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The Capital Structure Decision

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Title: The Capital Structure Decision


1
The Capital Structure Decision
  • To have debt or not to have debt? That is the
    question!!
  • Precise what is the optimal MIX between debt and
    equity?
  • Look at some real life examples
  • Unfortunately, impossible to pinpoint a precise
    mi()
  • Still-there must be som kind of answer

2
1st. Impact of Debt
  • Level of debt is a policy decision (within
    limits, not right or wrong but risk and return
    trade-off)
  • Debt leverage MAGNIFIER
  • This is good and bad!
  • Consider an example

3
Firm U Unleveraged
Economy
Bad Avg.
Good
Prob. 0.25 0.50
0.25 EBIT 2,000 3,000
4,000 Intere 0
0 0 EBT 2,000
3,000 4,000 Taxes (40) 800
1,200 1,600 NI
1,200 1,800 2,400
4
Firm L Leveraged
Economy
Bad Avg.
Good
Prob. 0.25 0.50
0.25 EBIT 2,000 3,000
4,000 Interest 1,200 1,200
1,200 EBT 800
1,800 2,800 Taxes (40) 320
720 1,120 NI
480 1,080 1,680 Same as for Firm U.
5
Firm U Bad Avg. Good
BEP 10.0 15.0 20.0 ROI 6.0 9.0 12.0
ROE 6.0 9.0 12.0 TIE
8
8
8
Firm L Bad Avg. Good
BEP 10.0 15.0 20.0 ROI 8.4 11.4
14.4 ROE 4.8 10.8 16.8 TIE 1.7x 2.5x
3.3x ROI (NI Interest)/Total financing.
6
Profitability Measures E(BEP)
15.0 15.0 E(ROI)
9.0 11.4 E(ROE)
9.0 10.8 Risk Measures ?ROE
2.12
4.24 CVROE 0.24
0.39 E(TIE) 2.5x
U L
8
7
Conclusions
  • Basic earning power BEP EBIT/Total assets is
    unaffected by financial leverage.
  • L has higher expected ROI and ROE because of tax
    savings.
  • L has much wider ROE (and EPS) swings because of
    fixed interest charges. Its higher expected
    return is accompanied by higher risk.

(More...)
8
  • In a stand-alone risk sense, Firm Ls
    stockholders see much more risk than Firm Us.
  • U and L ?ROE(U) 2.12.
  • U ?ROE 2.12.
  • L ?ROE 4.24.
  • Ls financial risk is ?ROE - ?ROE(U) 4.24 -
    2.12 2.12. (Us is zero.)

(More...)
9
  • For leverage to be positive (increase expected
    ROE), BEP must be gt kd.
  • If kd gt BEP, the cost of leveraging will be
    higher than the inherent profitability of the
    assets, so the use of financial leverage will
    depress net income and ROE.
  • In the example, E(BEP) 15 while interest rate
    12, so leveraging works.

10
Impact of Debt
  • Note debt leverages ROE
  • The return to all investors (stock and debt
    holders) is greater with debt given same EBIT.
    See s
  • Why?
  • The IRS!-formally Tax shield

11
So, More Debt?
  • Trade-off. (as always) Risk vs. Return
  • Wheres risk?
  • 1st greater volatility. The range of actual ROEs
    is wider than without debt. See probability
    distributions
  • Greater Risk(std. Dev. Or CV)
  • In fact heres the concept of business risk

12
What is business risk?
  • Uncertainty about future operating income (EBIT).
  • Note that business risk focuses on operating
    income, so it ignores financing effects.

Probability
Low risk
High risk
EBIT
E(EBIT)
0
13
Factors That Influence Business Risk
  • Uncertainty about demand (unit sales).
  • Uncertainty about output prices.
  • Uncertainty about input costs.
  • Product and other types of liability.
  • Degree of operating leverage (DOL).

