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Capital Structure Basic concepts: no taxes
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Chapter 15 Capital Structure: Basic Concepts Capital-structure and pie theory No-arbitrage pricing. Example: shares for debt Value Required return on the levered firm.
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Financial Leverage, EPS, and ROE CurrentProposed Assets$20,000$20,000 Debt$0$8,000 Equity$20,000$12,000 Debt/Equity 0.000.67 Interest raten/a8% Shares 400 240 Share price$50$50
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Comments Straight swap of equity for debt Market prices unchanged Real asset unchanged
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Financial leverage and risk Three states: bust, normal, boom. Probabilities not explicit. Look at each state separately.
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EPS, ROE, Current Structure Shares Outstanding = 400 Bust Normal Boom EBIT$1,000$2,000$3,000 Interest000 Net income$1,000$2,000$3,000 EPS$2.50$5.00$7.50 ROA5%10%15% ROE5%10%15%
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EPS and ROE under Proposed Capital Structure Shares Outstanding = 240 Bust Normal Boom EBIT$1,000$2,000$3,000 Interest640640640 Net income$360$1,360$2,360 EPS$1.50$5.67$9.83 ROA5%10%15% ROE3%11%20%
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Find the point of equal EPS For understanding the situation, not because it is a key to anything. Let x = EBIT Solve x/400 = (x - 640)/240 Solution x = 1600. EPS = 4 per share, in either structure
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Financial Leverage and EPS (2.00) 0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 1,0002,0003,000 EBIT EPS Debt No Debt Break-even Point
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Modigliani-Miller (MM) Model Perpetual Cash Flows (convenient) Firms and investors can borrow and lend at the same rate (convenient) Only value matters No transaction costs (convenient) No taxes
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Homemade is a big concept What financial managers do in the firm… can be duplicated by investors in the market … if they want to. Implication: financial managers can’t raise value by restructuring.
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Homemade leverage Instead of the firm swapping equity for debt. The investor does it himself, by borrowing. It works out just as well.
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Borrow $8000, buy the unlevered firm for $20,000 Bust NormalBoom Earnings $1000$2000$3000 Interest at 8%$640$640$640 Net Profits$360$1360$2360 ROE (on $12K)3%11%20% Same as owning the levered firm
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Okay, don’t buy the whole firm Buy 10%, forty shares for $2000. Borrow $800. Total cost $1200 Same as having 10% of the levered firm, that is, 24 shares at $50 per share.
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Homemade annihilation of leverage Idea. Form a portfolio. Part lending… part the levered firm. Portfolio has the action of the unlevered firm. A levered firm is a portfolio.
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Buy the levered firm (240 shares) and lend 8000 Cost of Portfolio = 12000 + 8000 = 20000 Boom NormalBust EPS $1.50$5.67$9.83 Earnings $360$1360$2360 Interest at (8%)$640$640$640 Net cash flow$1000$2000$3000 ROE 5%10%15% (Net cash flow / $2,000)
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The firm is a veil A way for shareholders to hold a portfolio.
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The MM Propositions I & II (No Taxes) P1: Value is unaffected by leverage P1: V L = V U P2: Leverage increases the risk and return to stockholders (formula to follow)
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Proposition II of M-M r B is the interest rate r s is the return on (levered) equity r 0 is the return on unlevered equity B is value of debt S L is value of levered equity r s = r 0 + (B / S L ) (r 0 - r B )
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Quick derivation of MM II Uses MM I. Value unchanged. Uses cash flow constraint.
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ValueRandom cash flow Aa Bb V a+b a+b
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V a+b = A + B No arbitrage pricing. Suppose V a+b not equal to A + B. Suppose V a+b > A + B. The potential arbitrage is to buy a and b separately and then sell a+b as a unit. Gain = V a+b - A – B, which is > 0. Position a + b – (a+b) = 0 is riskless
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Complete markets Cash flows a and b must be tradable. e.g., not gambling debts e.g., not insurance contracts
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ValueRandom cash flow SharesSLSL sLsL BondsBb Unlevered firmSUSU s U = s L + b For instance, capital structure Conclusion: S U = S L + B
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Problem: market rate of return on levered shares Increased risk of levered shares. Solution using definition of rates of return and MM I.
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MM I Cash flows
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MM I Expected cash flows (*)
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Weighted average cost of capital A reorganization of MM 2 with no taxes. Go back to equation (*) in the derivation, divide by S L + B
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MM Proposition II no tax Debt-to-equity ratio (B/S) Cost of capital: r (%). r0r0 rSrS r WACC rBrB
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Exam review What is the weighted average cost of capital?
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Answer Give the definitions and the formula. r B = bond rate r S = expected return on shares B = market value of bonds S = market value of shares T C = corporate tax rate
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Conclusion WACC = (S/(S+B))r S + (B/(S+B))(1-T C )r B
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