1 / 28

GROUP MEMBER

GROUP MEMBER. HENRY EBUN - 801984 ASMARAH RIKUN - 801979 NOORINA ABD HAMID - 805015 BUDIRMAN DAUD - 805014. Capital Structure: Basic Concepts. Chapter 15. Chapter outline. 15.1 The capital structure question and the pie theory.

micheal
Download Presentation

GROUP MEMBER

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GROUP MEMBER HENRY EBUN - 801984 ASMARAH RIKUN - 801979 NOORINA ABD HAMID - 805015 BUDIRMAN DAUD - 805014

  2. Capital Structure: Basic Concepts Chapter 15

  3. Chapter outline 15.1 The capital structure question and the pie theory. 15.2 Maximizing Firm value Vs Maximizing Stockholder Interests. 15.3 Financial Leverage and Firm Value: An Example. 15.4 Modigliani and Miler:Proposition II (No Taxes). 15.5 Taxes. Question And Answer

  4. 15.1 The CapitalStructure Question and The Pie Theory • Definition: Capital Structure is the mix of financial securities used to finance the firm. • The value of a firm is defined to be the sum of the value of the firm’s debt and the firm’s equity. • V = B + S • If the goal of the management of the firm is to make the firm as valuable as possible, then the firm should pick the debt-equity ratio that makes the pie as big as possible. S S B Value of the Firm S

  5. 15.2 M&M No Tax: Result • A change in capital structure does not matter to the overall value of the firm. Debt $300, 30%, Equity, $1000, 100% Equity, $400, 40%, Debt $600, 60%, Equity, $700, 70%, Total Firm Value = S+B Does not change (the pie is the same size in each case, just the slices are different).

  6. There are really two important questions: Why should the stockholders care about maximizing firmvalue? Perhaps they should be interested in strategies that maximize shareholdervalue. What is the ratio of debt-to-equity that maximizes the shareholder’s value? As it turns out, changes in capital structure benefit the stockholders if and only if the value of the firm increases. Note: When we talk about a change in capital structure, we usually hold other things constant. Thus, an increase in debt financing implies that equity will be repurchased (and vice versa) so that overall assets remain unchanged.

  7. The Objective of Management Since management is (in principle) controlled by the shareholders, we normally assume that management seeks to maximize the value of the firm’s equity. However, as long as there are no costs of bankruptcy, maximizing equity value S is equivalent to maximizing firm value V. Example: A firm has 10,000 shares; share price is $25 debt has a market value of $100,000 firm value V = B +S = $100,000+$25×$10,000 = $350,000 suppose the firm borrows another $50,000 and pays it immediately as a special dividend the value of debt increases to $150,000, but how are shareholders affected?

  8. The Objective of Management Cont’d Consider three possible outcomes: V ↑ $380,000 V → $350,000 V ↓ $320,000 S $230,000 $200,000 $170,000 Dividend $50,000 $50,000 $50,000 Capital gain/loss -$20,000 -$50,000 -$80,000 Net gain/loss $30,000 $0 -$30,000 • The change in capital structure benefits the shareholders if and only if the value of the firm increases • Managers should choose the capital structure that they believe will have the highest firm value (i.e. make the pie as big as possible)

  9. 15.3 Financial Leverage and Firm Value Consider an all-equity firm that is contemplating going into debt. (Maybe some of the original shareholders want to cash out.) Proposed Current Assets $8000 $8000 Debt $0 $4000 Equity $8000 $4000 Interest rate 10% 10% Market value/share $20 $20 Shares outstanding 400 200

  10. Current Capital Structure: No Debt Recession Expected Expansion ROA 5% 15% 25% Earnings $400 $1,200 $2,000 ROE 5% 15% 25% EPS $1 $3 $5

  11. Proposed Capital Structure: Debt Debt = $4,000 Recession Expected Expansion ROA 5% 15% 25% EBI $400 $1,200 $2,000 Interest -400-400-400 EAI $0 $800 $1,600 ROE 0 20% 40% EPS 0 $4 $8

  12. Financial Leverage and EPS Debt No Debt 4 Advantage to debt 3 2 Break-even point EPS ($) 1 0 $2,000 $400 $800 $1,600 $1,200 -1 Disadvantage to debt EBI in dollars, no taxes -2

  13. The Choice Between Debt and Equity Strategy A: Buy 100 Shares of Levered Equity Recession Expected Expansion EPS $0 $4 $8 Earnings 0 400 800 Initial cost = 100 shares@$20/share=$200 • MM Proposition I (No Taxes)

  14. Strategy B: Homemade Leverage Recession Expected Expansion EPS 200 600 1,000 Interest -200-200-200 Net earnings $0 $400 $800 Initial cost = 200 shares@$20/share $2,000 = $2,000

