Title: Session 8: Optimal Capital Structure and dividend policy
1Session 8 Optimal Capital Structure and dividend
policy
- C15.0008 Corporate Finance Topics
2Optimal Capital Structure Review
- The main theory we consider is the trade-off
theory. - Debt gives you a tax-shield. Hence more debt is
GOOD. - Debt increases probability of distress. This
increases expected distress costs, and agency
costs. Hence more debt is BAD - At some level of debt, the two balance out. That
is the optimal level of debt
3WACC approach
- V ? UCFt/(1rWACC)t
- UCF EBIT(1-T) depreciation capex ?nwc
- Calculate WACC at various debt levels
- rB from debt rating via interest coverage and
leverage ratios - rS from Prop. IIrS r0 (1- TC)(B/S)(r0 - rB)
- WACC (B/(SB)) rB(1-T)(S/(SB)) rS
- Adjust expected cash flows for financial distress
costs
4At the level of betas
- CAPM r0 rF ?U(rM - rF) (unlevered
equity) rS rF ?L(rM - rF) (levered equity) - rB rF ?B(rM - rF) (firms debt)
- Prop. II rS r0 (1- TC)(B/S)(r0 - rB)
- ? rS rF ?U(rM - rF) (1- TC)(B/S)(?U- ?B)(rM
- rF) - rF ?U (1- TC)(B/S)(?U- ?B)(rM -
rF) - ? ?L ?U (1- TC)(B/S)(?U- ?B)
- (If debt is riskless, ?B 0)
- ?L 1 (1- TC)(B/S) ?U
5Worksheet..
6APV approach
- VL VU PV(tax shield) - PV(financial distress
costs) - PV(tax shield) ?t TC(interest expense)t / (1
rB)t - The expected tax rate decreases as debt
increases. Use likelihood of distress. - PV(financial distress costs) Prob PV
(financial distress costs if financial distress
takes place) - The probability increases as the debt rating
declines - Cost are usually estimated as a percentage of
pre-distress firm value (10-20)
7Worksheet
8Binomial Tree
- Firm
- Single remaining cash flow in 1 year EBIT
10 million or 2 million (prob. 50) no
salvage value - Corporate tax rate T40
- Unlevered required return r010
- In the event of bankruptcy
- Financial distress costs are 15 of VU
- Pay taxes, financial distress costs, residual
goes to bondholders
9The Unlevered Firm
- VU S
- Liquidating dividend is only cash flow
- Value via DCF
EBIT(1-T)10(1-0.4)6
0.5(6)0.5(1.2)/1.13.27
EBIT(1-T)2(1-0.4)1.2
10The Levered Firm
- 2 million amount of (risky) 1-year debt
- Promised interest rate 56.65 (rf2)
- Promised payment (at maturity)
2(156.65)3.13 - Solvent for high EBITPayment to bondholders
3.13 - Bankrupt for low EBITPayment to
bondholdersEBIT-taxes-financial distress costs
EBIT-(EBIT-int.exp.)T-0.15VU
2-2-2(56.65)0.4-0.15(3.27) 1.16
11Debt Value
Replicate using the unlevered firm (rf2)
- H0.41, B-0.656, B2 (trading at par!!)
12Equity Value
Replicate using the unlevered firm (rf2)
- H0.69, B0.814, S1.45 rS14.49
13Firm Value
- VU S 3.27
- VL S B 1.45 2 3.45
- VL VU PV(tax shield) - PV(f.d. costs) ?
- In this case, the tax shield is risk-less (even
though the debt is risky) - PV(tax shield) 56.65(2)(0.4)/1.02
- 0.444
14Financial Distress Costs
Replicate using the unlevered firm (rf2)
- H -0.102, B -0.602, FD 0.267
- VL VU PV(tax shield) - PV(f.d. costs)
3.27 0.444 - 0.267 3.45
15Optimal Capital Structure
- The optimal amount of debt
- Decreases as business risk increases (distress
costs) - Decreases as in tangible assets increase
(distress costs) - Increases as the corporate tax rate increases
(tax shields) - Decreases as the growth rate increases (growing
firms are riskier. Hence distress costs)
This slide is important!!!
16Industry Data
Industry Debt Ratio EBITDA/ Value Fixed Assets/ Capital
Biotech 3.78 2.63 15.33
Food Wholesalers 22.85 12.60 59.54
Electric Utility 58.07 16.58 89.22
Source http//www.stern.nyu.edu/adamodar/
17Empirical Evidence
- Consistent with much of the theory (e.g., over
time, across industries, across tax regimes) - Profitable companies within industries appear
underlevered (pecking order theory) - Leverage increasing (decreasing) transactions
have positive (negative) effects on stock prices - Too many high-rated companies?
