Lecture 8 Capital Structure Chapter 16, 17 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Lecture 8 Capital Structure Chapter 16, 17

Description:

There is an optimal capital structure, target capital structure, that trade off ... the dividend payout (additional cash back to shareholders means that more ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:394
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: markhov
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lecture 8 Capital Structure Chapter 16, 17


1
Lecture 8 Capital Structure
(Chapter 16, 17)
  • Capital Structure Theories
  • - Tradeoff theory
  • - Pecking order theory
  • - Market timing theory
  • Recapitalization Decisions

2
Capital Structure
  • Percent of debt financing, also called
    (financial) leverage.

3
Financial Risk
  • The extra risk that shareholders face when the
    firm uses debt.

4
Example of financial risk
Sales 1,400,000 Variable
Costs (800,000) Fixed Costs (250,000)
EBIT 350,000 Interest (125,000)
EBT 225,000 Taxes (34)
(76,500) Net Income 148,500
5
Sales 1,540,000 10 Variable
Costs (880,000) Fixed Costs (250,000)
EBIT 410,000 17.14 Interest
(125,000) EBT 285,000 Taxes (34)
(96,900) Net Income 188,100 26.67
6
Sales 1,330,000 -5 Variable
Costs (760,000) Fixed Costs (250,000) EBIT
320,000 -8.57
Interest (125,000) EBT 195,000 Taxes
(34) (66,300) Net Income
128,700 -13.33
7
Trade-off Theory
  • There is an optimal capital structure, target
    capital structure, that trade off the benefits
    and the costs of debt and maximizes the firm
    value.
  • Miller and Modigliani (MM)

8
MM Version One No Friction (1958)
  • Changes in capital structure do not affect firm
    value when financial markets are perfect. Only
    market imperfections (taxes, etc.) allow for
    leverage to affect firm value.
  • MM perfect market assumptions
  • No taxes.
  • No brokerage costs.
  • No bankruptcy costs.
  • Investors can borrow at the same rate as
    corporations.
  • All investors have the same information as
    management about the firms future investment
    opportunities.
  • EBIT is not affected by the use of debt.

9
  • Proposition I
  • levered firm value unlevered firm
    value.
  • VL VU


  • (EBIT/WACC) EBIT/ksU
  • where ksU cost of equity for an
    unlevered firm.
  • ? Firm value is independent of leverage.

10
  • Proof with capital structure arbitrage
  • (see P. 611-612)
  • For two firms with exactly the same business
    characteristics and different financial leverage
    levels, if they are differently valued, investors
    can do capital structure arbitrage by
    short-selling the stocks of the high-value firm,
    and using the proceeds to buy the stocks of the
    low-value firm, which creates profits.
  • In a more realistic situation, this arbitrage
    would occur in a matter of seconds. The low-value
    firms price is pushed up and the high-value
    firms price is lowered down, eventually reaching
    an equilibrium with two firms equally valued.

11
  • Proposition II
  • ksL ksU Risk premium
  • ksU (ksU - kd)(D/S)
  • where ksU cost of equity for an
    unlevered firm, ksL cost of
    equity for a levered firm, D
    market value of firms debt, S
    market value of firms equity,
    kd cost of risk-free debt.
  • ? As a firm increases its use of debt, its
    cost of equity
  • also increases but its WACC remains
    constant.

12
MM Version Two with Corporate Taxes
  • Because interest is a tax-deductible expense for
    corporations, a levered firm should be more
    valuable than an unlevered firm (assuming that
    this difference in capital structure is the only
    difference).
  • Proposition I
  • VL VU TD

where T firms tax rate, D value of debt.
13
  • Proposition II
  • ksL ksU (ksU - kd)(1-T)(D/S)
  • where S value of equity.

14
MM Version Three with Multiple Frictions
  • Taxes mentioned earlier (in MM Version Two).
  • Bankruptcy cost direct costs (such as legal
    costs) and indirect costs (such as reputation
    loss and financial distress).
  • Agency problems e.g. risk-shifting ? firm may
    increase risk and thereby extract value from
    existing bondholders. (Covenants could reduce the
    problems)
  • Free cash flow reduction debt might reduce extra
    cash in the firms hence alleviate management
    deviations.

