of the risks the first one i can think of is if you're not selecting your stocks correctly well after the merger the stocks can just crash and it's going to pull your warrants down significantly and this isn't actually uncommon after the merger it's very frequent for spax to drop significantly and hofv is an example of that that merged a couple months ago and now the stock price is at 249 as i've been filming this and the warrants are 26 cents so if you bought this at the peak when the warrants were maybe two dollars and something well now you're facing an 80 90 loss and is it going to come back within the next five years it's possible but i mean that's a lot of risk and very low reward for you so this is the type of thing that you have to be careful like just because it's a spec doesn't mean that it's going to skyrocket same for the warrants the warrants are great when it's going up but when it's going down it's not going to help you so that's the first risk you still need to be very careful about the stocks that you invest in number two pre-merger the shares have built-in protection that the warrants don't have so all the spanx have money in their trust account that the money is supposed to go to the acquisition target when they find one and they end up merging but if for some reason the merger doesn't go through or they can't find an acquisition target then the money gets redistributed to the shareholders proportionally so it's ten dollars plus the interest that they collected over time so really let's say that that amounts to ten dollars and thirty cents well if you bought your shares for eleven dollars you're really only risking 70 cents per uh pre-merger and also let's say that the stock price goes to nine dollars well again you could just vote against the merger right say that it's overpriced and then you would redeem your shares for ten dollars plus the interest so even though the share went down you could just be protected you have downside protection well you don't have that with the warrants with the warrants if the merger doesn't go through for whatever reason then your warrants are worthless so that's the big risk with them you have to make sure that it's a serious company and that there's no like thing that's going to make the merger fail you need this to go through or your warrants just lose all of their value and then a third risk is that as we get closer to the date where the warrants become exercisable which is usually 30 days after the merger well the problem is that often the share price is going to drop significantly as people anticipate that all these warrant holders are going to be exercising and that's going to dilute the stock so this is something that you have to pay attention to as well it's great that in theory as we saw before like with some of the examples often there's an arbitrage opportunities and you can get a discount but if the stock price drops too much right and the warrants are too expensive you paid too much for them well then something that could have been a discount actually becomes a premium you might have overpaid for them so this is a third risk right it's very very difficult to anticipate what the stock price is going to be when the warrants become exercisable but this is something you have to keep in mind in a case like hylion that i showed earlier that has 16 dollars in arbitrage opportunities well i mean that gives you a lot of leeway but if it was five dollars well then it's very possible that you would have been overpaying if you bought those warrants to exercise them as shares now remember if you're a long-term buy and hold investor and you don't care about what happens in the next couple of weeks right you just want to hold for the next several years well then it doesn't matter because if you were to buy them today for a certain price but you can buy them cheaper with the warrants then that's always going to be the better option but if you're concerned with the short-term price movement then this might be a risk for you so we've covered a lot of ground but there's another question that people ask is cash versus cashless redemption so throughout this video i've talked about the 1150 cash redemption price but that's only one of the options that the companies give themselves they also give themselves the opportunity of doing cashless redemptions so here's the main difference in a cash redemption you're going to be giving them 11.50 per warrant and in exchange they'll trade it one to one for a share but in a cashless redemption let's say the company doesn't need to raise more money and they don't want to dilute the shares as much but what they can do is instead of trading one-to-one right because you're not giving them an extra 1150 they'll just give you a proportion of shares based on the average share price in the last 10 days or 20 days or whatever is specified in the document minus like the redemption price and they'll they'll give you a proportion of shares so instead of being at one to one it might be a 0.5 to 1 or 0.6 to 1. so because of that because you only get a fraction it's going to dilute the sharepool a little bit less so the real formula is a little bit more complicated i'll just list it in the description so you guys can do it if you're really interested in this you'll be able to calculate exactly how many shares you'd get all right in the close let's answer two basic questions that people have asked me very frequently so the first one is hey patrick now i know all about warrants but where are they i can't even find them so sadly in some platforms especially robin hood you can't trade warrants so this is highly on right the ticker symbol on robin hood is shll plus and they do have it in the system but as you can see it says this stock is not supported on robinhood if you go in the search bar and you type shll it's only going to show you the shares so they don't want you to trade it they discontinued the warrants a while ago so if this is something that's important to you you're going to have to use another brokerage so a lot of other brokerages allow warrants e-trade is one of them that's the one i use but fidelity allows it and many others so another question people ask frequently is okay so it's been 30 days after the merger now they're exercisable how do i get my shares if i want to redeem them well what you're going to have to do is contact your broker and tell them exactly what you want and what they're going to do is they'll contact the company and do the process for you and then after a few days the shares are going to be put in your account so for e-trade they charge a 38 fee right they call it the voluntary action and as i mentioned all you have to do is contact them tell them what you want to do and they'll do the process for you so guys i hope i answered a lot of your questions if you have more please list them in the comments or send me a private message and i'll try to explain a little bit more but i hope you enjoy the video i hope this answered a lot of your questions and just let me know what you guys think if you enjoy this type of content please like it really going to help me out and i'll see you guys in the next video thank you so much

Show more

Frequently asked questions

Learn everything you need to know to use airSlate SignNow eSignatures like a pro.

See more airSlate SignNow How-Tos

What is needed for an electronic signature?

To create an electronic signature and use it to validate a digital document, you need a reliable electronic signature platform, like airSlate SignNow. All you have to do is create your own account, upload a document and add as many Signature Field elements as you need. Once you click on your recipient(s) click on the element assigned to them, a window asking them to create an electronic signature will appear. You’ll receive automated notifications for each recipient when they execute their element. Once everyone has signed (assuming there is more than one signer involved), airSlate SignNow will send each participant an executed PDF copy of the form or contract.

How do I sign a PDF without using a digital signature?

Many people are still looking for solutions that help them add digital signatures to their documents. However, there's no need for it in most cases. Since 2000, you can utilize an eSignature to make your documents valid. This method works for agreements, contracts, tax, and legal forms. Electronically sign a PDF with an electronic signature in airSlate SignNow and it’ll be 100% valid for use. Please note that some states don't allow the use of eSignatures for specific cases like filing a Last Will, so it’s better to check your local laws before signing.

How can I make an electronic signature on a PC?

Using airSlate SignNow, you can eSign any PDF regardless of your device or OS. Open up your preferred browser and enter signnow.com. Create an account or just log in if you already have one. Then, upload the document you want to sign. Use My signature to choose a method for creating your electronic signature. Adjust the field’s size to finish signing and save the edits. Upload as many PDFs as you need without limits or restrictions.
be ready to get more

Get legally-binding signatures now!