Title: Capital Structure
1Capital Structure
- Merrill Lynch Investment Banking Institute
- July 2008
- Prof. Michael R. Roberts
2Topic Overview
- How should we think about capital structure?
- A benchmark the MM irrelevance propositions
- When is capital structure relevant?
- Taxes
- Bankruptcy costs
- Agency costs (benefits)
- Asymmetric information
3The Intuition Behind MM
- Buy a house today for 100,000 and sell one year
later - Assume mortgage rate is 10
- E.g., 145,000 (50,000 5,000)/50,000 - 1
80
(New Price)
(What we owe)
(What we paid)
4Questions
- Does the value of the house depend on the size of
the mortgage? - What does change with the size of the mortgage?
5Financing InvestmentExample
- All equity firm considers a project (note this
info.) - Invest 800 today
- Payoff tomorrow
- 1400 if strong economy w.p. 50
- 900 if weak economy w.p. 50
- Risk-Free Rate (Rf) 5
- Project Risk Premium (Rp-Rf) 10
6All Equity FinancingExample (Cont.)
- Project NPV Present value of future cash flows
to project less initial investment - How much equity can we raise? (Present value of
future cash flows to equity holders) - What are returns to shareholders (in both states
and expectation)? - What are the entrepreneurs profits?
-
7Debt and Equity FinancingExample (Cont.)
- Now suppose borrow 500, in addition to selling
equity - Note Project Cash Flows Debt Owed in each
state ? - debt is risk-free ? Rd Rf 5
- Payoffs to Debt and Equity
- MM I ? Value of firm is independent of capital
structure in perfect capital markets ? E 500 - Cash flows of D and E sum to Project cash flows ?
D and E must sum to value of firm (Law of One
Price) - MM I says that V D E, regardless of what D
and E are!
?
8Effect of Leverage on Risk and ReturnExample
(Cont.)
- Why isnt the value of equity
- ?
- Levered equity carries a higher risk premium than
unlevered equity ? rE?15 anymore - Levered equity higher risk higher return
(25) - This is not due to default risk! (Debt is
risk-free) - Project risk is the same 15
9MM I Synopsis
- In a perfect capital market, the total value of
a firm is equal to the market value of the total
cash flows generated by its assets and is not
affected by its choice of capital structure - Value of Firm (V) Value of Debt (D) Value of
Equity (E) (No matter what D and E are!) - Only thing that matters for value (size of the
pie) is the PV of the cash flowsdoesnt matter
how you divide them up (slice the pie) -
-
10The Cost of Capital
- Remember MM I implies
- Vl E D Vu ( Va)
- Return on a portfolio equals weighted average of
returns to the securities in the portfolio so - But this implies
-
11MM IILeverage, Risk, and the Cost of Capital
- MM Proposition II says
- The cost of capital of levered equity is equal to
the cost of capital of unlevered equity plus a
premium that is proportional to the market value
debt-equity ratio - With perfect capital markets WACC is constant
function of leverage because as D/E changes, rE
changes to compensate - For really high leverage, rD will change as well
(rD rA in limit) -
-
12WACC Leverage in Perfect Capital Markets
- VU1000 rA 15 rD5
- Shape of rE and rD dictated by response of cash
flows to leverage
13Leverage and EPS
- Fallacy
- Leverage can increase stock prices via its affect
on EPS - Rationale Leverage leads to higher earnings per
share, which in turn lead to higher stock prices - Error Ignores the impact of leverage on risk
- Example Levitron Industries (LVI)
- Currently
- All equity with 10mil shares with 7.50/share
- Next year EBIT 10mil
- Considering
- borrowing 15mil _at_ 8 and use proceeds to
repurchase 2mil shares _at_ 7.50/share - What are the consequences of this transaction
assuming perfect capital markets?
14Implications of Leverage for EPSExample (Cont.)
- Initial EPS
- LVIs earnings (EBIT)
- LVI has no debt ?
- Perfect markets ?
- Initial EPS
- EPS after debt issuance share repurchase
- Creates Annual Interest Payments
- Earnings after interest
- Share Repurchase
- of shares after repurchase
- EPS after debt issue repurchase
- EPS went up!