14
Business vs. Financial Risk
  • Even under no debtvariability (EBIT changes and
    so does ROE)
  • So a company with great deal of business risk
    would not want a lot of debt because it would
    accentuate that variability even more
  • A company with low business risk would be able to
    handle more debt

15
How Much Debt?
  • A Risk vs. return, of course
  • We said that risk is due to greater volatility in
    returns
  • That sounds too fancy. How about some real life
    answers?
  • Chain reaction
  • Remember Peter Lynch

16
Back to Business Risk
  • Recall that business risk is the inherent
    variability of your business.
  • As your EBIT fluctuates, so does your ROE and you
    have uncertainty
  • How much business risk you have in turn impacts
    how much debt you want to take on

17
Operating Leverage
  • def.
  • High degree of operating leverage highFC
  • Low degree of operating leveragelowFC
  • This impacts EBIT and thus ROE

18
What is operating leverage, and how does it
affect a firms business risk?
  • Operating leverage is the use of fixed costs
    rather than variable costs.
  • The higher the proportion of fixed costs within a
    firms overall cost structure, the greater the
    operating leverage.

(More...)
19
Breakeven Analysis
  • 1. If high DOL
  • breakeven point will be high (riskier)
  • if sales are up bigger profits
  • if sales are down bigger losses
  • 2. If low DOL
  • lower BE point (safer)
  • if sales are up lower profits
  • if sales are down lower losses

20
  • Higher operating leverage leads to more business
    risk, because a small sales decline causes a
    larger profit decline.

(More...)
21
Probability
Low operating leverage
High operating leverage
EBITL
EBITH
  • In the typical situation, higher operating
    leverage leads to higher expected EBIT, but also
    increases risk.

22
What is the Optimal Mix?
  • Theory on this is based on MM
  • 1st to systematically study capital structure
  • Very rigid theory (lots of assumptions)
  • But nevertheless a neat progression
  • 1. Under no Taxes (go ahead and laugh)
  • Capital structure is irrelevant
  • mix doesnt mattter
  • Value of the firm with or without debt is same

23
MM
  • 2. What if corporate taxes
  • Debt is great! (Tax shield)
  • As debt goes up value of the also up
  • optimal mix 100 debt!!!
  • 3. What if taxes and bankrupcy costs
  • more complicated
  • trade off benefits of debt vs. cost of debt
  • there is an optimal level

24
Trade-off Theory
  • MM theory ignores bankruptcy (financial distress)
    costs, which increase as more leverage is used.
  • At low leverage levels, tax benefits outweigh
    bankruptcy costs.
  • At high levels, bankruptcy costs outweigh tax
    benefits.
  • An optimal capital structure exists that balances
    these costs and benefits.

25
Bankrupcy Costs
  • Actual costs
  • legal expenses
  • accounting expenses
  • hard to liquidate maybe no liquidity
  • Potential costs
  • loss of customers/employees/suppliers
  • More debt more risk of bankrupcymore costs

26
Notes on Trade-off Model
  • Optimal point must exist for every company
  • Impossible to precisely determine
  • Best we can do is a range
  • We will do a hypothetical problem to determine an
    optimal mix

27
Information Asymmetry
  • Q Why do some large, well established companies
    have do little debt? A lot less than the
    trade-off model would suggest
  • Q2 Research shows that companies prefer to
    finance 1st with RE, next debt and only last with
    new stock. (Pecking order) Why?
  • Questions that trade-off model cant answer
  • Any ideas?

28
Information Asymmetry to the Rescue
  • 1st. There are two assumptions underlying
    information asymmetry
  • managers know more than investors
  • managers act in the best interest of current
    shareholders
  • Having defined that What does info. Asymmetry
    theory state?

29
2 Major Implications
  • 1. If the companys prospects are poor (nobody
    knows except insiders) then stock is OVERVAUED
  • Finance everything with stock
  • a. You can raise more money (lower cost)
  • b. Once the stock falls, the losses will be
    shared by old and new stockholders (this favors
    the old shareholders)

30
Ctd.
  • 2. If the companys prospects are good (nobody
    knows but insiders) then the stock is UNDERVALUED
  • Do not use stock to finance (use debt)
  • a. You are not getting enough money for it (cost
    of equity is higher)
  • b. When it goes up, it will benefit only old
    shareholders (wont have to share the gains with
    new shareholders)

31
Signaling Theory
  • MM assumed that investors and managers have the
    same information.
  • But, managers often have better information.
    Thus, they would
  • Sell stock if stock is overvalued.
  • Sell bonds if stock is undervalued.
  • Investors understand this, so view new stock
    sales as a negative signal.
  • Implications for managers?

