Title: Types of leases
1CHAPTER 18 Lease Financing
- Types of leases
- Tax treatment of leases
- Effects on financial statements
- Lessees analysis
- Lessors analysis
- Other issues in lease analysis
2Who are the two parties to a lease transaction?
- The lessee, who uses the asset and makes the
lease, or rental, payments. - The lessor, who owns the asset and receives the
rental payments. - Note that the lease decision is a financing
decision for the lessee and an investment
decision for the lessor.
3Lease Terms
- Operating Leases (aka Service Leases)
- Include operating and service costs as part of
lease - Cancellable by lessee
- Not fully amortized (value of lease payments less
than value of equipment) - Lease is for less than the life of the equipment
- Examples
- Autos, copiers, computers
4Lease Terms
- Capital or Financial Leases
- Source of financing
- Lessee generally agrees to purchase equipment and
then arranges lease agreement with bank or
leasing company (direct lease) - Not cancellable, fully amortized, generally no
service provided - Sale and lease-back arrangement
- Equipment is purchased from lessee
- Leveraged lease
- Lessor borrows portion of money required to buy
asset. Doesnt affect lessee.
5Why Lease?
- Sensible Reasons for Leasing
- Short-term leases are convenient
- Cancellation options are valuable
- Maintenance is provided
- In certain circumstances
- Standardization leads to low costs
- Leasing is a cheap way of financing
6Why Lease?
- Sensible Reasons for Leasing
- Tax shields can be used
- Lessor may be able to take advantage of tax
shields and pass value back to lessee
7Why Lease?
- Dubious Reasons for Leasing
- Leasing avoids capital expenditure controls
- Leasing should be viewed as a capital expenditure
- Leasing preserves capital
- Leasing does not require a cash outlay
- Borrowing does not require a cash outlay either
8Accounting for Leases
- Capital leases (financial leases)
- Must be represented on balance sheet and, hence,
offset by a liability - Lease agreement transfers ownership to lessee
before lease expires - Lessee can purchase asset for a bargain price
before lease expires - Least lasts for at least 75 of assets economic
life - Present value of lease payments is at least 90
of the assets value
9Accounting for Leases
- Operating Leases
- Do not meet any of the four criteria for capital
leases - Only represented as an expense
- Any advantage to a lease being off-balance
sheet?
10Leasing Theory
- Standard Assumption
- Leasing and debt are perfect substitutes
- An increase in leasing will be associated with a
corresponding drop in the amount of debt - Use after tax cost of debt to discount value of
leases
11Leasing Theory
- MM view
- Who cares?
- Lease, lend, equity it doesnt matter to firm
value - Is there an optimal level of debt?
- Standard assumption assumes that there is some
optimal level of debt and that leasing
substitutes for debt
12Leasing Theory
- What has been found in the finance literature?
- Leasing and debt are shown to be complementary
- More leasing more debt
- Why?
13Lease Valuation
- Valuation from the lessors perspective
- How much should we charge to break even?
- Cash outflows
- Initial cost of equipment
- Maintenance costs (where applicable)
- Cash inflows
- Depreciation tax shield
- After-tax lease payments
14Lease Valuation
- Valuation from the lessors perspective
- Discount rate
- Cash-flows are discounted at the WACC of the
lessor - Given that lessors are generally banks or other
financial institutions, they generally rely
heavily on debt - Find value of lease payment that makes NPV zero
- Similar to finding equivalent annual cost
15Lease Valuation
- Valuation from lessees perspective
- Should we lease?
- Trade off the costs of leasing with the cost of
buying - Assume initially we dont have cash outflow for
asset - Lose depreciation tax shield, have to make lease
payment, may or may not pay maintenance, dont
get salvage value - Discount at the after-tax cost of debt
- Substitution between lease and debt financing
16Financial Leases
Example Greymare Bus Lines is considering a
lease. Your operating manager wants to buy a new
bus for 100,000. The bus has an 8 year life.
The bus salesperson says she will lease Greymare
the bus for 8 years at 16,900 per year, but
Greymare assumes all operating and maintenance
costs. The companys tax rate is 35 and its
cost of debt is 10. The bus will be depreciated
using a five year MACRS schedule. Should
Greymare buy or lease the bus?
17Financial Leases
Greymare Bus Lines Balance Sheet without
lease Equivalent lease balance sheet
18Financial Leases
Example - cont Greymare Bus Lines can borrow at
10, thus the value of the lease should be
discounted at 6.5 or .10 x (1-.35). The NPV
result will tell us if Greymore should lease or
buy the bus.
19Financial Leases
Cash flow consequences of the lease contract to
Greymare
20Financial Leases
21Financial Leases
Example - cont Greymare Bus Lines lease cash
flows can also be thought of as loan equivalent
cash flows.
22Financial Leases
23Loan Equivalent
- If you can devise a borrowing plan that gives the
same cash flow as the lease in every future
period but a higher immediate cash flow - Borrow