- Looks good but are shareholders really better off?
?
no interest
?
no taxes
?
10mil / 10mil 1/Share
?
15mil x 8 1.2mil/Year
?
10mil - 1.2mil 8.8mil
?
?
10mil 2mil 8mil
?
8.8mil / 8mil 1.10 1.00
15Leverage and EPS A Closer LookExample (Cont.)
- MM tells us that there can be no benefit so
something must give... - Imagine that EBIT was only 4mil (instead of
10mil) - Before debt issuance EPS
- After debt issuance and share repurchase EPS
- So, when earnings are low, leverage amplifies EPS
fall just as leverage amplifies EPS climb with
high earnings - This amplification effect is just increased
risk of earnings! - The higher expected EPS is associated with higher
risk (i.e., MM I still holds)
Risk!
?
4mil / 10mil 0.40/Share
?
?
(4mil 1.2mil) / (10mil 2mil) 0.35/Share
16Leverage and EPS A Picture
- Average EPS is higher for levered firm
- Risk is higher (steeper line) for levered firm
17Leverage and Stock PriceExample (Cont.)
- Assume
- LVIs EBIT is constant in the future (10mil)
- All earnings are paid out in dividends
- If we increase EPS, what will happen to the share
price? - Unlevered
- Recall Earnings 10mil Shares 10mil ? EPS
1 - Dividends/Share (DPS)
- Value the company as a perpetuity to get the WACC
- Recall Price/Share 7.50
- Market Cap
1
?
1/rE ? rE 13.33 rA
?
7.50/Shr x 10mil Shr 75mil
?
18Leverage and Stock Price (Cont.)Example (Cont.)
- Levered
- Recall Issue 15mil debt to repo 15mil of
equity _at_ 7.50/shr - ? buyback 15mil/7.50/shr 2mil shr ? 10mil
2mil 8mil shares remaining after buyback - MM I ? New Market Cap
- ? New D/E ratio
- MM II New rE
- Earnings Interest
- New EPS
- New Share Price
- Intuition
- EPS is higher but so is risk, so shareholders
demand higher return rE
75mil - 15mil 60mil
?
?
15/60 1/4
13.33 ¼(13.33 - 8) 14.66
?
?
10mil (15mil x 0.08) 8.8mil
?
8.8mil / 8mil 1.10
1.1 / 14.66 7.50 ( Old Share Price)
?
19Equity Issuances and
Dilution
- According to CFOs in the US, what is the most
important consideration when issuing equity - Dilution!
- Fallacy
- Issuing equity will dilute existing shareholders
ownership - Rationale more shares mean the firm must be
divided among a larger of shares, thereby
reducing the value of each individual share - Error Ignores the fact that cash raised by
issuance increases the firms assets. - Example Jet Sky Airlines (JSA)
- Currently
- No debt
- 500mil shares trading _at_ 16/shr ? Market cap
8bil - Considering
- Expanding operations by buying 1bil new planes
with new equity _at_ current price 16/share - What are the implications for the stock price?
?
20Effect of Equity Issuances on Stock Prices
- The firm issues 62.5mil new shares _at_ 16/share to
get 1bil - Firm grows by 1bil, which offsets increase in
shares - Any gain or loss from issuance comes from project
NPV (i.e. what you do with the proceeds) - Key assumption
- Sell the shares at a fair price!
21Capital Structure in Perfect Capital
MarketsSumming it Up
- Conservation of Value Principle for Financial
Markets - With perfect capital markets, financial
transactions neither add nor destroy value, but
instead represent a repackaging of risk (and
therefore return). - MM I V E D
- Value of the firm is just the sum of E D,
regardless of what they are - MM II rE rA D/E(rA - rD)
- Leverage increases risk of equity (not value
according to MM I)
22What are Perfect Capital Markets
- What are the assumptions behind MM? That is,
when are the MM propositions true? - no taxes,
- no bankruptcy costs,
- no agency costs/benefits,
- no information asymmetry, and
- no transaction costs
- What the !_at_ ? Whats the point of this?
- If financial policy is to matter, it must be that
it mitigates (or takes advantage of) one or more
of these frictions - Devise financial strategies around minimizing
(maximizing) the adverse (beneficial) effects of
these frictions
23Debt and Taxes
- Corporations pay taxes on their profits after
interest payments are deducted ? interest expense
reduces taxes - Example Safeway, Inc.
- Safeways 2005 net income is lower with leverage
than without and
24Debt and Taxes (Cont.)
- equity is lower with leverage than without
- But, Safeway has greater value with leverage!
- Whats going on?
- With leverage, Safeway is worth an additional
140mil - This difference is just the value of the interest
tax shield -
25The Picture with Taxes
- In a perfect capital market, V D E
- Now, the government gets a slice!
- We can minimize that slice by shielding income
with debt!
26The WACC with and Without Corporate Taxes
27Leverage Recapitalization RevisitedExample
- Midco Industries
- Currently
- 20mil shares outstanding _at_ 15/share
- Stable earnings
- 35 tax rate
- Plan
- Borrow 100mil (on permanent basis)
- Use proceeds to repurchase shares
- What happens after the share repurchase?
28Leverage Recapitalization Revisited Example
(Cont.)
- Before Recap
- VA VU E
- After Recap
- PV(interest tax shield) tCD
- VL VU tCD
- E VL D
- Investors get 100mil from repo and equity is
worth 235mil ? 35mil gain with leverage
20mil shares x 15/share 300mil
?
0.35(100mil) 35mil
?
300 35 335mil ED
?
335mil - 100mil 235mil
?
29Leverage Recapitalization Revisited Example
(Cont.)
- Assume Midco repurchases shares _at_ current price
15/share - Repurchase 100mil 15/share 6.67mil shares
- After repurchase
- New of shares outstanding
- New share price after repo
- Shareholders that keep their shares gain
-
- Total gain
20mil 6.67mil 13.33mil
?
235mil/13.33mil 17.625/Shr
?
?
17.625 - 15 2.625/Share
2.625/Share x 13.33mil 35mil PV(Int Tax
Shield)
?
30Leverage Recapitalization RevisitedA Problem
- Why would anyone tender their shares for 15 if
they know that after the recap their shares will
be worth 17.63? - Alternatively, why dont I buy shares _at_ 15
before the repo, and then sell after the repo _at_
17.63 for an arbitrage profit? - It is precisely this arbitrage activity that will
drive up the price before the recap! - The announcement of the recap will drive up the
stock price to incorporate the PV (interest tax
shield) ex ante - So Midcos equity will rise from 300mil to
335mil before the repo - Price per share will increase to 335mil / 20mil
16.75 - Tax shield surplus will be split evenly between
those who tender their shares and those who keep
their shares - Original shareholders capture all of the surplus
1.75 x 20mil 35mil
31Financial Distress Costs
- Direct Costs
- Legal fees, court costs, opportunity cost of time
- Indirect Costs
- Stakeholder flight
- Supplier
- Distributer
- Customer
- Employees
- Creditor intervention (covenant violations)
- Asset fire sales
- Shareholders pay for these costs!
32The Picture with Taxes and Financial Distress
Costs
- Now, there is deadweight loss due to financial
distress costs - We can minimize that slice by taking on less debt
but then governments piece gets bigger ?
tradeoff
33Agency Costs
- Agency Costs are costs that arise when there are
conflicts of interest between the firms
stakeholders - Different claimants have different incentives,
which can lead firms to undertake actions that
hurt one groups to benefit another - Overinvestment and Asset Substitution
- Underinvestment and Debt Overhang
- Agency costs are another cost of increasing
leverage, just like bankruptcy costs
34Are Agency Costs Important?
