Title: Leases, Pensions, and Other Obligations
1Chapter 27
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- Leases, Pensions, and Other Obligations
2Session Overview
- Over the past 20 years, clever use of existing
accounting rules has allowed companies to keep
many assets and their corresponding debts off
balance sheet. During this session, we will
adjust the financial statements to normalize for - Operating leases. A company that chooses to lease
its assets will have artificially low operating
profits (because rental expenses include an
implicit interest expense) and artificially high
capital productivity (because the assets do not
appear on the lessees balance sheet). - Securitized receivables. By selling a portion of
its receivables, the company will reduce accounts
receivable on the balance sheet and increase cash
flow from operations on the accountants cash
flow statement. - Pensions. Today, under U.S. GAAP, U.S. companies
report the market value of pension shortfalls
(and excess pension assets) on the balance sheet.
Unfortunately, recent accounting changes have
addressed only deficiencies on the balance sheet.
The idiosyncrasies of pension accounting still
distort operating profitability and can even be
manipulated by management to enhance margins
artificially.
3Understanding Leases (Synthetic Debt)
- A business may acquire sole use of an asset
through a lease.
Use of asset for a contracted period
Monmouth Capital Corporation (lessor)
FedEx Corporation (lessee)
Periodic payments (cover interest costs and asset
depreciation)
- Why lease?
- Flexibility has value to lessee.
- Standardization by lessor leads to efficient
costs. - Depreciation tax shields are more valuable to
lessor (to avoid AMT).
4Lease Types
Capital lease
According to the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB), a capital lease is a lease that
meets one or more of the following four criteria,
meaning it is classified as a purchase by the
lessee (SFAS 13) 1. The lease term is
greater than 75 percent of the assets estimated
economic life. 2. The lease contains an
option to purchase the asset for less than fair
market value. 3. Ownership of the asset is
transferred to the lessee at the end of the lease
term. 4. The present value of lease payments
exceeds 90 percent of the fair market value of
the asset.
Operating lease
- A lease for which the lessee acquires the
property for only a small portion of its useful
life. An operating lease is commonly used to
acquire equipment on a short-term basis. Any
lease that is not a capital lease is an operating
lease.
5Operating Leases The Income Statement
- Operating leases combine depreciation and
interest payments into a single item called
rental payments. - Since interest expense is part of rental expense,
operating income is understated, depressing
margins versus those companies who borrow money
to purchase assets. - Our goal is to eliminate interest expense related
to operating leases from operating income.
1The value of operating leases is not typically
disclosed. A method for estimating the value of
leased assets is presented later.
6Operating Leases The Balance Sheet
- The value of leased assets via operating leases
does not appear on the balance sheet, either as
an operating asset or as a debt. - Therefore, operating assets and debt are
understated. This causes capital turns (revenue
to capital) to be distorted upward and debt to
EBITDA to be distorted downward versus peers. - Our goal is to recapitalize operating leases in
both operating assets and debt.
7Valuing Operating Leases
- Companies seldom disclose the value of their
leased assets, but you need to estimate their
value to adjust for operating leases. We
recommend the following estimation process using
rental expense, the cost of secured debt, and an
estimated asset life.
- To compensate the lessor properly, the rental
expense includes compensation for the cost of
financing the asset (at the cost of secured debt,
denoted by kd in the equation) and the periodic
depreciation of the asset (for which we assume
straight-line depreciation).
8Process for Capitalizing Leases
- The process for adjusting financial statements
and valuation for operating leases consists of
three steps - 1. Reorganize the financial statements to
reflect operating leases appropriately.
Capitalize the value of leased assets on the
balance sheet, and make a corresponding
adjustment to long-term debt. Adjust operating
profit upward by removing the implicit interest
in rental expense. - 2. Build a weighted average cost of capital
(WACC) that reflects adjusted debt to enterprise
value. To do this, use an adjusted debt-to-value
ratio that includes capitalized operating leases.
If unlevered industry betas are used to determine
the cost of equity, lever them at the adjusted
debt-to-value ratio to determine the levered cost
of equity. - 3. Value the enterprise by discounting free cash
flow (based on the newly reorganized financial
statements) at the adjusted cost of capital.
