Choices of Finance. Internal or External. External: Debt or Equity. Statistic of Debt/Equity ratio. Question: Is a high ratio bad?

Similar documents
Financing decisions (2) Class 16 Financial Management,

Chapter 15. Chapter 15 Overview

Financial Leverage and Capital Structure Policy

Capital Structure. Katharina Lewellen Finance Theory II February 18 and 19, 2003

Let s Build a Capital Structure

Maximizing the value of the firm is the goal of managing capital structure.

Capital Structure. Outline

: Corporate Finance. Financing Projects

Recitation VI. Jiro E. Kondo

Chapter 16 Debt Policy

Optimal Capital Structure

JEM034 Corporate Finance Winter Semester 2017/2018

Corporate Financial Management. Lecture 3: Other explanations of capital structure

Capital Structure. Capital Structure. Konan Chan. Corporate Finance, Leverage effect Capital structure stories. Capital structure patterns

Chapter 15. Topics in Chapter. Capital Structure Decisions

Homework Solution Ch15

Capital structure I: Basic Concepts

Principles of Banking (II): Microeconomics of Banking (3) Bank Capital

Chapter 18 Interest rates / Transaction Costs Corporate Income Taxes (Cash Flow Effects) Example - Summary for Firm U Summary for Firm L

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 19 - Dividends And Other Payouts

PAPER No.: 8 Financial Management MODULE No. : 25 Capital Structure Theories IV: MM Hypothesis with Taxes, Merton Miller Argument

Capital Structure I. Corporate Finance and Incentives. Lars Jul Overby. Department of Economics University of Copenhagen.

Financial Distress Costs and Firm Value

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS Session

EMBA in Management & Finance. Corporate Finance. Eric Jondeau

Chapter 17 Payout Policy

Capital Structure Questions

Advanced Corporate Finance. 3. Capital structure

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS Session

Chapter Ten. The Efficient Market Hypothesis

SUMMARY OF THEORIES IN CAPITAL STRUCTURE DECISIONS

15.414: COURSE REVIEW. Main Ideas of the Course. Approach: Discounted Cashflows (i.e. PV, NPV): CF 1 CF 2 P V = (1 + r 1 ) (1 + r 2 ) 2

Leverage. Capital Budgeting and Corporate Objectives

CORPORATE FINANCE: THE CORE

Module 4: Capital Structure and Dividend Policy

Basic Tools of Finance (Chapter 27 in Mankiw & Taylor)

Debt. Firm s assets. Common Equity

Financial Leverage: the extent to which a company is committed to fixed charges related to interest payments. Measured by:

Are Capital Structure Decisions Relevant?

Advanced Corporate Finance. 3. Capital structure

What do Microsoft, Lexmark, and Ford have in common? In 2009, all three companies

FCF t. V = t=1. Topics in Chapter. Chapter 16. How can capital structure affect value? Basic Definitions. (1 + WACC) t

Chapter 13 Capital Structure and Distribution Policy

Chapter 14: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market

Chapter 14: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market

OPTIMAL CAPITAL STRUCTURE & CAPITAL BUDGETING WITH TAXES

Leverage and Capital Structure The structure of a firm s sources of long-term financing

The homework assignment reviews the major capital structure issues. The homework assures that you read the textbook chapter; it is not testing you.

CHAPTER 17: CAPITAL STRUCTURE: TRADEOFFS AND THEORY

I. Multiple choice questions: Circle one answer that is the best. (2.5 points each)

Final Exam Finance for AEO (Resit)

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information

Capital Structure, cont. Katharina Lewellen Finance Theory II March 5, 2003

CHAPTER 14 Distributions to shareholders: Dividends and share repurchases. What is dividend policy?

More Tutorial at Corporate Finance

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 16 - Capital Structure: Basic Concepts

Chapter 16 Capital Structure

TRADE-OFF THEORY VS. PECKING ORDER THEORY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM THE BALTIC COUNTRIES 3

Corporate Borrowing and Leverage Effects

Discounting Rules for Risky Assets. Stewart C. Myers and Richard Ruback

Available online at ScienceDirect. Procedia Economics and Finance 6 ( 2013 )

Wrap-Up of the Financing Module

Capital Structure. Finance 100

Table of Contents. Chapter 1 Introduction to Financial Management Chapter 2 Financial Statements, Cash Flows and Taxes...

University of Pennsylvania The Wharton School

PAPER No. 8: Financial Management MODULE No. 27: Capital Structure in practice

Basic Finance Exam #2

Chapter 13. Efficient Capital Markets and Behavioral Challenges

Key Concepts and Skills

Dividend Policy. Return of Buybacks. Performance of Dividends Stocks. Cash Dividend vs. Stock Repurchase Dividend Theories.

