The Buyout Binge 何德光 MA0N0224. Case study Health Management Associated announcing in beginning of year 2007 that it would take on $2.4 billion in new.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Cash Flow Statement The purpose is to provide info about the sources and uses of cash during a particular time period content and organization –operating.
Advertisements

How Much Should a Corporation Borrow?
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
Dividend Policy 05/30/07 Ch. 21. Dividend Process Declaration Date – Board declares the dividend and it becomes a liability of the firm Ex-dividend Date.
Advanced Corporate Finance Lecture 08.1 and 09 Capital Structure and Bond Valuation (Continued) Fall, 2010.
Capital Structure: Basic Concepts
P.V. VISWANATH FOR A FIRST COURSE IN FINANCE 1. 2 Corporations pay taxes on their profits after interest payments are deducted. Thus, interest expense.
Key Financial Indicators. Measures of liquidity  See equations 1 and 2; page 12 of booklet Measures of solvency  See equations 3 – 6; page 13 of booklet.
Strategic Management Financial Ratios
Capital Structure (Ch. 12)
Dividends and Dividend Policy!
Capital Structure: Part 1
Chapter 9: The Cost of Capital
The Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC). WACC What precisely do the terms “cost of capital” and “weighted average cost of capital” mean? To begin,
> > > > Financing and Investing Through Securities Markets Chapter 18.
LEVERAGED BUYOUTS (LBOs) Prepared by: BRENDA E.PALAD Reference: Investment Banking by Joshua Rosenbaum (WILEY-FINANCE)
Financing. Types of Finance Debt Equity Debt Normally from Banks Amount loaned and interest rate – Depends on risk & developers standing – % of.
CORPORATE FINANCE VI ESCP-EAP - European Executive MBA
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Variables Affecting System Behavior SYSTEM Leadership Sources.
Financial Management 1. Every decision that a business makes has financial effects. So everything that a business does fits under the heading of finance.
Reporting and Analyzing Cash Flows Chapter 17. Purposes of the Statement of Cash Flows Designed to fulfill the following: – predict future cash flows.
Intro to Financial Management Understanding Financial Statements and Cash Flows.
Chapter 18 Principles PrinciplesofCorporateFinance Tenth Edition How Much Should A Corporation Borrow? Slides by Matthew Will Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill.
©2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Learning Objectives 1.Prepare and analyze the four basic financial statements. (LO1) 2.Examine the limitations of the.
Apply procedures for preparing corporate financial statements.
Slide 1 Cost of Capital Basic Skills: (Time value of money, Financial Statements) Investments: (Stocks, Bonds, Risk and Return) Corporate Finance: (The.
HFT 3431 Chapter 4 Statement of Cash Flows The Statement of Cash Flows Answers u u How Much Cash Was Provided by Operations u u What Amount of Property.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 12 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Chapter 18 Capital & Capital Market Financial Management  It deals with raising of finance, and using and allocating financial resources of a company.
Financial plan. Forms of Financing  Major categories of financing: 1) debt 2) Equity.
BONDS (DEBT FINANCE). CORPORATE FINANCE (sources of funds) COMPANIES: 1. generate internal cash flows / undistributed profits 2. issue shares (equity.
LONG TERM FINANCE: SHARES, DEBENTURES AND TERM LOANS CHAPTER 20.
Chapter 18 Principles of Corporate Finance Eighth Edition How Much Should a Firm Borrow? Slides by Matthew Will Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
C HAPTER 12 C ASE STUDY T HE B UYOUT B INGE Nguyen Le Tuong Vi MA2N
Financial Management Chapter 17. Define finance and explain the role of financial managers. Describe the components of a financial plan and the financial.
Management & Leveraged Buyouts
1 Chapter 7 Accounting for Financial Management. 2 What is free cash flow (FCF)? Why is it important? FCF is the amount of cash available from operations.
The Financial Planning Process Liquidity Liquidity Working Capital Working Capital Inventories Inventories Capital Budgeting Capital Budgeting Capital.
Goals and Governance of the Firm
Financial Management Chapter 17.
INVESTMENT BANKING LESSON 7 STRUCTURING A LEVERAGED BUYOUT Investment Banking (2 nd edition) Beijing Language and Culture University Press, 2013 Investment.
Ch. 3 - Understanding Financial Statements and Cash Flows , Prentice Hall, Inc.
AN OVERVIEW OF CORPORATE FINANCING
Cost of Capital. n For Investors the rate of return on a security is a benefit of investing. n For Financial Managers that same rate of return is a cost.
1- 1 CURRICULUM  Introduction: goal of the firm  Financial markets and institutions, accounting and finance  Measuring corporate performance  Long-term.
CHAPTER 9: THE COST OF CAPITAL. The Cost of Capital: 2.
Financial Statement Analysis K.R. Subramanyam Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the.
Dell is Going Private Case Study 1. 2 Why DELL going private?  Major reasons  Autonomy  Leadership  Strategy  Customers  Shareholders  ….. 3.
Chapter 14 Planning Debt Financing Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Cost of debt = Interest Payments. Debts are the borrowing which company takes to finance the company therefore they have to pay interest on those borrowing.
STRATEGIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT The Trade off of Debt KHURAM RAZA ACMA, MS FINANCE.
Cost of Capital Chapter 12 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Purpose of Statement Operating, Investing, and Financing Activities Product Life Cycle Statement of Cash Flows – Indirect Method Direct Method.
Financial Ratios.
Accounting for Financial Management
4.04 Statement of Cash Flows
Leveraged Buy Outs By AV Vedpuriswar.
Capital Structure Debt versus Equity.
Chapter 2 - Understanding Financial Statements, Taxes, and Cash Flows
Statement of Cash Flows
Statement of Cash Flows
Dividends and Dividend Policy
Statement of Cash Flows
Lecture 2 Chapter 2 Outline The Financing Decision
Valuation: The value of control
COST OF CAPITAL 1.
Planning Debt Financing
Chapter 4 Statement of Cash Flows
X100 Introduction to Business
Presentation transcript:

The Buyout Binge 何德光 MA0N0224

Case study Health Management Associated announcing in beginning of year 2007 that it would take on $2.4 billion in new debt to finance a one-time $10-per- share dividend. The move would lower their rate from Investment grade to junk level. The CEO noted that it would drop the company’s cost of capital from the lower teens to 7.5-8%, this move make private-equity buyout nearly impossible.

Case Analysis Company conducting “Leverage” by adding debt to capital structure. Stockholder get satisfied because of the dividend. The company prevent the “Leverage Buyout” from Private equity firms by drop the company’s Cost of capital The consequence of these action: – Down grade from Investment grade to Junk level. – Harming to interest of bound.

What is Leverage Buyout? Institutional investors and financial sponsors (like a private equity firm) making large acquisitions without committing all the capital required for the acquisition. To do this, a financial sponsor will raise acquisition debt (by issuing bonds or securing a loan) and also looks to the cash flows of the acquisition target to make interest and principal payments.

What effect would a decreased cost of capital have on a firm’s future investments? Generally, a decreased cost of capital will lead to the good in future investment. However, If the rate of return of investment is above the cost of capital, it still increase the value of the firm. If the rate of return below the cost of capital, it will decrease the value of the firm.

Thank you

The purposes of debt financing for leveraged buyouts are twofold The use of debt increases (leverages) the financial return to the private equity sponsor. The tax shield of the acquisition debt. Because income flowing through to equity is taxed, while interest payments to debt are not, the capitalized value of cash flowing to debt is greater than the same cash stream flowing to equity.