Subtract traditional debt and the current value
of operating leases from enterprise value to
determine equity value.
9Reorganizing the Income Statement
- To adjust the income statement, remove implicit
interest expense from rental expense. Operating
taxes must also be adjusted.
Leasing Example NOPLAT Calculation
Rental Expense In year 1, 35.5 million (5
710.6 million) of interest expense is removed
from operating profit.
Operating Taxes Operating taxes are increased by
the marginal tax rate (25) times implicit
interest expense.
Reconciliation Create a new account titled
after-tax lease interest.
10Reorganizing the Balance Sheet
- The value of capitalized operating leases (710.6
million) is added to book assets to long-term
debt. The corresponding adjustments increase both
sources and uses of invested capital.
Leasing Example Invested Capital Calculation
Operating
Financing
11Cost of Capital Capital Structure
- To determine the cost of capital, start by
computing how the company is financed. To adjust
capital structure for operating leases, add the
value of operating leases (710.6 million) to
unadjusted enterprise value.
Leasing Example Current Capital Structure
12Adjusting the Cost of Capital
- The adjusted cost of capital weights the
after-tax cost of debt (4.5 percent) by 10
percent, the cost of equity (12 percent) by 30
percent, and the after-tax cost of operating
leases (3.75 percent) by 60 percent. This leads
to a lower WACC of 6.3 percent.
Leasing Example Weighted Average Cost of Capital
(WACC) Calculation
13Free Cash Flow and Valuation
Leasing Example Free Cash Flow and Equity
Valuation
1. 2.
3.
4.
As long as (1) NOPLAT, (2) invested capital, (3)
cost of capital, and (4) total debt are adjusted
consistently, equity value will be identical.
14Are Leases Really Synthetic Debt?
- If operating leases are forms of synthetic debt,
debt ratings should drop as leases rise. Yields
on existing bonds should rise with operating
leases. Empirical analysis by Lim, Mann, and
Mihov supports this supposition.
15Session Overview
- Over the past 20 years, clever use of existing
accounting rules has allowed companies to keep
many assets and their corresponding debts off
balance sheet. During this session, we will
adjust the financial statements to normalize for - Operating leases. A company that chooses to lease
its assets will have artificially low operating
profits (because rental expenses include an
implicit interest expense) and artificially high
capital productivity (because the assets do not
appear on the lessees balance sheet). - Securitized receivables. By selling a portion of
its receivables, the company will reduce accounts
receivable on the balance sheet and increase cash
flow from operations on the accountants cash
flow statement. - Pensions. Today, under U.S. GAAP, U.S. companies
report the market value of pension shortfalls
(and excess pension assets) on the balance sheet.
Unfortunately, recent accounting changes have
addressed only deficiencies on the balance sheet.
The idiosyncrasies of pension accounting still
distort operating profitability and can even be
manipulated by management to enhance margins
artificially.
16Receivables Securitization
- Another common method of moving assets of the
balance sheet is securitization. - To securitize an asset, the company either sells
the assets outright or transfers the assets to an
independent subsidiary called a special purpose
entity (SPE). - As long as the company owns less than 50 percent
of the SPE and the SPE has more than 3 percent
ownership by unaffiliated parties, the original
company is not required to consolidate the SPEs
assets on its own balance sheetnor recognize its
obligations. - Consider the following example
Crown Holdings, Inc. The Company had no
outstanding borrowings under its 758
revolving credit facility at December 31, 2008
and had 234 of securitized receivables. . . .
The Company recorded expenses related to the
securitization facilities of 14, 17, and 15,
respectively, as interest expense,
including commitment fees of 0.25 on the unused
portion of the facilities.
17Interest or SGA?
- In some cases, fees are included in selling,
general, and administrative (SGA) expense,
rather than interest expense. In these
situations, the fees must be moved from SGA
expense to interest expense for valuation of the
company. - For example, Hasbro includes securitization fees
in its selling expenses
Hasbro Inc. As of December 30, 2008 and December
31, 2007 the utilization of the receivables
facility was 250,000. During 2008, 2007, and
2006, the loss on the sale of the receivables
totaled 5,302, 7,982, and 2,241, respectively,
which is recorded in selling, distribution, and
administration expenses in the accompanying
consolidated statements of operations.
18The Dark Side of Securitization
- Imagine that you run a division that sells 1
billion in products to a large customer. The
customer typically pays in 30 to 45 days, and
thus has 120 million in receivables outstanding.
- Your division is short of cash, and therefore
asks the customer to pay in cash. To encourage
the transaction, you offer a discount of 5
million. What happens to EBIT, NOPAT, invested
capital, and ROIC? - Lets say instead you decide to trade the
receivables for cash with a third party for a 5
million fee. If the fee is classified as
interest, what will happen to EBIT, NOPAT,
invested capital, and ROIC?
19Session Overview
- Over the past 20 years, clever use of existing
accounting rules has allowed companies to keep
many assets and their corresponding debts off
balance sheet. During this session, we will
adjust the financial statements to normalize for - Operating leases. A company that chooses to lease
its assets will have artificially low operating
profits (because rental expenses include an
implicit interest expense) and artificially high
capital productivity (because the assets do not
appear on the lessees balance sheet). - Securitized receivables. By selling a portion of
its receivables, the company will reduce accounts
receivable on the balance sheet and increase cash
flow from operations on the accountants cash
flow statement. - Pensions. Today, under U.S. GAAP, U.S. companies
report the market value of pension shortfalls
(and excess pension assets) on the balance sheet.
Unfortunately, recent accounting changes have
addressed only deficiencies on the balance sheet.
The idiosyncrasies of pension accounting still
distort operating profitability and can even be
manipulated by management to enhance margins
artificially.
20Pension Accounting
- The process of how to incorporate excess pension
assets and unfunded pension liabilities into
enterprise value, and how to adjust the income
statement to eliminate accounting distortions
consists of the following three steps - Identify excess pension assets and unfunded
liabilities on the balance sheet. If the company
does not separate pension accounts, search the
pension footnote for their location. Excess
pension assets should be treated as nonoperating,
and unfunded pension liabilities should be
treated as a debt equivalent. - Add excess pension assets to and deduct unfunded
pension liabilities from enterprise value.
Valuations should be done on an after-tax basis. - Remove the accounting pension expense from cost
of sales, and replace it with the service cost
and amortization of prior service costs reported
in the notes. The pension expense, service cost,
and amortization of prior service costs are
reported in the companys notes.
21Step 1 Identify Assets and Liabilities
- Not every company reports prepaid pension assets
and unfunded pension liabilities as a separate
line item. Many companies consolidate prepaid
pension assets in other long-term assets and
unfunded pension liabilities as part of other
long-term liabilities, making them difficult to
identify.
DuPont Pension Note in Annual Report, Funded
Status
Overfunded pensions are embedded in other assets
therefore a good portion of other assets should
NOT be included in invested capital.
The same holds true for unfunded liabilities.
They should not be treated as operating
liabilities, but rather as debt equivalents.
22Step 2 From Enterprise to Equity Value
- For an ongoing enterprise, excess pension assets
can be netted against unfunded liabilities to
determine net assets (liabilities) outstanding. - To incorporate pensions for a company with net
excess assets, add (1 Marginal Tax Rate) Net
Pension Assets to enterprise value, as excess
pension assets will lead to fewer required
contributions in the future. - To value companies with net unfunded liabilities,
deduct (1 Marginal Tax Rate) Net Pension
Liabilities from enterprise value. - For enterprises in liquidation, investigate the
tax implications of under- or overfunding. For
instance, many countries impose large tax
penalties to withdraw excess funding from pension
plans.
23Step 3 Adjust Income Statement
- To determine the portion of pension expense that
is compensation to employees (and not gains and
losses on pension investments), combine service
cost and amortization of prior service cost to
arrive at todays value of promised retirement
payments.
DuPont Adjusted Operating Profits
Pension Adjustment To remove plan performance
from operating expenses, remove pension
expensein DuPonts case, a 54 million gain in
2007 (subtract gains, add back expenses)and
replace it with the service cost (383 million)
and amortization of prior service cost (18
million).