Distributions to Shareholders

UNCERTAINTY AND INFORMATION

Iterated Dominance and Nash Equilibrium

AFM 371 Practice Problem Set #2 Winter Suggested Solutions

Principles of Corporate Finance

*Efficient markets assumed

CHAPTER 14. Capital Structure in a Perfect Market. Chapter Synopsis

Quiz Bomb. Page 1 of 12

CONVERTIBLE BONDS: A LITERATURE REVIEW AND SOME MARKET EVIDENCE

Price Theory Lecture 9: Choice Under Uncertainty

The Spiffy Guide to Finance

CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW. Modigliani and Miller (1958) in their original work prove that under a restrictive set

A Random Walk Down Wall Street

How quantitative methods influence and shape finance industry

The Determinants of Capital Structure: Analysis of Non Financial Firms Listed in Karachi Stock Exchange in Pakistan

CHAPTER 15 CAPITAL STRUCTURE: BASIC CONCEPTS

THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES JUNE / JULY 2006 FINS1613. Business Finance Final Exam

11 th Week of Lectures

FACULTY OF ECONOMICS UNIVERSITY OF LJUBLJANA MASTER S THESIS TANJA GORENC

Page 515 Summary and Conclusions

Mid Term Papers. Spring 2009 (Session 02) MGT201. (Group is not responsible for any solved content)

UNIVERSIDAD CARLOS III DE MADRID FINANCIAL ECONOMICS

The determinants for the capital structure choice of United States firms compared to United Kingdom firms

Practice questions. Multiple Choice

CHAPTER 16 CAPITAL STRUCTURE: BASIC CONCEPTS

Feedback Effect and Capital Structure

CAPITAL STRUCTURE: Implications of the different sources of financing

Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

Capital Structure Management

Transcription:

Choices of Finance. Internal or External. External: Debt or Equity. Statistic of Debt/Equity ratio. Question: Is a high ratio bad?

Does financial planning matter? Practitioneers devote a lot of attention to it. Leverage. Dividend policy. D/E in Cement industry is 20 times D/E ratio in Pharmaceuticals. Why? What are the important issues?

Clientele Theory Also called financial marketing. Investors with heterogeneous preferences and needs value the same cash flow streams differently. Financial policy choices affect the match between the security and clientele. Therefore, financial policy affects the firm s value!! For instance, an all-equity firm may fail to exploit the demands for both riskier and safer securities.

M&M (Debt Policy Doesn t Matter) Modigliani & Miller (MM 1:Debt Irrelevance) When there are no taxes and capital markets function well, it makes no difference whether the firm borrows or individual shareholders borrow. Therefore, the market value of a company does not depend on its capital structure.

M&M (Debt Policy Doesn t Matter) Assumptions Frictionless and competitive markets. Individuals can take same financial transactions as the firms and at same cost. The firms financing and operating decisions are independent. Capital structure does not affect cash flows e.g... No taxes No bankruptcy costs No effect on management incentives

M&M intuition Idea was revolutionary in the 50 s (won them the Nobel Prize). Investors preferences are over cash flows not securities. If they can make the same transactions as firms at the same prices, they will not pay a premium for firms to take such transactions. Put differently, if investors can reverse the firms financial decisions, these decisions are immaterial.

Arbitrage Proof. Two firms: V1=D1+E1, V2=E2. Both generate random X from same distribution. Firm 1 debt holders receive r * D1. Firm 1 equity holders receive X-r*D1. Firm 2 equity holders receive X If V2>V1, it is profitable to sell E2 and buy V1. If V1>V2, it is profitable to sell E1 (borrow D1) and buy V2.

M&M thoughts Yogi Berra said "You better cut the pizza in four pieces because I'm not hungry enough to eat six." A dairy farmer cannot make more money by skimming some of the butter fat and selling it and skim milk separately even though the butter fat sells for a higher prices per kg than whole milk.

Other applications. Applies to Governments as well (taxes or borrowing)! Modigliani, F. and M. Miller "Corporate Income Taxes and the Cost of Capital" American Economic Review, June 1963, 433-443. Miller, M., "Debt and Taxes," Journal of Finance, June 1977, 32, 261-276.

