Chap 013
Chap 013
Chap 013
Leverage and
Capital Structure
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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Chapter Outline
• The Capital Structure Question
• The Effect of Financial Leverage
• Capital Structure Theory: Case I, II &III
• Corporate Taxes and Capital Structure
• Bankruptcy Costs
• Optimal Capital Structure
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Capital Structure
• Decision on how to raise the funds?
– Issue Equity Securities
– Issue Debt Securities
• What is the primary goal of financial managers?
– Maximize stockholders’ wealth
• We want to choose the capital structure that will
maximize stockholder wealth by either:
– maximizing firm value or
– minimizing WACC
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Capital Restructuring
• We are going to look at how changes in capital
structure affect the value of the firm, all else
equal
• Capital restructuring involves changing the
amount of leverage a firm has without changing
the firm’s assets
• Increase leverage by issuing debt and
repurchasing outstanding shares
• Decrease leverage by issuing new shares and
retiring outstanding debt
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Financial Leverage, ROE and EPS
Current Proposed
Assets $8 mil $8 mil
Debt 0 $4 mil (at 10% interest)
Equity $8 mil $4 mil
Debt equity ratio 0 1
Share price $20 $20
Shares outstanding 400k 200k
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Example: Financial Leverage, EPS
and ROE
• Variability in ROE
– Current: ROE ranges from 6.25% to 18.75%
– Proposed: ROE ranges from 2.50% to 27.50%
• Variability in EPS
– Current: EPS ranges from $1.25 to $3.75
– Proposed: EPS ranges from $0.50 to $5.50
• The variability in both ROE and EPS increases
when financial leverage is increased. IOW,
Leverage amplifies the variation in both EPS and
ROE
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Break-Even EBIT
• Find EBIT where EPS is the same under
both the current and proposed capital
structures
• If we expect EBIT to be greater than the
break-even point, then leverage is
beneficial to our stockholders
• If we expect EBIT to be less than the
break-even point, then leverage is
detrimental to our stockholders
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Homemade Leverage
Homemade leverage: use of personal borrowing to change
the overall amount of financial leverage to which the
individual is exposed ==>capital structure is irrelevant
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Homemade Leverage-Example
Example: company is under current capital structure. An
investor is owning 100 shares but prefers the payoffs
under proposed capital structure
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Case I - Equations
• Prop I: Vu = EBIT/Ru
VL = Vu
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Case II - Example
Unlevered Firm Levered Firm
Case II – Proposition I
• The value of the firm increases by the
present value of the annual interest tax
shield
– Value of a levered firm
= value of an unlevered firm + PV(i tax shield)
– VU = EBIT(1-T) / RU
– VL = VU + DTC
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Case II – Proposition II
• The WACC decreases as debt increases because
of the government subsidies on interest payments
– RE = RU + (RU – RD)(D/E)(1-TC)
– WACC = RA = (E/V)RE + (D/V)(RD)(1-TC)
• Example
– EBIT=25m, Tc=35%, D=75m, Rd=9%, Ru=12%,
V=161.67m, E=86.67m
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Case III-With Corp Tax and
With Bankruptcy costs
• Financial distress
– Significant problems in meeting debt obligations
– Most firms that experience financial distress do not
ultimately file for bankruptcy
• Direct costs
– Costs directly related to bankruptcy ,eg: legal and
administrative costs
• Indirect bankruptcy costs
– Costs of avoiding a formal bankruptcy filing
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Case III-With Corp Tax and With
Bankruptcy costs
• As the D/E ratio increases, the probability of
bankruptcy increases
• This increased probability will increase the
expected bankruptcy costs
• At some point, the additional value of the interest
tax shield will be offset by the expected
bankruptcy cost-Trade-off Theory
• After this point, the value of the firm will start to
decrease and the WACC will start to increase as
more debt is added VL = VU + DTC –PV(BC)
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Figure 13.5
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Conclusions
• Case I – no taxes or bankruptcy costs
– No optimal capital structure
• Case II – corporate taxes but no BC
– Optimal capital structure is 100% debt
– Each additional dollar of debt increases the
cash flow of the firm
• Case III – corporate taxes and BC
– Optimal capital structure is part debt and part
equity
– Occurs where the benefit from an additional
dollar of debt is just offset by the increase in
expected bankruptcy costs
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Additional Managerial
Recommendations
• The tax benefit is only important if the firm
has a large tax liability
• Risk of financial distress
– The greater the risk of financial distress, the
less debt will be optimal for the firm
– The cost of financial distress varies across
firms and industries and as a manager you
need to understand the cost for your industry
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Tutorial
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