- Think about some of the giant collapses of the
last decade - Enron
- Worldcom
- Adelphi
- Think about all the mechanisms and institutions
developed to address incentive conflicts - What do all debt contracts contain? (Hint It
begins with a c) - SEC
- SOX
- Board of Directors
- Think about why you do anythingit must be in
your interest in one way or another
35Asymmetric InformationStock Returns Around
Equity Issuances
36Capital Structure and Asymmetric Information
- Asymmetric information refers to a situation
where parties have different information - E.g., Managers often have better information
relative to investors regarding their firm - Adverse selection refers to the idea that with
asymmetric information, the average quality of
assets in the market will differ from the average
overall quality - Investors know managers are selling overvalued
equity - Lemons principle when seller has private
information about the value of a good, buyers
will discount the price they will pay because of
adverse selection - Investors discount the price they will pay for
the equity - Alternative Use debt as a signal to investors
- Issuing debt suggests that the firm really will
grow since Ive pre-committed to pay back the debt
37Summary
- If you want to add value to a firm with financial
policy or strategy, then you have to be able to
point to at least one of the following channels - Reducing taxes
- Reducing bankruptcy costs
- Mitigating incentive conflicts
- Getting managers to behave
- Mitigating adverse selection costs
- Credibly conveying to the market that you are a
good firm - Much of financial innovation revolves around
addressing these issues to create value for
firms/investors - MIPS
- Junk Debt
- CDOs
- Syndicated Loans
38Asset Substitution or OverinvestmentBaxter Inc.
- Owes 1mil due at end of year
- Without a change in strategy, assets will be
worth only 0.9mil ? Baxter will default if they
take no action - Baxters considering a new strategy
- No upfront investment
- Success will increase firms assets to 1.3mil
w.p. 50 - Failure will decrease firms assets to 0.3mil
w.p. 50 - This is a negative NPV project since expected
value of firms assets decline from 900mil to
800mil - But, does this mean Baxter wont undertake the
investment?
39Asset Substitution or OverinvestmentBaxter Inc.
(Cont.)
- Note
- Equityholders gain 150mil from investment (0 to
150mil) - Debtholders lose 250mil from investment (900mil
to 650mil) - Net gain (loss) in firm value of -100mil NPV
of strategy - 0.5(1300-900) 0.5(300-900) -100mi
- Equity holders have incentive to gamble with
debt holders money but debt holders will
anticipate this and pay less ex ante
40Debt Overhang and UnderinvestmentBaxter Inc.
- Owes 1mil at end of year but without a change in
strategy, assets will be worth only 0.9mil ?
default - Considering alternative strategy
- Requires initial investment of 0.1mil
- Generates risk-free return of 50
- Clearly a positive NPV investment
- Problem (?) Baxter doesnt have the cash on hand
- Can they raise the money in the equity market?
41Debt Overhang and UnderinvestmentBaxter Inc.
(Cont.)
- If equity holders contribute 0.1mil, they only
get back 0.05mil - 0.1mil goes to debt holders, whose payoff goes
from 0.9mil to 1mil - Even though project is positive NPV, equity
holders wont undertake it because most of the
benefit goes to debt holders - Underinvestment or Debt Overhang
42Agency Costs and the Value of Leverage
- Leverage can encourage managers and shareholders
to act in ways that reduce firm value. - It appears that equity holders benefit at expense
of debt holders. - But, ultimately the shareholders bear these
agency costs. - When a firm adds leverage to its capital
structure, the decision has two effects on the
share price. - The share price benefits from equity holders
ability to exploit debt holders in times of
distress. - But, debt holders recognize this possibility and
pay less for the debt when its issued ? reduces
amount firm can distribute to shareholders. - Debt holders lose more than shareholders gain
from these activities and the net effect is a
reduction in the initial share price of the firm.
43Agency Costs and the Amount of LeverageExample
- Scenario 1 Do nothing
- Firm will be worth 0.9mil ? E 0.5mil D
0.4mil - Scenario 2 Risky strategy
- Equity worth only 0.45mil under risky strategy,
0.5mil under existing so shareholders will
reject it
44Agency Costs and the Amount of Leverage Example
(Cont.)
