06.01.2021 Chapter 15 Debt and Taxes Chapter Outline 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield 15.4 Personal Taxes 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 15-2 1 06.01.2021 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction • Consider Safeway, Inc. which had earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) of approximately $1.85 billion , and interest expenses of about $350 million. Safeway’s marginal corporate tax rate was 35%. Safeway’s net income was lower with leverage than it would have been without leverage. Safeway’s debt obligations reduced the value of its equity. But the total amount available to all investors was higher with leverage. Where does the additional $123 million come from? 15-3 INCOME EXPENSES EARNINGS BEFORE INTEREST AND TAXES INTEREST PAYMENTS INCOME BEFORE TAXES TAX DIVIDENDS NET INCOME RETAINED PROFIT 15-4 2 06.01.2021 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction (cont'd) • In Safeway’s case, the gain is equal to the reduction in taxes with leverage: $648 million − $525 million = $123 million. • Note that the interest payments provided a tax savings of 35% × $350 million = $123 million. • Interest Tax Shield – The reduction in taxes paid due to the tax deductibility of interest Interest Tax Shield Corporate Tax Rate Interest Payments 15-5 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction • Corporations pay taxes on their profits after interest payments are deducted. Thus, interest expense reduces the amount of corporate taxes. This creates an incentive to use debt. 15-6 3 06.01.2021 Chapter Outline 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield 15.4 Personal Taxes 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 15-7 The Interest Tax Shield and Firm Value • The cash flows a levered firm pays to ALL investors will be higher than they would be without leverage by the amount of the interest tax shield. Cash Flows to Investors Cash Flows to Investors (Interest Tax Shield) with Leverage without Leverage 15-8 4 06.01.2021 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield • MM Proposition I with Taxes – The total value of the levered firm exceeds the value of the firm without leverage due to the present value of the tax savings from debt. V L V U PV (Interest Tax Shield) MM Proposition I without taxes: In a perfect capital market, the total value of a firm is equal to the market value of the total cash flows generated by its assets and is not affected by its choice of capital structure (levered or unlevered equity) 15-9 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield (cont'd) • When a firm uses debt, the interest tax shield provides a corporate tax benefit each year. • This benefit is computed as the present value of the stream of future interest tax shields the firm will receive. 15-10 5 06.01.2021 Textbook Example 15.2 Hint: find the annual interest tax shield and value it as a annuity 15-11 Impact of taxes on WACC • In the case of debt, the return paid to the debt holders is not the same as the cost to the firm. How could this be? 15-12 6 06.01.2021 Impact of taxes on WACC • Suppose a firm with a 35% tax rate borrows $100,000 at 10% interest per year • Then its net cost at the end of the year is calculated as follows • The effective cost of the debt—the firm’s net cost of interest on the debt after taxes—is only $6500/$100,000 = 6.50% of the loan amount, rather than the full 10% interest 15-13 The Weighted Average Cost of Capital with Taxes • With tax-deductible interest, the effective after-tax borrowing rate is r(1 − c) and the weighted average cost of capital becomes E D rwacc rE rD (1 c ) E D E D rwacc E D D rE rD rD c E D E D E D Pretax WACC Reduction Due to Interest Tax Shield 15-15 7 06.01.2021 Problem 15.11 Rumolt Motors has 30 million shares outstanding with a price of $15 per share. In addition, Rumolt has issued bonds with a total current market value of $150 million. Suppose Rumolt’s equity cost of capital is 10%, and its debt cost of capital is 5%. a. What is Rumolt’s pretax weighted average cost of capital? b. If Rumolt’s corporate tax rate is 35%, what is its after-tax weighted average cost of capital? rwacc E D D rE rD rD c E D E D E D Pretax WACC Reduction Due to Interest Tax Shield 15-16 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield (cont'd) • The value of interest tax shield depends on how the firm’s debt and interest payments will vary over time: – Permanent debt – Target (fixed) debt-equity-ratio 15-17 8 06.01.2021 A. The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt • Typically, the level of future interest payments is uncertain due to • the amount of debt outstanding • the interest rate on that debt • the risk of the firm. – For simplicity, we will consider the special case in which the above variables are kept constant. 15-18 The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt (cont'd) • Suppose : – a firm borrows debt D and keeps the debt permanent – the firm’s marginal tax rate is c – the debt is riskless with a risk-free interest rate rf , • then the interest tax shield each year is c × rf × D • and the tax shield can be valued as a perpetuity. C P V ( C i n p e r p e t u i t y ) r PV (Interest Tax Shield) c Interest rf c D c (rf D) rf 15-19 9 06.01.2021 The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt (cont'd) • What if debt is risky and interest rate is not fixed ? • If the debt is fairly priced, no arbitrage implies that its market value must equal the present value of the future interest payments. Market Value of Debt D PV (Future Interest Payments) • If the firm’s marginal tax rate is constant, then: PV (Interest Tax Shield) PV ( c Future Interest Payments) c PV (Future Interest Payments) c D 15-20 B. The Interest Tax Shield with a Target Debt-Equity Ratio • The value of the interest tax shield can be found by comparing the value of the levered firm, VL, to the unlevered value, VU, of the free cash flow discounted at the firm’s unlevered cost of capital, the pretax WACC. • When a firm adjusts its leverage to maintain a target debt-equity ratio, we can compute its value with leverage, VL, by discounting its free cash flow using the weighted average cost of capital. 15-21 10 06.01.2021 Unlevered cost of capital – Even though the company may actually have debt, the company’s unlevered cost of capital still matters - If the unlevered cost of capital is found to be 10% and a company has debt at a cost of just 5% then its actual cost of capital (WACC) will be lower than the 10% unlevered cost. Remember that the after-tax cost of debt is lower than the pre-tax cost of debt, and the WACC is lower than the unlevered cost of capital - This unlevered cost is still informative, but if the company fails to achieve the 10% unlevered returns that investors in this market require, then investor capital may move to alternative investments. This will lead to a fall in the company’s stock price. - The firm’s unlevered cost of capital equals its pretax WACC because it represents investors’ required return for holding the 15-22 entire firm (equity and debt) Textbook Example 15.3 Hint: Compute the value of Western Lumber as a constant growth perpetuity - for unlevered value use pretax WACC as r - for levered value use WACC as r - Interest tax shield = VL-VU 15-23 11 06.01.2021 Summary Point • MM Proposition I with Taxes – The total value of the levered firm exceeds the value of the firm without leverage due to the present value of the tax savings from debt With Permanent Debt : • Interest tax shield c × D With a Target Debt-Equity Ratio : • Interest tax shield = VL-VU 15-24 Chapter Outline 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield 15.4 Personal Taxes 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 15-25 12 06.01.2021 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield • when a firm uses debt to repurchase outstanding shares and captures the benefit of tax shield 15-26 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield • Assume that Midco Industries wants to boost its stock price. The company currently has 20 million shares outstanding with a market price of $15 per share and no debt. Midco has had consistently stable earnings, and pays a 35% tax rate. Management plans to borrow $100 million on a permanent basis and to use the borrowed funds to repurchase outstanding shares. 15-27 13 06.01.2021 The Tax Benefit • Without leverage – VU = (20 million shares) × ($15/share) = $300 million • If Midco borrows $100 million using permanent debt, the present value of the firm’s future tax savings is – PV(interest tax shield) = c∙D = 35% × $100 million = $35 million 15-28 The Tax Benefit (cont'd) • Thus the total value of the levered firm will be – VL = VU + cD = $300 million + $35 million = $335 million • Because the value of the debt is $100 million, the value of the equity is – E = VL − D = $335 million − $100 million = $235 million – Although the value of the shares outstanding drops to $235 million, shareholders will also receive the $100 million that Midco will pay out through the share repurchase. 15-29 14 06.01.2021 The Share Repurchase • Assume Midco repurchases its shares at the current price of $15/share. The firm will repurchase 6.67 million shares. – $100 million ÷ $15/share = 6.67 million shares • It will then have 13.33 million shares outstanding. – 20 million − 6.67 million = 13.33 million • The total value of equity is $235 million; therefore the new share price is $17.625/share. – $235 million ÷ 13.33 million shares = $17.625 • Shareholders that keep their shares earn a capital gain of $2.625 per share. – $17.625 − $15 = $2.625 • The total gain to shareholders is $35 million. – $2.625/share × 13.33 million shares = $35 million 15-30 The Share Repurchase If the shares are worth $17.625/share after the repurchase, why would • Assume Midco repurchases its shares atshareholders the current price of their shares to Midco at $15/share? $15/share. The firm willtender repurchase 6.67 million shares. – $100 million ÷ $15/share = 6.67 million shares • It will then have 13.33 million shares outstanding. – 20 million − 6.67 million = 13.33 million • The total value of equity is $235 million; therefore the new share price is $17.625/share. – $235 million ÷ 13.33 million shares = $17.625 • Shareholders that keep their shares earn a capital gain of $2.625 per share. – $17.625 − $15 = $2.625 • The total gain to shareholders is $35 million. – $2.625/share × 13.33 million shares = $35 million 15-31 15 06.01.2021 The Share Repurchase (cont'd) • If investors could buy shares for $15 immediately before the repurchase, and they could sell these shares immediately afterward at a higher price, this would represent an arbitrage opportunity • Realistically, the value of the Midco’s equity will rise immediately from $300 million to $335 million after the repurchase announcement. With 20 million shares outstanding, the share price will rise immediately to $16.75 per share. – $335 million ÷ 20 million shares = $16.75 per share • With a repurchase price of $16.75, the shareholders who tender their shares and the shareholders who hold their shares both gain $1.75 per share as a result of the transaction. 15-32 No Arbitrage Pricing (cont'd) • The benefit of the interest tax shield goes to all 20 million of the original shares outstanding for a total benefit of $35 million. – $1.75/share × 20 million shares = $35 million • When securities are fairly priced, the original shareholders of a firm capture the full benefit of the interest tax shield from an increase in leverage. 15-33 16 06.01.2021 Analyzing the Recap: The Market Value Balance Sheet • In the presence of corporate taxes, we must include the interest tax shield as one of the firm’s assets. 15-34 Table 15.2 Market Value Balance Sheet for the Steps in Midco’s Leveraged Recapitalization Original MVBS After Debt issuance Assets Assets Cash Cash 100 Original Assets 300 Original Assets 300 Total Assets 300 Total Assets 400 Liabilities Liabilities Debt Debt 100 Equity 300 Equity 300 Total Liab. 300 Total Liab. 400 Shares outstanding (M) 20 Shares outstanding (M) 20 Price per share ($) 15.00 Price per share ($) 15.00 it is true only in a perfect capital market 15-35 17 06.01.2021 Table 15.2 Market Value Balance Sheet for the Steps in Midco’s Leveraged Recapitalization Original MVBS Recap Announced Debt issuance Share repurchase Assets Assets Assets Assets Cash Cash 100 Cash Original Assets 300 Original Assets 300 Original Assets 300 Interest tax shield 35 Int. tax shield 35 Int. tax shield 35 Total Assets 335 Total Assets 435 Total Assets 335 Cash Original Assets Total Assets 300 300 Liabilities Liabilities Debt Debt Liabilities Liabilities Debt 100 Debt 100 Equity 300 Equity 335 Equity 335 Equity 235 Total Liab. 300 Total Liab. 335 Total Liab. 435 Total Liab. 335 Shares outstanding (M) 20 Shares outstanding (M) 20 Shares outstanding (M) 20 Shares outstanding (M) 14.03 Price per share ($) 15.00 Price per share ($) 16.75 Price per share ($) 16.75 Price per share ($) 16.75 15-36 Chapter Outline 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield 15.4 Personal Taxes 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 15-37 18 06.01.2021 15.4 Personal Taxes • The cash flows to investors are typically taxed twice: – first at the corporate level – investors are taxed again when they receive their interest or dividend payment. Equity investors also must pay taxes on dividends and capital gains. 15-38 Including Personal Taxes in the Interest Tax Shield • The amount of money an investor will pay for a security depends on the cash flows the investor will receive after all taxes have been paid. • Personal taxes reduce the cash flows to investors and can offset some of the corporate tax benefits of leverage. 