MMII (Leverage Irrelevance) Interest rate on corporate debt was 5%. Stock market averages 11%. How can financing be irrelevant? When debt is risk free, the expected return on common stock increases linear to the D/E ratio r equity = r assets + D E ( rassets rdebt )

Proof of MMII E [ X ] r = = D r + E r V D+ E D+ E a d e Rearranging yields r = ( r r ) D + r E e a d a

Taxes and Bankruptcy Interest is tax deductible so savings is t* Rd * D. Present value is t*rd*d/ Rd. Vl is value of leveraged firm, Vu is value of unleveraged firm Vl=Vu+t*D Re=Ru+(Ru-Rd)*(D/E)*(1-t)

Financial Distress Costs of Financial Distress - Costs arising from bankruptcy or distorted business decisions before bankruptcy. (Enron has over a billion direct costs). Market Value = Value if all Equity Financed + PV Tax Shield - PV Costs of Financial Distress

Financial Distress Maximum value of firm Market Value of The Firm Value of unlevered firm PV of interest tax shields Costs of financial distress Value of levered firm Debt Optimal amount of debt

Is this really true (Miller 1977)? Bankruptcy costs are not that high. If income tax rate is progressive: higher income, more taxes. Then general equilibrium effects will cause rates such that the corporate tax shield is equal to the personal income tax. This means that the MM results return!!

Pecking Order Hypothesis Managers know more than outside investors. This explains why a new issue lowers the price (they wouldn t do it if they felt the stock was undervalued). Firms prefer internal financing in order not to send adverse signals that may lower the stock price. If external financing is required, they issue debt first and then equity in order to avoid this bad signal.

Trade-off Theory The optimal D/E structure depends upon the tradeoff between interest tax shields and what financial troubles are out there. Companies with safe, tangible assets ought to have high D/Es. Companies with risky, intangible assets ought to rely on equity. Highly profitable firms sometimes don t take on debt, like MSFT, JNJ but GE has 4.25

Financial Slack Financial Slack is valuable in order to let bond holders feel that the bonds are risk free. Financial Slack may have a cost in that financial distress gives strong incentives for managers (especially entrenched ones) to work their butts off.

Moral hazard. What happens if all assets are not in place? Switching to a riskier project is advantageous to share-holders. Why? On plus side, bond holders don t gain, but loose more on the minus side since chance of default goes up. May invest in Negative NPV projects!! Does convertible bonds help alleviate this?

JB JB Manufacturing is an all equity firm. The equity is worth 2 million. The cost (return) of equity is 18%. JB pays no taxes. JB plans on issuing 400,000 in debt and use the proceeds to repurchase equity. The cost (return) of debt is 10%. What will the cost of capital (return on assets) be after repurchase? What will the return of equity be?

Market Efficiency Market Efficiency Theory Capital markets reflect all relevant information. You cannot consistently earn excess profits. Efficient Capital Markets - Financial markets in which security prices rapidly reflect all relevant information about asset values. Random Walk - Security prices change randomly, with no predictable trends or patterns.

Random Walk Theory The movement of stock prices from day to day DO NOT reflect any pattern. Statistically speaking, the movement of stock prices is random (skewed positive over the long term).

Random Walk Theory Coin Toss Game Heads $103.00 Heads $106.09 $100.00 Tails $100.43 Heads $100.43 Tails $97.50 Tails $95.06

Market Efficiency Technical Analysts - Investors who attempt to identify over- or undervalued stocks by searching for patterns in past prices. Fundamental Analysts - Analysts who attempt to fund under- or overvalued securities by analyzing fundamental information, such as earnings, asset values, and business prospects. Once a profit making opportunity is discovered, it will be competed away.

Market Efficiency Weak Form Efficiency - Market prices rapidly reflect all information contained in the history of past prices. Semi-Strong Form Efficiency - Market prices reflect all publicly available information. Strong Form Efficiency - Market prices reflect all information that could in principle be used to determine true value.

Todd s trip to work Two paths to work: Beit Oren and Hof Carmel. There is construction on the Beit Oren path starting on Sunday. Weak form of travel efficiency, after a day or so paths will take the same time. Semi-Strong form, if announced beforehand, that day paths will take the same time. Strong form, as long as one of the city planners know, that day paths will take the same time.

Lessons of Market Efficiency Markets have no memory Trust market prices There are no financial illusions Do it yourself diversification (worry about transaction costs).

Markets are good at aggregating information. Experiment by Charles Plott. State of world is either X, Y or Z. A stock has highest value in state Z and lowest in X. Bidders are given different signals. For instance if state Z half are given not X and half Y. Miracle: Price of stock went to actual value.

Prediction Markets Began with Iowa electronic presidential market. Used then at HP. Now Google uses it. Also there is intrade and tradesports. Tried to use it for Terrorism. Read Wisdom of Crowds if you are interested.

Prediction Markets People have taken market efficiency in reverse. If markets are efficient then they reflect information available. If we want to find out this information, run a market..

Market now. We are going to run a presidential prediction market (for fun).. Asset X will pay 100 shekels if Obama wins and 0 shekels otherwise. Asset Y will pay 100 shekels if McCain wins and 0 otherwises. Even teams will start with 5 of asset X, odd teams will start with 5 of asset Y. Both teams will start with 500 shekels endowment..