- Scenario 3 Conservative strategy
- Shareholders value increase by 0.15mil for a
0.1mil investment so theyre willing to invest
in the project
45Mitigating Agency Costs
- Shorter maturity debt can offset agency costs by
limiting scope of expropriation - Covenants can mitigate agency costs by forcing
managers to commit not to expropriate debtholders
46Agency Benefits of Leverage
- Managerial Entrenchment occurs from the
separation of ownership and control in which
managers make decisions to benefit themselves at
the expense of investors - Leverage can preserve ownership concentration and
mitigate agency costs - Issuing debt can maintain the original
shareholders stake, while issuing equity can
dilute original shareholders incentives because
any agency costs are shared with others - Leverage can mitigate empire building tendencies
arising from incentives to run large firms (e.g.,
salary structure, perquisites) - Leverage imposes discipline by pre-committing the
cash flows and by creditor monitoring
47Agency Costs and the Tradeoff Theory
- The value of the levered firm can now be shown to
be
48Aggregate Sources of Funding for Capital
Expenditures, U.S. Corporations
49Leverage and the Equity Cost of CapitalExample
- Levered equity has a return sensitivity that is
125 that of unlevered equity ? risk premium is
125 that of unlevered equity
50Effect of Leverage on Risk and Return Example
(Cont.)
- The returns to equity holders are very different
with and without leverage. - Unlevered equity has a return of either 40 or
10, for an expected return of 15. - Levered equity has higher risk, with a return of
either 75 or 25, for an higher expected return
of 25. - Levered equity has twice the systematic risk of
unlevered equity ? has twice the risk premium
51Homemade Leverage and ArbitrageExample
- Same assets ? same value ? unlevered firm is
undervalued (or levered firms is overvalued) - Buy low and sell high!
- Buy the equity of the unlevered firm on margin to
replicate the levered equity cash flows - Short sell the equity of the levered firm
- What is impact of arbitrage activity on security
prices?
52Leveraged Recapitalization
- A leveraged recapitalization is when a firm
borrows money to pay a (large) special dividend
or repurchase (a lot of) shares - Example Harrison Industries
- All equity firm 50mil shares _at_ 4/share ? Market
Cap 200mil - Plan Borrow 80mil to repurchase _at_ 4/shr,
80mil/4 20mil shares - What are the implications of the planned recap?
53Leveraged Recapitalization Example (Cont.)
- Note
- Share price doesnt change since its a 0-NPV
transaction 80mil in debt for 80mil in equity
54Multiple Securities
- When firms have multiple securities, the WACC is
computed by a weighted average cost of capital of
all the securities - Example Consider entrepreneurs firm at outset
but - Capital structure is
- Risk-free debt 500 _at_ 5
- Equity 440 _at_ rE
- Warrants 60 pay 210 in strong economy and 0 in
weak - The WACC is
55Multiple SecuritiesExample (Cont.)
- Compute return on Warrants, rW
- Compute return on equity, rE
- Compute WACC
56Net Debt
- We can view cash as negative debt
- Its risk-free and reduces risk, the opposite of
debt - 1 of cash in the firm will earn the risk-free
rate - 1 of debt in the firm will pay the risk-free
rate - Net Debt Debt Cash (and Risk-Free Securities)
57Cash and Beta Example
- Ciscos net debt 0 - 16bil -16bil
- Implies total value E D 110bil (-16bil)
94bil - Whats going on?
- Equity has capitalized 94bil in assets and
16bil in cash - Business assets are risky (ßA 2.57), cash is
not (ßC 0) - So, equity is less risky than firms business
assets because of the cash
58Interest Tax Shields withTarget Debt-Equity
Ratios
- When a firm adjusts its leverage to maintain a
target debt-equity ratio, we can compute its
value with leverage, VL, by discounting its free
cash flow using the weighted average cost of
capital. - The value of the interest tax shield can be found
by comparing the value of the levered firm, VL,
to the unlevered value, VU, of the free cash flow
discounted at the firms unlevered cost of
capital, the pretax WACC.
59Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with a Target
Debt-Equity Ratio Example
- Compute unlevered value
- Step 1 Compute pre-tax WACC
- Step 2 Compute firm value as growing perpetuity
60Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with a Target
Debt-Equity Ratio Example (Cont.)
- Compute levered value
- Step 1 Compute post-tax WACC
- Step 2 Compute firm value as growing perpetuity
- Compute value of interest tax shield
61Interest Tax Shield with Personal TaxesExample
- In 2005 t15
- VU300mil
- VL VU tD 300 0.15(100) 315mil
- With 20mil original shares outstanding, stock
price would increase by 15mil / 20mil
0.75/share