32
SIGNALING
  • Because this concept of information asymmetry is
    well known, how a company raises becomes a
    signal!
  • Issue stock bad news (overvalued)
  • Issue debt good news (undervalued)
  • Warning this applies more to large, well
    established cos with access to all capital mkts

33
  • New companies
  • fast growth will require that co. uses all
    possible capital including equity
  • or a small new company may not have easy access
    to bond market so it can only raise money trhough
    equity
  • Here the signals are probably not relevant

34
  • New companies
  • fast growth will require that co. uses all
    possible capital including equity
  • or a small new company may not have easy access
    to bond market so it can only raise money trhough
    equity
  • Here the signals are probably not relevant

35
Info. Asym. Conclusion
  • Q1 Why some cos have less optimal debt?
  • A They keep a reserve borrowing capacity So if
    they need more , they can issue debt and not
    have to send a (-) signal by issuing stock
  • Q2 Why is there a pecking order?
  • A Issuing stock is a bad signal that should be
    done as a last resort

36
Closing Comments
  • There is an optimal capital structure (maximizes
    value of the firm)
  • Quantifying it accurately is impossible
  • Still great accuracy may not be necessary
  • That is, you can be relatively far away from your
    theoretical optimal and the impact on firm value
    is minor

37
Closing Comments Still
  • The truth is that the effect of capital structure
    decisions is small compared to the effect of
    operating decisions
  • Operating decisions find new markets, produce
    more efficiently, increase sales, lower costs
  • These are the primary determinants of your
    success, not capital structure

38
Closing Comments (endless)
  • You can have lousy financial arrangements but
    good sales and youll survive and even prosper
  • Even the best financial plans cant overcome
    operating deficiencies

39
Perpetual Cash Flow Example
Expected EBIT 500,000 will remain constant
over time. Firm pays out all earnings as
dividends (zero growth). Currently is all-equity
financed. 100,000 shares outstanding. P0 20 T
40.
40
Component Cost Estimates
Amount Borrowed (000) kd ks 0
- 15.0 250 10.0 15.5
500 11.0 16.5 750 13.0 18.0
1,000 16.0 20.0
If company recapitalizes, debt would be issued to
repurchase stock.
41
  • The MM and Miller models cannot be applied here
    because several assumptions are violated.
  • kd is not a constant.
  • Bankruptcy and agency costs exist.
  • Theory provides some valuable insights, but
    because of invalid assumptions, direct real-world
    application is questionable.

42
Sequence of Events in a Recapitalization
  • Firm announces the recapitalization.
  • Investors reassess their views and estimate a new
    equity value.
  • New debt is issued and proceeds are used to
    repurchase stock at the new equilibrium
    price.

(More...)
43
(No Transcript)
44
D 250, kd 10, ks 15.5. S1

1,839. V1 S1 D1 1,839 250
2,089. P1 20.89.
(EBIT - kdD)(1 - T) ks
500 - 0.1(250)(0.6) 0.155
2,089 100
45
Shares 250 repurchased
20.89 Shares remaining Check on
stock price P1
20.89. Other debt levels treated similarly.
11.97. n1 100 - 11.97
88.03.
S1 n1
1,839 88.03
46
What is the firms optimal amountof debt?
  • Debt kd ks P
  • 250 10 15.5 20.89
  • 500 11 16.5 21.18
  • 750 13 18.0 20.92
  • 500,000 of debt produces the highest stock price
    and thus is the best of the debt levels
    considered.

47
Calculate EPS at debt of 0, 250K, 500K, and
750K, assuming that the firm begins at zero debt
and recap-italizes to each level in a single step.
Net income NI EBIT - kd D(1 - T). EPS
NI/n. 0 300 100.00 3.00 250 285
88.03 3.24 500 267 76.39 3.50 750 242
64.15 3.77
D NI n EPS
48
  • EPS continues to increase beyond the 500,000
    optimal debt level.
  • Does this mean that the optimal debt level is
    750,000, or even higher?

49
Find the WACC at each debt level.
D S V kd ks WACC
0 2,000 2,000 -- 15.0 15.0 250
1,839 2,089 10 15.5 14.4 500 1,618
2,118 11.0 16.5 14.2 750 1,342
2,092 13.0 18.0 14.3
e.g. D 250WACC (250/2,089)(10)(0.6)
(1,839/2,089)(15.5) 14.4.
50
  • The WACC is minimized at D 500,000, the same
    debt level that maximizes stock price.
  • Since the value of a firm is the present value of
    future operating income, the lowest discount rate
    (WACC) leads to the highest value.

