Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information

Similar documents
Chapter 17 Payout Policy

RISK MANAGEMENT AND VALUE CREATION

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

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

Some Puzzles. Stock Splits

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

Advanced Risk Management

Chapter 15. Topics in Chapter. Capital Structure Decisions

Capital structure I: Basic Concepts

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

Wrap-Up of the Financing Module

Financial Distress Costs and Firm Value

CHAPTER 16 CAPITAL STRUCTURE: BASIC CONCEPTS

EMP 62 Corporate Finance

Finance: Risk Management

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

Chapter 13 Capital Structure and Distribution Policy

Corporate Borrowing and Leverage Effects

Homework Solution Ch15

Chapter 20: Financial Options

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

Capital Structure Management

Chapter 16 Debt Policy

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 19 - Dividends And Other Payouts

Recitation VI. Jiro E. Kondo

Principles of Corporate Finance

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

: Corporate Finance. Financing Projects

CHAPTER 17: CAPITAL STRUCTURE: TRADEOFFS AND THEORY

Capital Structure. Finance 100

INTERNATIONAL CORPORATE GOVERNANCE. Wintersemester Christian Harm

Chapter 15. Chapter 15 Overview

AFM 371 Practice Problem Set #2 Winter Suggested Solutions

Determinants of Credit Rating and Optimal Capital Structure among Pakistani Banks

Chapter 16: Payout Policy

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

FIN Corp Fin'l Policy & Control: Selling Seasoned Equity. Why Sell Seasoned Equity? Why Sell Seasoned Equity? (cont.)

Debt. Firm s assets. Common Equity

Note that there is an overlap between the T/F and multiple-choice questions, as some of the T/F statements are used in multiple-choice questions.

Applied Corporate Finance. Unit 4

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS Session

Informational Frictions and Financial Intermediation. Prof. Irina A. Telyukova UBC Economics 345 Fall 2008

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

Discussion of Calomiris Kahn. Economics 542 Spring 2012

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

Quiz Bomb. Page 1 of 12

Contemporary Financial Management 8th Edition

CAPITAL STRUCTURE POLICY. Chapter 15

CAPITAL STRUCTURE POLICY. Principles Applied in This Chapter 15.1 A GLANCE AT CAPITAL STRUCTURE CHOICES IN PRACTICE

Practice questions. Multiple Choice

CORPORATE FINANCE: THE CORE

JEM034 Corporate Finance Winter Semester 2017/2018

Commentary. Philip E. Strahan. 1. Introduction. 2. Market Discipline from Public Equity

Corporate Finance - Yossi Spiegel

Key Concepts and Skills

Smith C. RAISING CAPITAL: THEORY AND EVIDENCE in Chew D. (ed.) The New Corporate Finance McGrawHill 1993

Part 4: Market Failure II - Asymmetric Information Adverse Selection and Signaling

Chapter Eleven. Chapter 11 The Economics of Financial Intermediation Why do Financial Intermediaries Exist

Financing decisions (2) Class 16 Financial Management,

Week-2. Dr. Ahmed. Strategic Plan

Chapter 14: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market

FACULTY OF ECONOMICS UNIVERSITY OF LJUBLJANA MASTER S THESIS TANJA GORENC

Capital Structure. Outline

DETERMINANTS OF DEBT CAPACITY. 1st set of transparencies. Tunis, May Jean TIROLE

Handout for Unit 4 for Applied Corporate Finance

Module 4: Capital Structure and Dividend Policy

Module 1: Accounting Information in Capital Markets

CONVERTIBLE BONDS: A LITERATURE REVIEW AND SOME MARKET EVIDENCE

Prof. Bryan Caplan Econ 812

Stocks and corporate bonds not the most important sources of funds for business

Financial Economics Field Exam August 2011

FIN 540 Recapitalizations. What Is a Recapitalization (Debt/Equity Swap)?

