3.1 Leverage and Capital Structure
3.1 Leverage and Capital Structure
3.1 Leverage and Capital Structure
Contents
3.1 Leverage and Capital structure 3.1.5 Optimal or Ideal Capital
3.1.1 Business and financial risk Structure
3.1.2 Types of leverage 3.1.5.1 Factors affecting
3.1.2.1 Operating leverage capital structure decisions
3.1.2.2 Financial leverage 3.1.5.2 WACC and capital
3.1.2.3 Total leverage structure
3.1.3 The Firms Capital Structure 3.1.5.3 Hamada equation
3.1.4 Capital Structure Theories 3.1.5.4 EBIT-EPS approach
3.1.4.1 Modigliani and Miller 3.1.5.5 Share value
(M&M) maximization
3.1.4.2 Trade-off theory
3.1.4.3 Signaling theory
3.1.4.4 Pecking order hypothesis
3.1.4.5 Windows of opportunity
Business risk
! Is the riskiness inherent in the firm’s operations (or
riskiness of firm’s assets) if no debt is used
! Is the risk of being unable to cover operating costs
! Common measure: standard deviation of σROIC
(Return on invested capital)
! ROIC = EBIT (1-T)/ Total invested capital
High risk
0 EBIT
Factors affecting business risk
Product
obsolescence
Legal,
Sales and
regulatory
cost
and foreign
variability
risk exposure
Competition
Business Operating
risk Leverage
Financial risk
! Is the increase in stockholder’s risk, over and
above the firm’s business risk, resulting from
the use of financial leverage
! Is the risk of being unable to cover financial
costs
! More debt or preferred stock, more financial
risk
Analysis and impact of Leverage
Rev. Rev.
P P
TC
TC
VC=50 VC=47 FC
FC =7K
=5K
QBE
P80
Sales QBE Sales
=167 =213
Financial Leverage
! Is the extent to which fixed-income securities are used
in a firm’s capital structure
! The higher the financial leverage, the higher the
financial risk
P900 profit
10% interest
P9,000 capital
P600 loss
Total Leverage
! results from the combined effect of using both fixed
operating and fixed financial costs;
! Hence, DTL = DOL x DFL
Degree of Operating Degree of Degree of Total
Leverage (DOL) Financial Leverage (DTL)
Leverage (DFL)
Debt to
Debt ratio equity
ratio
Times
EBITDA
interest
coverage
earned
ratio
ratio
Capital Structure Theories
1. Modigliani and Miller (M&M) Irrelevance
Theory
2. Trade-off theory
3. Signaling theory
4. Pecking order hypothesis
5. Windows of opportunity
The Modigliani and Miller (M&M)
Irrelevance Theory
No Same
bankruptcy borrowing
cost rate
Trade-off Theory
! States that firm trade off tax benefits of
debt financing against problems caused
by potential bankruptcy
MM
Tax-effect
Effect of tax
and
bankruptcy
WACC under Trade-off theory
Trade-off Theory
! Market frictions or factors affecting capital
structure
1. Corporate taxes
2. Personal taxes
3. Cost of bankruptcy and financial distress
4. Agency costs
› Outside equity
› Outside debt
Trade-off Theory: Corporate Taxes
! Debt financing provides tax savings
! Interest expense are tax deductible, whereas
dividends are not
Trade-off Theory: Personal taxes
! Equity financing provides personal tax
advantage
! capital gains and dividends are taxed at lower
rates than interest income
Personal taxes
Corporate
taxes Bankruptcy
costs
Agency cost of
outside equity Agency cost of
outside debt
Signaling Theory
States that management’s actions provide clues
to investors about the firm’s prospects and
stock valuation
Debt financing is viewed as “positive signal” that firm
has favorable prospects and stock is underpriced;
while
Stock offering is viewed as a “negative signal” that
firm has unfavorable prospects and stock is
overpriced
Assumes asymmetric information, a situation in
which managers have more/better information
about firm’s prospects than do investors
Pecking Order Hypothesis
States that managers will tend to adhere to a
hierarchy of financing as follows:
1. Spontaneous credit (A/P and accruals)
2. Retained earnings
3. Marketable securities (short-term debt securities)
4. Debt (bonds)
5. Hybrid securities (e.g. convertible bonds)
6. New common stock
" new equity financing is undesirable because of
flotation cost (& underpricing) and signaling effects
due to asymmetric information
States that managers
adjust the firm’s capital
structure to take
advantage of mispricing
When stock is
overvalued, managers
issue new equity
When stock is
undervalued, managers
use debt or even
repurchase stock
Optimal or Ideal Capital Structure
! Is the capital structure that maximizes
company’s value
! Factors affecting capital structure decisions:
also shows effect of financial leverage effect (more debt, steeper line)- use
of debt financing leads to greater impact on level and volatility of EPS
EBIT-EPS Approach (cont’d)
• Financial breakeven point- level of EBIT for
which the EPS just equals zero (0)
• Financial breakeven point = Int + [PD div/ (1-T)]
Assume a 30% tax rate, expected EBIT of P650,000, risk free rate of 5% and
market risk premium of 7%.
DFL
# shares
D/E
Beta
Cost of equity
Debt ratio
WACC
Firm value
EPS
Stock price