- Financial flexibilityanother real option?
- Targeting a debt rating?
18Capital Structure in Practice
- What do CFOs look at in determining debt policy?
- Financial flexibility 59
- Debt rating 57
- Volatility 48
- Tax savings 45
- Most firms (81) have at least a flexible target
debt-equity ratio.
Source http//www.stern.nyu.edu/adamodar/
19Dividend Policy
- Dividend policy theory and evidence
- Dividend decisions in practice
- Stock dividends, splits, and repurchases
20Two Questions
- How much of earnings should the firm retain as
cash? - Liquidity
- Fund future projects/acquisitions without going
to the capital markets - Reserve for future debt payments
- How should the residual be paid out?
- Dividends
- Stock repurchases
21A More Refined Question
- Lets assume that
- Investment decisions (projects) are fixed
- Financing decisions (capital structure) are
fixed - Does dividend policy affect stock price?
- Does dividend policy affect firm value?
- The dividend decision is a tradeoff between
paying dividends, issuing equity, and
repurchasing stock.
22An Example
- A firm generates a cash-flow of 1 million. It
needs 500K for investment. Three alternatives - (1) Invest 500K, pay 500K dividends
- (2) Invest 500K, pay 1 million dividends,
raise 500K new equity - (3) Invest 500K, pay 0 dividends,
repurchase 500K of stock
23Three Views of Dividend Policy
- (1) Dividend policy is irrelevant
- (2) High dividends are good
- (3) Low dividends are good
- Good here means higher stock price, which means
- Higher cash flows
- Lower cost of equity ( rS D/P g )
24Dividend Irrelevance
- Miller/Modigliani in perfect markets, investors
can create their own dividends, therefore
dividend policy is irrelevant - Do-it-yourself dividends stock sales
- Undo-it-yourself dividends stock
purchases with the money from dividend income
25Example of Dividend Irrelevance
- Two dividend payment dates 0, 1
- Investor prefers cash-flows of 10 and 10 each
- Company decides to pay 11 and 8.9. Cost of equity
is 10 - Investor can choose to keep 10 and invest 1 in
the companys shares. - Investment of 1 gives an expected cash flow of
1.1 - 8.9 1.1 10. Thus investor can recreate her
preferred cash-flow
26Some reasons why dividends matter
If
Then
- Managers misuse free cash flow ?
- Transaction costs are high ?
- Issuance costs ?
- Personal Taxes ?
- Clientele effects ?
High dividends are good
High/Low dividends
Low dividends are good
Low dividends
High/low dividends
27Information Effects
- Unexpected changes in dividends cause stock price
reactions D? ? P? D? ? P? - Why? Because dividends convey news about future
earnings.
28Empirical Evidence
- Not conclusive
- Survey data suggest managers think dividend
policy is important - Tax changes appear to trigger dividend policy
changes - Non-payers tend to initiate dividends when the
spread between the M/B ratios of payers and
non-payers is high
29Stock Repurchases
- Signal that stock is under-valued
- Increase debt-equity ratio
- Eliminate certain stockholders (targeted)
- Tax benefits
- Stock price reaction is positive!
30Disappearing Dividends
31Disappearing Dividends contd
Reasons SEC Rule 10b-18, Executive compensation
through stock options
32Conclusions
- Issuance costs of new equity matter, dividend
policy should be responsive to investment
opportunities - Taxes, transaction costs, and agency costs play a
role - Information effects are important (an explicit
policy is valuable)
33Practical Considerations
- Restrictions, e.g., bond covenants
- Liquidity
- Access to capital markets
- Earnings predictability
- Ownership
34Types of dividend policies
- Constant payout ratio
- Constant dollar dividend
- Small regular dividend plus special dividends
- Target payout ratio, slow adjustment, stepwise
progression
35GEs Dividend
36Payment Procedure
- Declaration date -- dividend announced
- Ex-day -- stock first trades without right to
dividend - Payment date -- checks mailed
Declaration
Ex-day
Payment
37Exam points
- Recapitalizations
- Unlevering a levered firm to find return on
unlevered equity - Relevering an unlevered firm at a target ratio,
WACC formula - APV Computing tax shields, default probability,
Cost of distress - Valuing distress costs like options
38Exam points
- Dividend irrelevance
- Factors that affect dividend policy
- Tax effects
- Information effects
39Assignments
- Chapter 17
- Problems 17.2, 17.5, 17.11
- Problem set 2 due Wednesday
- Case USG due Monday, Jul 31
- Start preparing for the exam