Title: Introduction to corporate financing
1Introduction to corporate financing
2Back to the principles of corporate finance
- The Financing Principle Choose a financing mix
that minimizes the hurdle rate and matches the
assets being financed - What are the firms choices with respect to
financing its investments? - Retained earnings
- Equity
- Debt
- The mix of debt and equity used by a firm is
called the firms capital structure. Is there an
optimal external financing mix (capital
structure) and, if so, what is it?
3Trends in FinancingSources of Funds for
Investment for U.S. Non-Financial
Corporations(expressed as a percent of each
years total investment)
Internal funds are net income plus depreciation
less cash dividends paid to shareholders. Source
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Flow of Funds Accounts
4Trends in FinancingSources of Funds for
Investment for U.S. Non-Financial
Corporations(expressed as a percent of each
years total investment)
Internal funds are net income plus depreciation
less cash dividends paid to shareholders. Source
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Flow of Funds Accounts
5Patterns of firm financing
- Publicly traded firms in the US finance their
investments mostly with funds generated
internally rather than with external funds - 70-90 of financing is internal
- Notice that in almost every year there exists a
financing gap (difference between cash needed to
finance investments and cash generated
internally) - When using external financing, firms are more
likely to use debt rather than equity even though
there are variations in the debt-equity mix from
year to year
6Do firms rely too much on internal funds?
- The data show a heavy reliance of firms on
internal funds - Are managers averse to external financing? Do
they forego positive NPV projects if they involve
external financing? - There are some good reasons for relying on
internal funds - Cost of issuing new securities is avoided
- Announcement of new equity is usually bad news
for investors who worry that the decision signals
lower future profits or higher risk
7The distinction between debt and equity
- The difference between debt and equity is not one
between bonds and stocks, but is determined by
the nature of each assets claims on the firms
cash flows - Debt and equity are distinguished based on the
following characteristics - Nature of claim
- Priority of cash flows
- Tax treatment
- Maturity
- Management control
8Characteristics of debt and equity
9The firms financing choices
- The range of financing choices available to firms
has expanded greatly in recent decades - Firms can choose among the following instruments
to finance their investments - Common stock
- Preferred stock
- Debt
- Convertible securities
- The firms choice of financing depends on its
needs and the reception of the firms securities
by investors not on securities laws
10Common stock
- Common stockholders are the owners of the firm
they hold the residual claim on the earnings of
the firm (i.e., they receive whatever is left
after all debts are paid) - In 2000, over 60 of common stock in the US was
held by financial institutions (banks, pension
and mutual funds, insurance companies) - Pension and mutual funds each held about 20 of
all common stock - Common stock is the conventional way for a firm
to raise equity capital either through an IPO or
through seasonal offerings
11- The maximum number of shares that can be issued
is known as the authorized share capital - If management wants to increase the number of
authorized shares, it needs to receive approval
by the firms shareholders - The firms shares held by investors are said to
be issued and outstanding - When a firm repurchases its outstanding shares,
these shares are held in the Treasury until they
are cancelled or resold and are called issued but
not outstanding
12- Common stockholders have the right to vote to
- Elect the Board of Directors
- Approve mergers
- Increase the number of shares of stock that the
firm can issue - In the US and the UK, firm ownership is widely
dispersed, meaning that it is rare to find
shareholders who own more than 5-10 of the
outstanding shares of a firm - In many countries, firm ownership is more
concentrated and large shareholders may own 20
or more of shares this is less common in the US
(e.g. Microsoft)
13Classes of common stock
- If existing shareholders do not wish to
relinquish control, they can attach inferior
voting rights to newly-issued shares - Thus, firms may have several classes of stock
with different voting rights - For example, a firm may have class A shares and
class B shares where A shares have 10 votes each
and B shares have 1 vote each - Shares with superior voting rights trade, on
average, at a small premium in the US
14- Firms may also issue different classes of stock
that differ in terms of dividend payments - One class of shares receives cash dividends
- A second class of shares receives stock dividends
- Possible explanations of this difference are
- The firm is trying to attract investors in
different tax brackets - The firm may be trying to compensate investors
who hold shares with inferior voting rights by
offering higher dividend payments
15Preferred stock
- Preferred stock is a form of a hybrid security
and is typically a small proportion of a firms
financing - Preferred stock pays a fixed dividend like debt,
but does not have a final repayment date (firm
often buys back the stock) - A firm can choose not to pay dividend, but
skipped dividends are accumulated and must
eventually be repaid (cumulative vs.