  15. 15.4 MM PROPOSITION II (NO TAXES) Proposition II Leverage increases the risk and return to stockholders RS = RO + (B/SL) (RO-RB) RB is the interest rate (cost of debt) RS is the return on (levered) equity (cost of equity) RO is the return on unlevered equity (cost of capital) B is the value of debt SL is the value of levered equity A higher debt-to- equity ratio leads to a higher required return on equity, because of the higher risk involved for equity-holders in a company with debt. The formula is derived from the theory of Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)

  16. The derivation is straightforward: RWACC= S/B + S x RS + B/B + S x RB Where RB is the cost of debt RS is the expected return on equity or stock, also called the cost of equity or the required return on equity RWACC is the firm’s weighted average cost of capital B is the value of the firm’s debt or bonds S is the value of the firm’s stock or equity A firm’s weighted average cost of capital is a weighted average of its cost of debt and its cost of equity. The weight applied to debt is proportion of the debt in the capital structure, and the weight applied to equity is the proportion of equity in the capital structure. Note: RWACCmeans an average representing the expected return on all of a company’s securities, each source of capital, such as stocks bonds and other debt is weighted in the calculation according to its prominence in the company’s capital structure

  17. GRAPH RS RWAC RB R0 Cost of capital : R (%) Debt – equity ratio (B/S)

  18. RS = RO + (RO– RB) B/S RS is the cost of equity RB is the cost of debt RO is the cost of capital for an all-equity firm RWACC is a firm’s weighted average cost of capital. In a world with no taxes, RWACC for a levered firm is equal to RO RO is a single point whereas RS, RB and RWACC are all entire lines

  19. Summary of MM Propositions without taxes 1. Assumptions -No taxes -No transaction costs -Individuals and corporations borrow at same rate 2. Results Proposition I = VL = VU (Value of levered firm equals value of unlevered firm) Proposition II = RS = RO = B / S (RO–RB) 3. Intuition Proposition I :Through homemade leverage individuals can either duplicate or undo the effects of corporate leverage Proposition II : The cost of equity rises with leverage because the risk to equity rises with leverage

  20. 15.5 TaxesModigliani and Miller (MM) Proposition I & II

  21. Tax definition : Tax is to impose a financial charge or other levy upon a taxpayer by a state or the functional equivalent of a state. • 2. The value of the levered firm is the sum of the value of the debt and the value of the equity. • 3. The firm value is positively related to debt within tax . • 4. MMProposition I (with corporate taxes) • - Firm value increases with leverage : VL = Vu + TcB • VL is the value of a levered firm • VU is the value of an un levered firm • TCB is the present value of tax shield is the tax rate (TC) x the value of debt (B)

  22. 5. MMProposition II (with corporate taxes)- Some of the increase in equity risk and return is offset by the interest tax shield. MM Proposition II states that leverage increase the risk and return to stockholders: Rs = Ro + (B/SL) x (1-Tc) x (Ro – RB)RS is the required rate of return on equity, or cost of equity.Ro is the cost of capital for an all equity firm.RB is the required rate of return on borrowings, or cost of debt.B/SL is the debt-to-equity ratio.Tc is the tax rate.

  23. MM PROPOSITION I (WITH TAXES) Example: The Water Products Company Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) = $1,000,000 Corporate Tax rate (tc) = 35% Debt (B) = $4,000,000 Cost of debt (RB) = 10% Interest (RBB) = $400,000 (.10 x $4,000,000) The levered firm pays less in taxes than does the unlevered firm about $140K ($350-$210). Thus the sum of the debt plus the equity ($400K + $390K) of the levered firm is greater than the equity of the unlevered firm ($650K).

  24. Firm Value $650K Debt $400K +Equity $390K = Firm Value $790K Tax Shield= Tc X RB x B =.35 x .1 x $4,000,000 = $140K Levered increases the value of the firm by the tax shield. VL =Vu + tcB = $650,000 + $140,000 = $790,000 The value of an unlevered firm (no debt) is the present value of EBIT x (1-tc) = Vu $1,000,000 x (1-.35) = $650,000

  25. Value of the Levered Firm Firm Value VL VL1 VL VU B B1 Debt Value of the firm levered is related to debt. The value firm will increase when debt is increase.

  26. MM PROPOSITION II ( WITH TAXES) • Expected Return and Leverage under Corporate Taxes • Expected return on equity and leverage is positive relationship. • The expected on equity increase with leverage. • The expected on earning per share increase with leverage. • 4.The risk of equity increase with Leverage. • The Weighted Average Cost of Capital, RWACC, and corporate Taxes • In the no-tax case, RWACC is not affected by leverage. • But, RWACC will decline with leverage in a world with corporate taxes. • Stock Price and Leverage under Corporate Taxes • 1. The price of the stock increase with levered firm.

  27. The Effect of Financial Leverage Cost of capital: R(%) R0 RB Debt-to-equityratio (B/S)

  28. THANK YOU

More Related