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Long-Term Debt Sources of Financing

Long-Term Debt Sources of Financing. Interest rate levels Types of long-term debt Risks of long-term debt Debt valuation. Capital Financing Basics. Businesses need capital to acquire the assets needed to provide services. Capital comes in two basic forms:

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Long-Term Debt Sources of Financing

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  1. Long-Term Debt Sources of Financing • Interest rate levels • Types of long-term debt • Risks of long-term debt • Debt valuation

  2. Capital Financing Basics • Businesses need capital to acquire the assets needed to provide services. • Capital comes in two basic forms: • Debt capital (loans, bonds, debentures) -- liability sources of capital • Equity capital (stock, retained earnings) -- non-liability sources of capital • HSO utilization of debt and equity capital

  3. Common Long-Term Debt Instruments • Term loans (3-15 year maturities) • Amortized interest/principal payments • Lender as financial intermediary (bank) • Advantages: speed, flexibility, low cost • Bonds (10-30 year maturities) • Bond issues • Multiple creditors/investors per issue • Public vs. private placement of bond issues

  4. Common Long-Term Debt Instruments • Types of Bonds • Corporate Bonds • Investor-owned organizational debt issue • Longer maturity debt (10-30 years) • Fixed vs. variable interest rates • Payment of interest and principal • Mortgage Bonds • Corporate debt issues backed by pledge of organizational assets • Primary vs. secondary mortgage issues

  5. Common Long-Term Debt Instruments • Types of Bonds • Corporate Debentures • Corporate debt backed by revenue-generating capacity of organization (no fixed assets) • Higher cost form of corporate debt than MB’s • Rationale for use • Subordinated Debentures • “Junk” or below investment grade debt issues • High-risk, high-cost corporate debt • Rationale for use

  6. Common Long-Term Debt Instruments • Types of Bonds • Municipal Bonds (“Munis”) • Debt issues from non-federal governmental entities and/or their representative organizations • Types of munis -- general obligation munis, special tax bonds, revenue bonds (NFP’s) • Fixed interest, longer-term maturities • “Serial issue” municipal bonds • Tax exemption of municipal bond interest • Public vs. private placement of munis

  7. Debt Contract Provisions • Bond indentures • General provisions • Maturity of bonds • Interest rate (coupon rate) • Restrictive covenants (creditor obligations of borrower) • Trustee (bond fiduciary) • Call provisions -- advantages and disadvantages to issuer/borrowers

  8. Bond Ratings • Rating agencies assign bond ratings that reflect the probability of default: Investment Grade Junk Bonds Moody’s Aaa Aa A Baa Ba B Caa C S&P AAA AA A BBB BB B CCC D

  9. Bond Rating Concepts • Bond rating criteria • Issuer’s financial condition • Competitive situation • Quality of management • Importance of ratings • To investors/creditors • To issuers (cost of capital) • Changes in ratings (factors affecting)

  10. Credit Enhancement • Credit enhancement (bond insurance) is available on municipal bonds. • Insured bonds have the rating of the insurer (AAA), not the issuer. • Issuers must pay an up-front fee to obtain bond insurance. (50-75 basis points based on total debt service)

  11. Interest Rate Components • Interest as opportunity cost of debt • The interest rate on any debt security can be thought of a base rate plus one or more components. • Here is the model: Rate = RRF + IP + DRP + LP + PRP + CRP.

  12. Here: RRF = Real risk-free rate. IP = Inflation premium. DRP = Default risk premium. LP = Liquidity premium. PRP = Price risk premium. CRP = Call risk premium.

  13. Interest Rate Example 1 1-Year Treasury Security RRF = 2%; IP = 3%: Rate = RRF + IP + DRP + LP + PRP + CRP = 2% + 3% + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 = 5%. • Why are there zeros for DRP, LP, PRP, and CRP?

  14. Interest Rate Example 2 30-Year Columbia/HCA Callable Bond RRF = 2%; IP = 4%; DRP, LP, PRP = 1%; CRP = 0.4%: Rate = RRF + IP + DRP + LP + PRP + CRP = 2% + 4% + 1% + 1% + 1% + 0.4% = 9.4%. • Callable vs. non-callable rates of interest

  15. The Term Structure of Interest Rates • Term structure is the relationship between interest rates and debt maturities. (years to maturity) • Thus, term structure tells us the relationship between short-term and long-term rates. • A graph of the term structure is called the yield curve.

  16. Treasury Yield Curve (July 1998) Interest Rate (%) 1 yr. 5.3% 5 yr. 5.4 10 yr. 5.5 20 yr. 5.6 30 yr. 5.7 7 6      5 0 10 20 30 Years to Maturity

  17. Bond Yield Curves • What does a bond yield represent? • YTM (bond yield to maturity) -- (1) coupon rate/yield for bonds that sell at par value (new issues, mature issues); (2) coupon rate/yield for bonds plus or minus capital gain/loss for bonds that sell below or above par value (outstanding bond issues) • Normal vs. inverted yield curves

  18. Debt Valuation Why should healthcare managers worry about debt valuation? • Managers must understand how investors make resource allocation decisions. • Cost of financing is important to good capital investment decisions. • Debt valuation concepts are used to value other assets.

  19. General Valuation Model • The financial value of any asset stems from the cash flows that the asset is expected to produce. • Thus, all assets are valued in the same way: • Estimate the expected cash flows. • Set the required rate of return/discount rate • Discount the cash flows. • Sum the present values.

  20. 0 1 2 N CF1 CF2 CFN General Valuation Model (Cont.) R(R) ... PV CF1 PV CF2 PV CFN Value

  21. Bond Definitions 1. Par value: Stated face value of the bond. Generally the amount borrowed and repaid at maturity. Often $1,000 or $5,000. 2. Coupon rate: Stated interest rate on the bond. Multiply by par value to get dollar coupon payment. Usually fixed.

  22. 3. Maturity date: Date when the bond will be repaid. Note that the effective maturity of a bond declines each year after issue. 4. New versus outstanding bonds: When a bond is issued, its coupon rate reflects current conditions. When conditions change, bond values change.

  23. 5. Debt service requirements: Issuers are concerned with their total debt service payments, including both interest expense and repayment of principal. Many municipal bond issues (serial issues) are structured so that debt service requirements are roughly constant over time.

  24. 0 1 2 15 What’s the value of a 15-year, 10% coupon bond if R(R) = 10%? 10% ... 100 + 1,000 100 100 $ 760.61 239.39 $1,000.00

  25. PV annuity PV maturity value PV annuity $ 760.61 239.39 $1,000.00 The bond consists of a 15-year, 10% annuity of $100 per year plus a $1,000 lump sum at t = 15: = = = INPUTS 15 10 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 1000 OUTPUT

  26. What’s the value after one year if interest rates remain constant? INPUTS 14 10 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 1000 OUTPUT If interest rates (the required rate of return on the bond) stay constant, the bond’s value remains at $1,000.

  27. Now suppose interest rates fell, so that R(R) is now only 5 percent. INPUTS 14 5 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 1494.93 OUTPUT When R(R) falls, a bond’s value increases. Now the bond sells above its par value, or at a premium. (logic?)

  28. What would happen if interest rates rise, and R(R) is now 15 percent? INPUTS 14 15 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 713.78 OUTPUT When R(R) rises, a bond’s value decreases. Now the bond sells below its par value, or at a discount. (logic?)

  29. Assume the bond has 14 years to maturity. What would happen to bond values over time if interest rates remained at the levels given: 5 percent, 10 percent, and 15 percent?Remember that the bond has a 10 percent coupon rate.

  30. Bond Value ($) 1,495 R(R) = 5%. 1,216 R(R)= 10%. M 1,000 832 R(R) = 15%. 714 14 10 5 0 Years to Maturity

  31. At maturity, the value of any bond must equal its par value. • The value of a premium bond will decrease to par value at maturity. • The value of a discount bond will increase to par value at maturity. • A par bond value will remain at par if interest rates remain constant. • The return in each year consists of an interest payment and a price change.

  32. Definitions Annual interest payment. price Current yield = Capital gains yield = = + Change in price. Beginning price Total return Current yield Capital gains yield .

  33. Find the current yield, capital gains yield, and total return during Year 1 when the interest rate falls to 5%. $100 $1,000 Current yield = = 0.100 = 10.00%. $495 $1,000 Capital gains = = 0.495 = 49.5%. Total return = 10.0% + 49.5% = 59.5%.

  34. Repeat the calculation,but this time for Year 2. $100 $1,495 Current yield = = 0.670 = 6.70%. -$25 $1,495 Capital gain = = -0.170 = -1.70%. Total return = 6.7% - 1.7% = 5.0%.

  35. Yield to Maturity • The yield to maturity (YTM) on a bond is the expected rate of return assuming the bond is held to maturity. (reported bond yields) • Mathematically, it is the discount rate that forces the present value of the cash flows from the bond to equal the bond’s price.

  36. What’s the YTM on a 14-year, 10% annual coupon, $1,000 par value bond that sells for $1,494.93? 0 1 9 10 YTM = ? ... 100 100 100 1,000 PV1 . . PV9 PV10 PVM Find the discount rate that “works”! $1,495

  37. Using a Financial Calculator for YTM INPUTS 14 1494.93 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 5.00 OUTPUT

  38. Find YTM if price were $713.78. INPUTS 14 713.78 -100 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 15.0 OUTPUT

  39. Bonds Actually HaveSemiannual Coupons • Therefore, there are twice as many interest payments compared to annual coupon payments. • But, the interest payment is only half of the annual payment. • And, the required rate of return (discount rate) is only half of the annual rate.

  40. Find the value of a 14-year, 10% coupon, semiannual bond if the required rate of return is 5 percent. 2x14 5 / 2 100 / 2 28 2.5 -50 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 1499.12 INPUTS OUTPUT

  41. Find the YTM of a 14-year, 10% coupon, semiannual bond if the bond is selling for $1,400. 2x14 100 / 2 28 1400 -50 -1000 N I/YR PV PMT FV 2.90 INPUTS OUTPUT Thus, the annual YTM = 2 x 2.90% = 5.80%.

  42. Interest Rate Risk • Interest rates change constantly, which gives rise to two types of interest rate risk. • Price risk arises because bond values decline when interest rates rise. • Reinvestment rate risk arises because reinvested coupon (and principal) payments earn less when interest rates fall.

  43. Does a 1-year or 10-year 10 percent bond have more price risk? R(R) 1-year Change 10-year Change 5% $1,048 $1,386 +4.8% -4.4% +38.6% -25.1% 10% 1,000 1,000 15% 956 749

  44. Value 10-year . $1,500 . . . . 1-year $1,000 . $500 0 R(R) 0% 5% 10% 15%

  45. Does a 1-year or 10-year bond have more reinvestment rate risk? • Reinvestment rate risk depends both on the bond’s maturity and the investor’s holding period. • In general, the shorter the maturity, the greater the reinvestment rate risk.

  46. How can interest rate riskbe minimized? • Long-term bonds have high price risk but low reinvestment rate risk. • Short-term bonds have low price risk but high reinvestment rate risk. • Nothing is riskless! However, risk can be minimized by matching the maturity of the bond to the holding period.

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