Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Issues with WACC
and capital structure
policy
- Weighted average of cost of capital
(WACC)
- Cost of capital
- aka required rate of return
- represents expected rate of
return on an asset after taking
into consideration into account
time value of money and risk
- Market determined rate, externally
determined
- Opportunity cost (the return
offered in the market in
investment of equivalent risk)
- cost of capital (issuer of financial security)
- expected return (investors)
- WACC estimate the required rate
of return as a weighted average of
the required return on debt and
equity
- Cost of equity (ke)
- CAPM
- Cost of debt (kd)
- is then estimated
- Taxes
- should be treated
consistently in the net cash
flows and in the cost of
capital
- project is evaluated after tax basis
- *insert FORMULA
- WACC calculation
- Determine the permanent
source of capital the company
utilises
- Debt
Anmerkungen:
- - Bank overdraft
- Money market loans
- Commercial bills
- Promissory notes
- Bonds
- Debentures
- Unsecured notes
- Mortgage loans
- Finance leases
- Term loans
- Equity
Anmerkungen:
- - Ordinary shares
- Preference shares
- Retained earnings
- Cost each component of
capital are based on
CURRENT conditions
Historical value is irrelevant
- Calculate after tax cost of debt:
after tax kd= before tax kd (1-te)
- te: effective company tax rate
- Calculate cost of equity
- CAPM
- DFC approach
(Dividend Valuation
Models)
- Weight each component to
determine the WACC (value
each source of funds and total
value of projects)
- Appropriate weights: the proportion that each
source of funds represents of the total sources
used to finance proposed projects
- Current capital structure can be used
- if cap structure is
expected to change, use
company's target capital
structure
- Weight should be calculated
using current market values
rather than book values
- consistent with the
way source of fund is
calculated
- reflect the amounts investors
can realize from selling the
investment
- Issue with WACC
- do not take into account risk of a project
- Capital Strucuture
- Mix of securities which serves to divide those CF between diff classes of investors
- Debt
- Equity
- Modigliani
and Miller
Propositions
- Assumptions
Anmerkungen:
- 1. Capital markets are perfect
2. Companies and individual can borrow at the same interest rate
3. There are no taxes
4. There are no cost associated woth the liquidation of a company
5. Companies have fixed investment policy so that investment decisions are not affected by financing decisions
- Proposition 1
Conservation of Value
- The value of an asset remains the same, regardless of how the net
operating CF generated by the asset are divided between different classes
of investors
- Two firms with identical operating CF but different capital
structures should have the same total value
- If one firm is more valued than the other(VL>VU)
- In a competitive market, investors
will recognise the relative
mispricing of shares in the two
companies and will seek to make
an arbitrage profit by selling shares
in L and buying shares in U
- This will force the price of L
down and price of U up until the
mispricing is eliminted
- Proposition 2
Conservation of Risk
- Firm value is expected
cashflow/cost of capital
- ke>kd
- k is the weighted average of ke and kd
- So it follows therefore that we can decrease
k by getting funds from a cheaper source
(debt)
- By lowering k we increase the value of the firm
- The cost of equity of a levered firm
ke=k0+(k0-kd)(D/E)
- k0= compensation for business risk
- (k0-kd)(D/E) is compensation for financial risk
- When debt increases total risk is
conserved, but it is concentrated
upon a smaller number of
shareholders and hence required
returns increases
- The introduction of relatively cheap
debt into the firm's capital CF will not
decrease cost of capital of the firm's CF
nor the value of the firm
- Direct cost of debt (explicit): debt
- Indirect cost of debt (implicit):
increased required return required by
the shareholder
- The impact of taxes
on capital strucuture
- Claasical tax system
- Leverage will increase
firm value because
interest on debt is a tax
deductible expense
resulting in an
increase in the after tax
net CF to investors
- PV of tax shield= tcD
- M&M Proposition1
with taxes
- value of levered firm is
equal to value of an
unlevered firm of the
same risk class plus the
present value of the
tax saving
- VL=VU+tcD
- k=ke(E/V)+kd(1-tc)(D/V)
- Imputation tax system
- The imputation system implies
that firm income distributed as
dividends is effectively taxed at
the shareholder's marginal rate
- just like interest income
- capital gains may be
tax-advantaged for some
investors
- t interest = t dividends
t dividends > t cap gain
hence, t interest >t cap
gain
- There might be a
tax-induced reason to issue
equity rather than debt
where shareholders
generate their returns via
capital gains
- Non tax impact on cap structure
- Bankruptcy cost:
The trade off theory
- As debt increases, financial risk
increases and thus the probability of
default (bankruptcy or risk of financial
distress also increases
- Debtholder bear
realised
bankruptcy costs
- Greater default probability,
higher interest rate
charged by debtholder
- Higher interest charged,
lower leveraged
- Shareholder
bear expected
bankruptcy
costs in the
form of more
expensive debt
- The possibility of a tradeoff
between opposing effects of
benefits of debt finance and cost of
financial distress may mean that
optimal capital structure exists
- VL=VU+tcD-PV(expected bankruptcy costs)
- GRAPH! VERY IMPORTANT
- Agency cost:
Pecking-order theory
- Management's
announcement of a new
equity issue may be
interpreted as a sign that
management believes that
its equity is overpriced
- cause a decrease in
share price
- prefer debt than
equity
- but debt involves transaction costs and
open company to external scrutiny
- Preference for using retained earnings over
debt finance
- This theory does not lead to optimal cap structure
- Rather cap structure is reflection of the
firm;s need for external finance
- It explains that
- negative inta-industry correlation between
profitability and D/E
- Negative share price reaction on
annonucement of equity issue
- Asset type
- Companies
with general
used assets
can borrow
more than
firm specific
assets
- Company
with tangible
assets are
able to
borrow more
than the
intangible
assets
- Free Cash Flow
- Unless CF is
paid to
investors,
manager could
destroy value
- Invest
in -ve
NPV
- Increase
consumption
of
perquisites
- Increase leverage to soak up
free CF
- Agency cost
- Asset
substitution
problem
Anmerkungen:
- Shareholder in a company with outstanding debt own a call option on the assets of the company
Call option values increase with increasing volatility
- A company with outstanding debt may have an incentives to take higher risk projects, even the project may reduce overall market value of the firm
- Underinvestment
problem
Anmerkungen:
- Firm close to bankruptcy may pass up +ve NPV projects because nobody will be willing to finance them
- Existing s/h will not contribute equity as first gains from investing in +ve NPV projects accrue to debtholders
New s/h will not buy equity at existing prices but require a substantial discount
-Existing s/h will reject as their interest is diluted
- knowing this debtholder
will
- build into their
required return
compensation
for any
expected losses
from this
activity, making
debt more
expensive
- insist on
restrictive
lending
condition that
inhibit these
activities