Distributions to Shareholders

SUMMARY OF THEORIES IN CAPITAL STRUCTURE DECISIONS

ANGLO-AMERICAN FIRMS & FINANCE IN TRANSITION EB434 ENTERPRISE + GOVERNANCE

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

FIN 540 Selling Corporate Debt. Selling Corporate Debt: Summary Statistics (Tables 2&3)

Capital Structure and Financial Performance: Analysis of Selected Business Companies in Bombay Stock Exchange

Should we fear derivatives? By Rene M Stulz, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Summer 2004

Chapter 16 Capital Structure

Advanced Corporate Finance. 3. Capital structure

THE HONG KONG INSTITUTE OF CHARTERED SECRETARIES THE INSTITUTE OF CHARTERED SECRETARIES AND ADMINISTRATORS

Lecture 1: Introduction, Optimal financing contracts, Debt

Concentrating on reason 1, we re back where we started with applied economics of information

CORPORATE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT. PART I INTRODUCTION (chapter 1-2)

Economics 101A (Lecture 25) Stefano DellaVigna

FIN 300 Chapter 1: Introduction to Corporate Finance

Scenic Video Transcript End-of-Period Accounting and Business Decisions Topics. Accounting decisions: o Accrual systems.

Problem Set 5 Answers

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

MAIN TYPES OF INFORMATION ASYMMETRY (names from insurance industry jargon)

Principal-Agent Issues and Managerial Compensation

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

The Financial System. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () The Financial System 1 / 55

The influence of leverage on firm performance: A corporate governance perspective

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS Session

Dividend Policy Chapter 16

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

Mergers, Acquisitions and Divestures

OLD/PRACTICE Final Exam

Transcription:

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-1 Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information I. Basic Ideas 1. As debt increases, chance of bankruptcy increases => bankruptcy costs make debt less attractive 2. As debt increases, creditors become more concerned that stockholders will try to exploit them => decrease in issue price (increase in interest rates) makes debt less attractive 3. Debt motivates managers to work harder for stockholders => makes debt more attractive 4. Capital structure changes reveal management s private information about the firm => debt issues reveal management s confidence => equity issues reveal management s belief that equity is overvalued II. The Costs of Bankruptcy and Financial Distress Note: In perfect markets, bankruptcy does not affect capital structure decisions Reason: creditors simply take control of the firm => no loss of value => no cost => need to look at cash flows that go to someone besides stockholders and creditors in bankruptcy A. Direct Costs of Bankruptcy Direct costs: costs stemming from the bankruptcy process Primary source of costs: cost to hire outside experts Ex. accountants, lawyers, investment bankers Results of studies of average cost as a percent of pre-bankruptcy value: 3-4% but 12% for small firms => many of costs fixed

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-2 B. Indirect Costs of Financial Distress Indirect costs: costs to the firm associated with an increased chance of bankruptcy 1) stem from changes in behavior towards the firm 2) difficult to measure Examples: loss of customers, loss of suppliers and trade credit, loss of best employees, more difficulty collecting from customers, fire sale of assets, loss of value as management fights fires rather than maximizing value, losses by creditors as we default on what we owe them. Results of studies of indirect financial distress costs: 10-20% of firm value C. Expected Financial Distress Costs E(Financial Distress Costs) = probability of distress x financial distress costs III. Agency and Debt 1) Probability of distress increases with: a) amount of debt relative to cash flow and assets b) volatility of cash flows and asset values 2) Distress costs vary by industry and firm Agency: conflicts of interest within the firm => conflicts primarily stem from an unequal sharing of the costs and benefits of some action A. Stockholder-Bondholder Conflict and the Agency Cost of Debt Note: all of the following issues are more significant if the firm is in financial distress

