Capital Structure Basic concepts: no taxes Chapter 15 Capital Structure: Basic Concepts Capital-structure No-arbitrage Example: and pie theory pricing. shares for debt Value Required return on the levered firm. Financial Leverage, EPS, and ROE Assets Debt Equity Debt/Equity Interest rate Shares Share price Current $20,000 $0 $20,000 0.00 n/a 400 $50 Proposed $20,000 $8,000 $12,000 0.67 8% 240 $50 Comments Straight swap of equity for debt Market prices unchanged Real asset unchanged Financial leverage and risk Three states: bust, normal, boom. Probabilities not explicit. Look at each state separately. EPS, ROE, Current Structure Shares Outstanding = 400 Bust Normal EBIT $1,000 $2,000 Interest 0 0 Net income $1,000 $2,000 EPS $2.50 $5.00 ROA 5% 10% ROE 5% 10% Boom $3,000 0 $3,000 $7.50 15% 15% EPS and ROE under Proposed Capital Structure Shares Outstanding = 240 Bust Normal EBIT $1,000 $2,000 Interest 640 640 Net income $360 $1,360 EPS $1.50 $5.67 ROA 5% 10% ROE 3% 11% Boom $3,000 640 $2,360 $9.83 15% 20% Find the point of equal EPS For understanding the situation, not because it is a key to anything. Let x = EBIT Solve x/400 = (x - 640)/240 Solution x = 1600. EPS = 4 per share, in either structure Financial Leverage and EPS 12.00 Debt 10.00 Break-even Point EPS 8.00 6.00 4.00 No Debt 2.00 0.00 EBIT 1,000 (2.00) 2,000 3,000 Modigliani-Miller (MM) Model Perpetual Cash Flows (convenient) Firms and investors can borrow and lend at the same rate (convenient) Only value matters No transaction costs (convenient) No taxes Homemade is a big concept What financial managers do in the firm… can be duplicated by investors in the market … if they want to. Implication: financial managers can’t raise value by restructuring. Homemade leverage Instead of the firm swapping equity for debt. The investor does it himself, by borrowing. It works out just as well. Borrow $8000, buy the unlevered firm for $20,000 Earnings Interest at 8% Net Profits ROE (on $12K) Bust Normal Boom $1000 $2000 $3000 $640 $640 $640 $360 $1360 $2360 3% 11% 20% Same as owning the levered firm Okay, don’t buy the whole firm Buy 10%, forty shares for $2000. Borrow $800. Total cost $1200 Same as having 10% of the levered firm, that is, 24 shares at $50 per share. Homemade annihilation of leverage Idea. Form a portfolio. Part lending… part the levered firm. Portfolio has the action of the unlevered firm. A levered firm is a portfolio. Buy the levered firm (240 shares) and lend 8000 Cost of Portfolio = 12000 + 8000 = 20000 Boom Normal Bust EPS $1.50 $5.67 $9.83 Earnings $360 $1360 $2360 Interest at (8%) $640 $640 $640 Net cash flow $1000 $2000 $3000 ROE 5% 10% 15% (Net cash flow / $2,000) The firm is a veil A way for shareholders to hold a portfolio. The MM Propositions I & II (No Taxes) P1: Value is unaffected by leverage P1: VL = VU P2: Leverage increases the risk and return to stockholders (formula to follow) Proposition II of M-M rB is the interest rate rs is the return on (levered) equity r0 is the return on unlevered equity B is value of debt SL is value of levered equity rs = r0 + (B / SL) (r0 - rB) Quick derivation of MM II Uses MM I. Value unchanged. Uses cash flow constraint. MM I Cash SU S L B r0 SU rS S L rB B r0 ( S L B) rS S L rB B rS S L r0 ( S L B) rB B rS S L r0 ( S L B) rB B rS S L r0 S L (r0 rB ) B B rS r0 (r0 rB ) SL MM Proposition II no tax Cost of capital: r (%) r0 . B rS r0 (r0 rB ) SL rS rWACC rB Debt-to-equity ratio (B/S) Exam review What is the weighted average cost of capital? Answer Don’t tell us a story. Give the definitions and the formula. rB = bond rate rS = expected return on shares B = market value of bonds S = market value of shares TC = corporate tax rate Pay-off pitch WACC = (S/(S+B))rS + (B/(S+B))(1-TC)rB