Solutions Manual Corporate Finance: A Focused Approach Third Edition Michael C. Ehrhardt University of Tennessee Eugene F. Brigham University of Florida Australia ∙ Brazil ∙ Canada ∙ Mexico ∙ Singapore ∙ Spain ∙ United ∙ Kingdom ∙ United States i PREFACE This preface contains a description of how we and others have used Corporate Finance (CF). Additionally, it gives some suggestions on how the instructional aids contained in this manual or available separately from South-Western College Publishers can be used to enhance the course. Course Format There is no single best way to teach a finance class—the optimal course structure varies with students’ backgrounds, instructors' interests, the number of class contact hours, and the place of the course in the overall curriculum. Further, because these factors change over time, most of us vary our approaches from year to year. Still, it may be useful to some instructors to learn how we use CF. We designed CF primarily for use in the introductory MBA corporate finance course, but it can also be used at the undergraduate level when the students are very good. We wrote CF because we wanted a textbook that could be covered in a single semester, but that still covered all the important corporate finance topics in depth. CF provides a discussion of both the theories behind financial decision-making and "nuts and bolts" information about how to implement the theory. It is useful both for primary learning and as a reference book—students find the text useful in follow-up case courses as well as after graduation, when they must apply the material in a real-world setting. We believe that a few cases are necessary to give the course a real-world flavor. Further, we like to use cases and problems that require the use of spreadsheets and Internet data, and a large set of cases are available from South-Western College Publishers. Most MBA programs require that students are familiar with spreadsheets prior to taking the finance course, but many students have only a rudimentary knowledge. Thus, the first finance course should give students the opportunity to learn more about spreadsheets, especially how they can be used to assist in financial decision-making. End-of-Chapter Materials A section at the end of each chapter contains Questions, Self-Test Problems, Problems, and a Mini Case. This Solutions Guide provides answers and worked-out solutions to the Questions, Problems, and Mini Cases (the solutions to the Self-Test Problems are in the textbook’s Appendix A). Perhaps the most important pedagogic aid in CF is the relatively long "Mini Case" at the end of the problem set for each chapter. We noticed a difference in students' interest and attention on ii our "lecture days" as opposed to our "case days." Generally, case days were much livelier. That made us wonder if we could make our lectures more like the cases. Then, for several years, we experimented with writing up some short cases (Mini Cases) for use as a basis for our lectures. The Mini Cases covered the key elements of the chapters, and the solutions were set up in a lecture format, with more detail than our normal end-of-chapter problem solutions. Later, we created transparencies, and then PowerPoint slides, to enhance the solutions. The results were so successful that we ended up scrapping our old lecture notes and instead used the Mini Cases and PowerPoint slides for our lectures. We also have Excel worksheets that correspond to the Mini Cases. In addition to containing spreadsheet solutions to the Mini Case, the Excel worksheets allow us to do some real-time what-if analysis. We often visit relevant Web sites when we are in a networked classroom. For example, when teaching bond pricing, we begin with the PowerPoint show, which explains the basic concepts such as the relationship between bond price and market interest rates for bonds of different maturities. We then “toggle” to the Excel worksheet and do some “what-if” analysis with a graph that shows the change in bond prices as we change the input, the market interest rate. When time permits, we use the Web links at the textbook’s Web site. For example, we go to a Web site that has current actual bond prices, and we compare the actual relationships with those that we discussed in class. Acknowledgments We would like to thank Amelia Bell and Stephanie Hodge for all their help on this edition. We also want to thank Lou Gapenski, Dana Clark, Susan Whitman, and Tina Goforth for their work in the past. Conclusions We have tried to make this Solutions Manual as clear and error-free as possible; however, there are almost certainly some mistakes and unclear sections. Any suggestions for improving the manual would be greatly appreciated, and should be addressed to Mike Ehrhardt at the e-mail address given below. Eugene F. Brigham University of Florida gene.brigham@cba.ufl.edu Michael C. Ehrhardt University of Tennessee ehrhardt@utk.edu March 2008 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 An Overview of Corporate Finance and the Financial Environment .........................1-1 Chapter 2 Time Value of Money .................................................................................................2-1 Chapter 3 Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes .............................................................3-1 Chapter 4 Analysis of Financial Statements ................................................................................4-1 Chapter 5 Risk and Return ...........................................................................................................5-1 Chapter 6 Bonds, Bond Valuation, and Interest Rates ................................................................6-1 Chapter 7 Stocks, Stock Valuation, and Stock Market Equibibrium ..........................................7-1 Chapter 8 Financial Options and Applications in Corporate Finance.........................................8-1 Chapter 9 The Cost of Capital .....................................................................................................9-1 Chapter 10 Basics of Capital Budgeting: Evaluating Cash Flows .............................................10-1 Chapter 11 Cash Flow Estimation and Risk Analysis.................................................................11-1 Chapter 12 Financial Planning and Forecasting Financial Statements .......................................12-1 Chapter 13 Corporate Valuation, Value-Based Management, and Corporate Governance .......13-1 Chapter 14 Capital Structure Decisions.......................................................................................14-1 Chapter 15 Distributions to Shareholders: Dividends and Repurchases....................................15-1 Chapter 16 Working Capital Management ..................................................................................16-1 Chapter 17 Multinational Financial Management .......................................................................17-1 iv