51
How would higher or lower business risk
affect the optimal capital structure?
  • At any debt level, the firms probability of
    financial distress would be higher. Both kd and
    ks would rise faster than before. The end result
    would be an optimal capital structure with less
    debt.
  • Lower business risk would have the opposite
    effect.

52
This is an Alternative Presentation
53
Capital Structure
  • Debt is a Magnifier
  • Example 2 types of financing-1 is zero debt the
    other is 50 debt ratio
  • Assume we need 175,000 financing. If we borrow
    half-87,500, the interest rate is 10
  • Consider two cases an expected situation and a
    bad situation

54
Example
  • I. Expected case No debt 50
  • EBIT 35,000 35,000
  • -Int 0 8,750
  • EBT 35,000 26,250
  • -taxes 14,000 10,500
  • Net Income 21,000 15,750 ROE 12 18

55
Example
  • I. Bad News case No debt 50
  • EBIT 5,000 5,000
  • -Int 0 8,750
  • EBT 5,000 3,750
  • -taxes 2,000 1,500
  • Net Income 3,000 2,250 ROE 1.7 -2.6

56
Why the difference?
  • Cash Flow to Investors No debt 50
  • Shareholders 21,000 15,750
  • Bondholders 0 8,750 Total 21,000 24,500
  • Difference is 3,500 difference in taxes!

57
LeverageVolatility
  • This means that a company with uncertain earnings
    would make itself that much more risky by
    financing with debt.
  • The formal concept is called business risk and
    financial risk
  • Lets look at them

58
What is business risk?
  • Uncertainty about future operating income (EBIT).
  • Note that business risk focuses on operating
    income, so it ignores financing effects.

Probability
Low risk
High risk
EBIT
E(EBIT)
0
59
Business Risk and Financial Risk
  • If the Standard deviation of the ROE with zero
    debt is 2.14
  • And if the standard deviation of the ROE with 50
    debt is 4.5
  • Follows that the business risk is 2.14
    (variability without leverage) and the financial
    risk is 4.5-2.14 2.36

60
Factors That Influence Business Risk
  • Uncertainty about demand (unit sales).
  • Uncertainty about output prices
  • Uncertainty about input costs.
  • Product and other types of liability.
  • Degree of operating leverage (DOL).

61
Operating Leverage
  • Lets look at this factor in more detail
  • It is the extent to which the your costs are
    fixed vs. variable
  • High degree of operating leverage highFC
  • Low degree of operating leveragelowFC
  • This impacts business risk as it impacts EBIT and
    thus ROE

62
Operating Leverage
  • Operating leverage is the use of fixed costs
    rather than variable costs.
  • The higher the proportion of fixed costs within a
    firms overall cost structure, the greater the
    operating leverage.
  • You can see this through breakeven analysis

(More...)
63
Breakeven Analysis
  • 1. If high DOL
  • breakeven point will be high (riskier)
  • if sales are up bigger profits
  • but if sales are down bigger losses
  • 2. If low DOL
  • lower BE point (safer)
  • if sales are up lower profits
  • but if sales are down lower losses

64
  • Higher operating leverage leads to more business
    risk, because a small sales decline causes a
    larger profit decline.

(More...)
65
What is the optimal level of debt?
  • Theory on this is based on Miller Modigliani
    (MM-Nobel Prize)
  • They were the 1st to systematically study capital
    structure
  • Their main results are two without taxes and
    with taxes

66
MM
  • 1. Under no Taxes
  • Capital structure is irrelevant
  • mix doesnt mattter
  • Value of the firm with or without debt is same
  • It is easy to criticize this result as being
    unrealistic-irrelevant/yet it provides clues as
    to what is relevant

67
MM
  • 2. What if corporate taxes
  • Debt is great! (Tax shield)
  • As debt goes up value of the also up
  • optimal mix 100 debt!!!
  • Now, we see no companies at 100 leverage. So
    what is next?

68
Trade-off Theory
  • MM theory ignores bankruptcy (financial distress)
    costs, which increase as more leverage is used.
  • At low leverage levels, tax benefits outweigh
    bankruptcy costs.
  • At high levels, bankruptcy costs outweigh tax
    benefits.
  • An optimal capital structure exists that balances
    these costs and benefits.