non-cumulative preferred stock) - Dividends must be paid to preferred stockholders
before common stockholders receive any cash flows
16- Preferred stockholders are paid after
bondholders, but before common stockholders - Major advantage of preferred stock is that it
does not dilute shareholder ownership, but a
disadvantage is that payments to preferred
shareholders are not tax deductible - Variants of preferred stock are convertible
preferred stock and adjustable rate preferred
stock
17Why do firms issue preferred stock?
- Preferred stock is more expensive than debt and
is not tax deductible - However, firms issue preferred stock because
- Preferred stock is calculated as equity when
determining a firms leverage - Firms dont have to pay taxes on 70 of dividends
from preferred stock investments in other
companies
18Debt
- Stockholders issue debt promising to make regular
interest payments and repay the principal - Debt comes with limited liability stockholders
can default on debt and turn over the
corporations assets to creditors - Lenders do not generally have voting power or
control on management - Interest payments are viewed as a cost for the
firm and are, thus, deductible from taxable
income
19Debt characteristics
- Debt maturity
- Short-term vs. long-term debt (most corporate
bonds have maturities between 5-20 years) - In general, maturity should match the horizon of
the investment - Larger firms can issue short-term debt
(commercial paper) while smaller firms rely on
bank financing for short-term needs - Fixed vs. floating interest rate
- Typically, rates are fixed, even though rates can
also be floating and linked to an interbank rate
such as LIBOR -
20- Choice of currency
- Debt can be issued domestically in US dollars or
issued as dollar-denominated bonds abroad
(eurobonds) - Firms with large operations overseas may issue
bonds in a foreign currency - Debt security
- Secured debt has the highest priority in terms of
payment (mortgage bonds, collateral bonds) - This debt is backed by collateral (inventory,
accounts receivable, equipment, etc.) - Unsecured bonds backed by the firms general
credit are called debentures, if they have
maturity greater than 15 years, and notes if
their maturity is less than 15 years
21- Debt seniority
- Some debt is subordinated (junior claim) in case
of default - Subordinated debt holders get paid after other
creditors, but before preferred and common stock - Debt may have a call provision this allows the
firm to repay and retire debt before its maturity
date - Moodys and Standard Poors rate bonds on a
regular basis - Bonds below investment grade (BBB for SP, Baa
for Moodys) are referred to as junk bonds and
must offer a risk premium to investors
22Convertible securities
- Firms issue securities that give investors the
option to convert them into other securities
called convertible securities - Thus, the option that these securities include
may have a significant impact on their value - There are three types of convertible securities
issued by firms - Warrants
- Convertible bonds
- Stock options
23- Warrants give their holders the right to buy
shares in a firm at a fixed price within a
certain period of time, in exchange for paying
for the warrants today - Warrants are attractive because
- Their value increases with the variance of the
firms stock - They create no financial obligations for the firm
in terms of dividends at the time of their issue - They avoid ownership dilution while allowing the
firm to raise equity capital
24- Convertible debt (bonds) gives its owner the
option to exchange the bond into common stock at
a pre-determined exchange ratio - Convertible bonds are attractive because
- Firms can offer a lower yield because the
conversion option has value - Convertible bonds are an attractive alternative
to firms with high growth that do not currently
have high operating cash flows - Convertible debt can reduce conflicts between
equity and debt holders in a firm
25- A couple of examples
- Amazon.com raised 1.25 billion in February 1999
by selling convertible debt with conversion
prices of 78 and offering yield of 4.75, which
was 500-600 basis points below junk bond yield - From 1994 to third quarter of 1999, convertible
debt comprised 5-10 of total public debt
issuance for non-financial corporations, while in
Q4 1999 Q1 2000 it jumped to 20-25 due to the
soaring NASDAQ