15
  • Proposition I
  • VL VU
  • TD
  • - (PV of bankruptcy costs)
  • - (PV of agency costs)
  • (PV of free cash flow
    reduction)
  • ? The optimal capital structure is
    determined by a
  • trade off between benefits and costs of
    debt.

16
Example Suppose Titan Photo has no growth, and
its expected EBIT is 100,000, corporate tax
rate is 30. It uses 500,000 of 12 debt
financing, and the cost of equity to an
unlevered firm in the same business risk level is
16. 1) What is the value of the firm
according to MM with tax? S
(EBIT kd D)(1-T)/ksL VU SU
EBIT (1-T) / ksU 100000
(1-30) /0.16 437500 VL VU TD
437500 0.3 500000 587500
SL VL D 587500 500000 87500 2) What
is this firms cost of equity? ksL
ksU (ksU -kL) (1-T) (D/S)
16 (16-12) (1-30) (500000/87500)
32
17
Pecking Order Theory
  • Stewart Myers (1984)
  • Managers are better informed than investors.
    Investors might see an external equity issuance a
    bad news about the company, assuming that
    managers want outside shareholders to share the
    loss, thus investors will react to this issuance
    negatively, increasing the issuance cost of
    external equity.

18
  • Firms therefore prioritize their sources of
    financing according to the law of least effort,
    or of least resistance internal funds are used
    first, and when that is depleted, debt is issued,
    and when it is not sensible to issue any more
    debt, equity is issued.
  • This theory maintains that businesses adhere to a
    hierarchy of financing sources and prefer
    internal financing when available, and debt is
    preferred over equity if external financing is
    required.

19
Market Timing Theory
  • A firm will issue a type of external capitals
    when the associated capital market is good. For
    instance, it will issue stocks when the stock
    market is hot.

20
Other Issues Need to be Considered in Practice
  • Business Risk firms with low BR may use more
    debt.
  • Assets firms with marketable fixed assets may
    use more debt.
  • Growth rapid growth often requires external
    financing, and will typically use more debt.
  • Debt Ratings Some firms want to use more debt
    than their lenders may be willing to provide.
    Banks and rating agencies (SP) use the financial
    ratios (TIE and other debt ratios) for their
    decisions.

21
Recapitalization
Ways to recapitalize (that is, to change the
existing capital structure, equity structure, or
debt structure) - Raising new equity such as
raising VC, IPO, SEO - Raising new debt/bond
- Stock repurchase - Leveraged buyout, etc.
22
Recapitalization
  • Example
  • PPC has total mkt value 100M, with 1M
    shares at 50 per
  • share, and 50M of 10 perpetual bonds
    selling at par.
  • EBIT 13.24, and Tc 15.
  • PPC can change its capital structure by
    increasing debt to 70M
  • or decreasing it to 30M. If it increases
    leverage, it will call its old bonds and issue
    new ones with a 12 coupon. If it decreases
    leverage, it will call the old bonds and issue
    new ones with a 8 coupon. PPC will sell or
    repurchase stock at the new equilibrium price to
    complete the CS change. It pays all earnings as
    dividends and is thus a 0 growth stock. If it
    increases leverage ks will be 16, if it
    decreases leverage ks will be 13.
  • Should the firm change its capital structure?

23
Solution base situation (D 50M)
V Firm Value D E Value of Debt
Value of Equity.
24
Solution Two scenarios
Decrease leverage (to D 30M).
Increase leverage (to D 70M).
25
Managing Capital Structure
  • Firms may set target (desired) capital structures
    by
  • setting up financial statement forecasts several
    years into the future,
  • explicitly including the AFN lines in the
    forecasts, and
  • varying the proportions of new debt and equity
    used to finance future growth, and
  • varying the dividend payout (additional cash back
    to shareholders means that more funds will be
    needed in the future), repurchase of equity and
    type of debt (some debt has higher interest
    costs).
  • With such forecasts, managers are able to
    understand how different scenarios affect firm
    value.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com