69
Bankrupcy Costs
  • 1. Actual costs (Direct costs)
  • legal expenses
  • accounting expenses
  • hard to liquidate maybe no liquidity
  • 2. Potential costs (Indirect Costs)
  • loss of customers/employees/suppliers
  • Both are hard to measure-nevertheless studies
    shown them to be 8-10 of value

70
Notes on Trade-off Model
  • Optimal point must exist for every company
  • Impossible to precisely determine
  • Best we can do is a range
  • We will do a hypothetical problem to determine an
    optimal mix

71
Another Theory
  • Trade-off model is well accepted (although cant
    quantify it).
  • Yet, there is another theory that is popular in
    explaining cap. Structure
  • Called Information Asymmetry and it is based on
    the idea that managers know more than investors

72
Information Asymmetry
  • 1st. There are two assumptions underlying
    information asymmetry
  • managers know more than investors
  • managers act in the best interest of current
    shareholders
  • Having defined that What does info. Asymmetry
    theory state?

73
Information Asymmetry
  • Q Why do some large, well established companies
    have do little debt? A lot less than the
    trade-off model would suggest
  • Q2 Research shows that companies prefer to
    finance 1st with RE, next debt and only last with
    new stock. (Pecking order) Why?
  • Questions that trade-off model cant answer
  • Any ideas?

74
2 Major Implications
  • 1. If the companys prospects are poor (nobody
    knows except insiders) then stock is OVERVAUED
  • Finance everything with stock
  • a. You can raise more money (lower cost)
  • b. Once the stock falls, the losses will be
    shared by old and new stockholders (this favors
    the old shareholders)

75
Ctd.
  • 2. If the companys prospects are good (nobody
    knows but insiders) then the stock is UNDERVALUED
  • Do not use stock to finance (use debt)
  • a. You are not getting enough money for it (cost
    of equity is higher)
  • b. When it goes up, it will benefit only old
    shareholders (wont have to share the gains with
    new shareholders)

76
Signaling Theory
  • MM assumed that investors and managers have the
    same information.
  • But, managers often have better information.
    Thus, they would
  • Sell stock if stock is overvalued.
  • Sell bonds if stock is undervalued.
  • Investors understand this, so view new stock
    sales as a negative signal.
  • Implications for managers?

77
SIGNALING
  • Because this concept of information asymmetry is
    well known, how a company raises becomes a
    signal!
  • Issue stock bad news (overvalued)
  • Issue debt good news (undervalued)
  • Warning this applies more to large, well
    established cos with access to all capital mkts

78
Pecking Order of Financing
  • Research shows that companies prefer to finance
    1st with RE, next debt and only last with new
    stock. (Pecking order) Why?
  • Information asymmetry would help explain this.
    Stock sends bad signals-last resort
  • Information asymmetry may also explain why
    companies like financial slack (or reserve
    borrowing capacity)

79
Financial Slack/Reserve Borrowing Capacity
  • It is easier to have cash ahead of your needs.
    That way you do not have to worry about the
    signaling problems of issuing securities
  • It is easier to have less debt than optimal, that
    way you can always borrow when the opportunity
    comes
  • Theres a dark side to financial slack though

80
Factors that favor Debt
  • 1. Taxes!
  • 2. Reduce Agency costs-debt imposes discipline
    and focus on your managers
  • 3. Control- debt allows you to finance without
    losing control
  • 4. Information asymmetry- issuing debt send
    better signals than issuing equity

81
Factors that Discourage Borrowing
  • 1. Financial Distress-cost increases as you take
    on more debt
  • 2. High business risk-if you are volatile to
    begin with, debt only increases this
  • 3. Agency costs-more debt comes with strings
    attached-this restricts your flexibility
  • 4. Dividend policy-too much debt can hurt your
    ability to have stable dividends

82
Closing Comments
  • There is an optimal capital structure (maximizes
    value of the firm)
  • Quantifying it accurately is impossible
  • Still great accuracy may not be necessary
  • That is, you can be relatively far away from your
    theoretical optimal and the impact on firm value
    is minor

83
Closing Comments Still
  • The truth is that the effect of capital structure
    decisions is small compared to the effect of
    operating decisions
  • Operating decisions find new markets, produce
    more efficiently, increase sales, lower costs
  • These are the primary determinants of your
    success, not capital structure

84
Closing Comments (endless)
  • You can have lousy financial arrangements but
    good sales and youll survive and even prosper
  • Even the best financial plans cant overcome
    operating deficiencies
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