15-39 19 06.01.2021 Including Personal Taxes in the Interest Tax Shield (cont'd) • The actual interest tax shield depends on both corporate and personal taxes that are paid. • To determine the true tax benefit of leverage, the combined effect of both corporate and personal taxes needs to be evaluated. 15-40 Figure 15.3 After-Tax Investor Cash Flows Resulting from $1 in EBIT 15-41 20 06.01.2021 Table 15.3 Top Federal Tax Rates in the United States, 1971–2012 15-42 Including Personal Taxes in the Interest Tax Shield (cont'd) • In general, every $1 received after taxes by debt holders from interest payments costs equity holders $(1 − *) on an after-tax basis, where: – Effective Tax Advantage of Debt (1 i ) (1 c ) (1 e ) (1 c ) (1 e ) 1 (1 i ) (1 i ) – when the personal tax rates on debt and equity income are the same (i = e ), the formula reduces to * = c. – When equity income is taxed less heavily (e is less 15-43 than i), then * is less than c. 21 06.01.2021 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with Personal Taxes • Without personal taxes and with permanent debt the value of the firm with leverage is VL = VU + cD • With personal taxes and permanent debt, the value of the firm with leverage becomes V L V U D – If * is less than c, the benefit of leverage is reduced in the presence of personal taxes. 15-44 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with Personal Taxes (cont'd) • With personal taxes the firm’s equity and debt costs of capital will adjust to compensate investors for their respective tax burdens. • The net result is that a personal tax disadvantage for debt causes the WACC to decline more slowly with leverage than it otherwise would. 15-45 22 06.01.2021 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt • Several assumptions were made in estimating the effective tax advantage of debt after taking personal taxes into account that may need adjustment when determining the actual tax benefit for a particular firm or investor. 15-46 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) A. It was assumed that investors paid capital gains taxes every year. • However, capital gains taxes are paid only when the investor sells the stock and realizes the gain. Deferring the payment of capital gains taxes lowers the present value of the taxes, which can be interpreted as a lower effective capital gains tax rate. 15-47 23 06.01.2021 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) B. Investors with accrued losses that they can use to offset gains face a zero effective capital gains tax rate. • Thus, investors with longer holding periods or with accrued losses face a lower tax rate on equity income, decreasing the effective tax advantage of debt. 15-48 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) C. It was also assumed that shareholder gains from additional earnings were evenly split between dividends and capital gains. • For firms with much higher or much lower payout ratios, however, this average would not be accurate. 15-49 24 06.01.2021 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) D. In addition, it was assumed that investors pay the top marginal federal income tax rates. • In reality, rates vary for individual investors, and many investors face lower rates. – At lower rates, the effects of personal taxes are less substantial. 15-50 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) E. Many investors face no personal taxes. – For example, investments held in retirement savings accounts or pension funds that are not subject to taxes. – For these investors, the effective tax advantage of debt is the full corporate tax rate. 15-51 25 06.01.2021 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt (cont'd) • The bottom line: – Calculating the effective tax advantage of debt accurately is extremely difficult. • A firm must consider the tax bracket of its typical debt holders, and the tax bracket and holding period of its typical equity holders. – The tax advantage of debt will vary across firms and from investor to investor. 15-52 Chapter Outline 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield 15.4 Personal Taxes 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 15-53 26 06.01.2021 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes • Do Firms Prefer Debt? – When firms raise new capital from investors, they do so primarily by issuing debt. In most years aggregate equity issues are negative, meaning that on average, firms are reducing the amount of equity outstanding by buying shares. – While firms seem to prefer debt when raising external funds, not all investment is externally funded. Most investment and growth is supported by internally generated funds. – Even though firms have not issued new equity, the market value of equity has risen over time as firms have grown. For the average firm, the result is that debt as a fraction of firm value has varied in a range from 30–45%. 15-54 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes (cont'd) • Do Firms Prefer Debt? – The use of debt varies greatly by industry. – Firms in growth industries like biotechnology or high technology carry very little debt, while airlines, automakers, utilities, and financial firms have high leverage ratios. 15-55 27 06.01.2021 Figure 15.7 Debt-toValue Ratio [D / (E + D)] for Select Industries Source: Capital IQ, 2012 15-56 Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt • Level of earnings • Growth rate 15-57 28 06.01.2021 Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt • To receive the full tax benefits of leverage, a firm need not use 100% debt financing, but the firm does need to have taxable earnings. – This constraint may limit the amount of debt needed as a tax shield. 15-58 Table 15.4 Tax Savings with Different Amounts of Leverage ? ? With no leverage, the firm receives no tax benefit. With high leverage, the firm saves $350 in taxes. With excess leverage, the firm has a net operating loss and there is no increase in the tax savings. Because the firm is already not paying taxes, there is no immediate tax shield from the excess leverage 15-59 29 06.01.2021 Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt (cont'd) • The optimal level of leverage from a tax saving perspective is the level such that interest equals EBIT. – At the optimal level of leverage, the firm shields all of its taxable income and it does not have any tax-disadvantaged excess interest. 15-62 Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt (cont'd) • However, it is unlikely that a firm can predict its future EBIT (and the optimal level of debt) precisely. – If there is uncertainty regarding EBIT, then there is a risk that interest will exceed EBIT. As a result, the tax savings for high levels of interest falls, possibly reducing the optimal level of the interest payment. – In general, as a firm’s interest expense approaches its expected taxable earnings, the marginal tax advantage of debt declines, limiting the amount of debt the firm should use. 15-63 30 06.01.2021 Growth and Debt • Growth will affect the optimal leverage ratio. – To avoid excess interest, a firm with positive earnings should have a level of debt such that interest payments are below its expected taxable earnings. Interest rD Debt EBIT or Debt EBIT / rD 15-64 Growth and Debt (cont'd) • From a tax perspective, the firm’s optimal level of debt is proportional to its current earnings. However, the value of the firm’s equity will depend on the growth rate of earnings: – The higher the growth rate, the higher the value of equity. As a result, the optimal proportion of debt in the firm’s capital structure [D / (E + D)] will be lower, the higher the firm’s growth rate. 15-65 31 06.01.2021 Other Tax Shields • There are numerous provisions in the tax laws for deductions and tax credits, such as depreciation, investment tax credits, carry-forwards of past operating losses, etc. • To the extent that a firm has other tax shields, its taxable earnings will be reduced and it will rely less heavily on the interest tax shield. 15-66 • Firms have used debt to shield a greater percentage of their earnings from taxes in more recent years (mirroring the increase in the effective tax advantage of debt). • Firms have far less leverage that our analysis of the interest tax shield would predict. 15-67 32 06.01.2021 The Low Leverage Puzzle (cont'd) • Firms worldwide have similar low proportions of debt financing. – Although the corporate tax codes are similar across all countries in terms of the tax advantage of debt, personal tax rates vary more significantly, leading to greater variation in *. 15-68 Table 15.5 International Leverage and Tax Rates (1990) 15-69 33 06.01.2021 The Low Leverage Puzzle (cont'd) • It would appear that firms, on average, are under-leveraged. However, it is hard to accept that most firms are acting suboptimally. – In reality, there is more to the capital structure story than discussed so far. 15-70 The Low Leverage Puzzle (cont'd) • A key item missing from the analysis thus far is that increasing the level of debt increases the probability of bankruptcy. • If bankruptcy is costly, these costs might offset the tax advantages of debt financing. 15-71 34