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-3 1. Excessive Risk Taking Basic idea: shareholders may gain at the expense of bondholders if the firm invests in high risk projects even if the project has a negative NPV Reason: unequal sharing of upside and downside of risk 1) Bondholder claim: fixed => downside risk: hurts them => upside risk: doesn t really help them. 2) Stockholder claim: residual with limited liability => upside risk: stockholders benefit from upside => downside risk: doesn t hurt once value falls below what owed the creditors => net result: stockholders prefer high risk while bondholders prefer low risk 2. Under-investment in positive NPV projects Basic idea: stockholders MAY prefer the firm reject positive NPV projects 1) if default is likely, bondholders get much (even all) of the project s benefit => bondholders paid first => stockholders may have net loss if they provide funding 2) problem can be solved if can get creditors to help fund the project => will be hard to do since default already likely 3. Cashing Out Basic idea: stockholders gain at the expense of bondholders when the firm pays out cash to stockholders Reason: when firm pays out cash, the combined value of the firm s outstanding stock and bonds falls by the amount of cash paid out => as long as bonds drop in value, the drop in stock value < cash paid out => since stockholders get all of the cash paid out (dividends, stock repurchases), stockholders have a net gain

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-4 4. Agency Costs, Covenants, and Debt Debt covenant: agreement in debt contract that places restrictions on the firm Role of debt covenants: attempt to prevent actions that would benefit stockholders at the expense of bondholders Q: Why would stockholders want to protect bondholders against these problems? Benefit of covenants: increases issue price (lower interest rate) for debt compared to if bondholder interests are not protected Cost of covenants: reduces management flexibility B. Stockholder-Manager Conflict and the Agency Benefit of Debt Key idea: the interests of managers and owners may not be the same 1. Ownership and the Sharing of Benefits and Costs a. Basic ideas 1) if the manager is also the owner, the goal of the manager and the goal of the owner is the same => same person! 2) if the manager doesn t own all of the firm s stock, there is a potential conflict between the owner and the manager if there is an unequal sharing of the costs and benefits => almost always the case b. Types of conflict between owners and managers Key => think about what is optimal for managers and stockholders 1) Management Effort: Q: Who bears the cost of management effort? management Q: Who gets the benefit of management effort? management and owners Q: Will managers want to expend more or less effort than is optimal for stockholders? Less

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-5 2) Pay and Perks: Q: Who bears the cost of management pay and perks? stockholders Q: Who gets the benefit of management pay and perks? management and owners Q: Will managers want more or less pay and perks than is optimal for stockholders? More 3) Firm diversification: Q: How does company-specific risk impact stockholders? Doesn t since well diversified Q: How does company-specific risk impact managers? Makes worse off since not well diversified Q: How does diversification of the firm impact stockholders and managers? Stockholder: indifferent Managers: benefits them => managers will want to diversify the firm even though it doesn t help stockholders Note: only a problem only if firm incurs cost as diversify 4) Empire building: Q: How does the size of the firm impact stockholders? Doesn t (unless related to NPV) Q: How does the size of the firm impact managers? may benefit => management at larger firms tend to have higher pay, perks, power, and prestige and less risk Q: Will managers want a larger firm than stockholders? Yes, may even want to invest in negative NPV projects to grow firm Note: the impact of stockholder-manager conflict likely worse if firm generates high free cash flow Free cash flow: cash flow left after interest payments and investment in positive NPV projects

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-6 2. Debt and owner-manager conflict 1) Issuing debt allows original owners to avoid issuing equity Why important? stock can only be issued to outside investors at a discount because of future owner/manager conflict 2) Debt helps resolve stockholder-manager conflict after it is issued => issue debt and repurchase equity a) cash will be used for debt service so management can t waste it b) creditors help monitor management 3) Threat of bankruptcy motivates managers to work harder 1) debt may weaken firm so less able to respond to competition 2) management may resist debt because don t like the discipline and reduced job security IV. The Tradeoff Theory V L = V U + PV(Interest Tax Shield) PV(Financial Distress Costs) PV(Agency Costs of Debt) + PV(Agency Benefits of Debt) (16.3) => optimal debt maximizes firm value Firm Value Tradeoff Theory 115,000 110,000 Vu = 100,000 105,000 100,000 95,000 Taxes (T) T+Fin Distress(T+FD) T+FD+Agency 90,000 85,000 80,000 0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 D*(T+FD+A) D*(T) D*(T+FD) