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Fin 2

The document discusses theories on the optimal capital structure of corporations including the tradeoff theory and pecking order theory. It also discusses how stakeholders' claims can be described using options and the implications of financial distress.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views23 pages

Fin 2

The document discusses theories on the optimal capital structure of corporations including the tradeoff theory and pecking order theory. It also discusses how stakeholders' claims can be described using options and the implications of financial distress.

Uploaded by

afrozatufa_18
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Capital

ost of C (Modigliani-)Miller* and Personal Taxes

Usually: Taxes on interest > Taxes on capital gains


d the Co

vs.
al Structture and

ƒ “Grossed-up” interest rates on debt

ƒ Advantage of debt is reduced


3) Capita

ƒ Equilibrium amount of aggregate debt determined


by relative corporate and personal tax rates

* Cp. Miller (1977).


333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 52
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Cost of Capital for Projects
ƒ Adjustment for risk (How?)
d the Co

ƒ CAPM-determined cost of capital:

( )
al Structture and

E ⎣⎡ R% p ⎦⎤ = R f + β p ⋅ E ⎣⎡ R% m ⎦⎤ − R f

ƒ Effect of tax shield:


⎛ B ⎞
WACC = ρ ⋅ ⎜1 − τ c ⋅
B + S ⎟⎠
3) Capita

Source: CWS (2005), p. 579.

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 53


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Cost of Capital Given Risky Debt
The cost of capital given risky debt, without and
d the Co

with corporate taxes:


al Structture and
3) Capita

Source: CWS (2005)


(2005), p
p. 588
588.

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 54


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Implications of Financial Distress*
ƒ Direct and indirect implications
d the Co

– Increasing cost of capital


– Loss of customers, suppliers, and employees
al Structture and

– Legal and administrative costs


– Price risk in emergency liquidation of assets
ƒ Behavioural implications
– Incentive to take large
g risks
3) Capita

– Incentive toward underinvestment or “milking the


property”
– Cashing out
ƒ Free cash flow hypothesis
yp
* Cp. BD (2007), pp. 497-498; 503-505, RWJ (2002), pp. 425-430.
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 55
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C The Optimal Capital Structure…
Structure
…with risky debt, bankruptcy costs, and taxes.
d the Co
al Structture and
3) Capita

Source: RWJ (2002), p. 432


2.
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 56
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Treadeoff Theory
ƒ Tradeoff between positive (tax shield) and negative
d the Co

(costs of financial distress) effects of debt:


VL = VU + PV ⎡⎣Tax Shield ( B ) ⎤⎦ − PV ⎡⎣ Financial Distress Cost ( B ) ⎤⎦
al Structture and

ƒ Tax shield and cost of financial distress are non


non-
linear functions of debt:
Tax Shield ( B ) = max [ EBIT , kb ⋅ B ] ⋅τ c
3) Capita

Bankruptcy Cost ( B ) = PD ( B ) ⋅ LGD

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 57


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C The Pecking Order Theory
ƒ Use internal financing
d the Co

(No direct transaction cost)

ƒ Use debt (low


(low-risk)
risk) financing
al Structture and

(1-3% direct transaction cost*)

ƒ U equity
Use it (high-risk)
(high i k) financing
fi i g
(3.5-7% direct transaction cost*)
3) Capita

ƒ Issue when overvalued


ƒ Forego projects when undervalued?
* Cp. BD (2007), p. 533.
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 58
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Stakeholders‘ Claims as Options
Stakeholders
How can the positions of shareholders and
d the Co

bondholders be described with call options?


al Structture and

S
Shareholders
ƒ are long a call option
45°
3) Capita

Bondholders
ƒ own the firm 45°

ƒ are short a call option


p
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 59
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Stakeholders‘ Claims as Options
Stakeholders
How can the positions of shareholders and
d the Co

bondholders be described with put options?


al Structture and

Shareholders
S
ƒ own the firm
ƒ are short
h a risk-less
i kl bond
b d
ƒ are long a put option
45°
3) Capita

Bondholders
ƒ are long a risk-less
risk less bond
ƒ are short a put option
45°

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 60


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Stakeholders‘ Claims as Options
Stakeholders
Reconciliation of the options
p approach:
pp
d the Co
al Structture and

45°

+ ⇒
3) Capita

45°

45°

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 61


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Some Statements from BD (2007)
“When securities are fairly priced, the original shareholders
d the Co

of a firm capture the full benefit of the interest tax shield


from an increase in leverage”
al Structture and

BD (2007),
(2007) p. 469
469.

ƒ Leverage increases riskiness of equity


ƒ Risk is compensated by higher return to equity holders
3) Capita

ƒ Attention:
Ri
Risk
k also
l iincreases expected
t d costt off fi
financial
i l di
distress
t
(see next slide)

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 62


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
Capital
ost of C Some Statements from BD (2007)
“When securities are fairly priced, the original shareholders
d the Co

of a firm pay the present value of the costs associated with


bankruptcy and financial distress.”
al Structture and

BD (2007),
(2007) p. 500
500.

ƒ In financial distress,
distress shareholders are indifferent to costs
to bondholders
ƒ Bondholders anticipate financial distress costs
3) Capita

ƒ Present value of the costs is priced into cost of debt


ƒ Cost of debt reduces return to equity

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 63


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
e Finance, WS 2009 Homework for Chapter 4
ƒ BD Chapter 17

ƒ CWS Chapter 16
orporate

ƒ RWJ Chapter 18
PS Co

ƒ Q&A, Articles, etc.

ƒ Reader-Articles

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 64


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
e Finance, WS 2009
Karl-Franzens-University Graz
INSTITUTE OF BANKING AND FINANCE

Chapter 4
Payout Policy
orporate

ƒ Modigliani-Miller
Modigliani Miller and Homemade Dividends
PS Co

ƒ Share Repurchases
ƒ Real-World Factors
4) Payout Policy Homemade Dividends: Example
Assumptions:
ƒ No taxes, no transaction costs, no information
asymmetry

Example:
ƒ COF Corp. (share price of € 21,50)
– Announces
A dividend
di id d off € 1,50/share
1 50/ h
ƒ John Checker (owns
( 40 shares of COF Corp.)
p)
– Wants dividend of (a) € 2,50/share or
((b)) € 0,50/share
, /
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 66
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Homemade Dividends: Example
Initial wealth:
€ 21.50 x 40 shares = € 860.00

Wealth after dividend payout:

Dividend of € 1.50
1 50
Proceeds from dividend € 1.50 x 40 shares = € 60.00
Value of stock holdings € 20
20.00
00 x 40 shares = € 800
800.00
00
Total € 860.00

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 67


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Homemade Dividends: Example
Desired dividend: € 2.50

Dividend of € 2.50 Homemade dividend


Proceeds from € 2.50 x 40 shares = € 1.50 x 40 shares =
dividend € 100.00 € 60.00
Proceeds from stock € 20.00 x 2 shares =
€ 0.00
sale € 40.00
Sum € 100.00 € 100.00
Value of stock € 19.00 x 40 shares = € 20.00 x 38 shares =
h ldi
holdings € 760
760.00
00 € 760
760.00
00
Total € 860.00 € 860.00

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 68


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Homemade Dividends: Example
Desired dividend: € 0.50

Dividend of € 0.50 Homemade dividend


Proceeds from € 0.50 x 40 shares = € 1.50 x 40 shares =
dividend € 20.00 € 60.00
Cost of stock € -20.00 x 2 shares =
€ 0.00
purchase € -40.00
Sum € 20.00 € 20.00
Value of stock € 21.00 x 40 shares = € 20.00 x 42 shares =
h ldi
holdings € 840
840.00
00 € 840
840.00
00
Total € 860.00 € 860.00

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 69


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Implications of Homemade Dividends
ƒ Dividend policy is irrelevant under the
assumptions made

ƒ Investors will not pay more for high-dividend firms

ƒ Any iincome stream


A tr can be
b created
r t d using
i g
homemade dividends

ƒ Firms should never forego positive NPV-projects

ƒ Taxes and transaction costs can change


conclusions
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 70
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Share Repurchase: Example
Consider the following balance sheet:

Assets Liabilities
Cash € 500,000 Debt € 3,000,000
Other assets € 7,500,000 Equity € 5,000,000
Total € 8,000,000 Total € 8,000,000
Shares outstanding: 50,000
50 000
Price per share: € 5,000,000 / 50,000 = € 100.00

The company wants to distribute € 200,000 to


its shareholders.
shareholders
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 71
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Share Repurchase: Example
Balance sheet after € 4.00 dividend/share:

Assets Liabilities
Cash € 300,000 Debt € 3,000,000
Other assets € 7,500,000 Equity € 4,800,000
Total € 7,800,000 Total € 7,800,000
Shares outstanding: 50,000
50 000
Price per share: € 4,800,000 / 50,000 = € 96.00

Price per share plus dividend equals value before


distribution (€ 100.00).
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 72
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Share Repurchase: Example
Balance sheet after repurchase of 2,000 shares:

Assets Liabilities
Cash € 300,000 Debt € 3,000,000
Other assets € 7,500,000 Equity € 4,800,000
Total € 7,800,000 Total € 7,800,000
Shares outstanding: 48,000
48 000
Price per share: € 4,800,000 / 48,000 = € 100.00

Balance sheet is the same as after the dividend


payment
payment.
333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 73
Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF
4) Payout Policy Implications of Share Repurchases
ƒ Share repurchase is equivalent to dividend if
there are no taxes

ƒ Taxes and transaction costs can change


conclusions

ƒ Open-market repurchase or tender offer (possibly


“ rong” price)
“wrong”

333.313 PS Corporate Finance, WS 2009 74


Stefan Palan, Institute of Banking & Finance © 2009 IBF

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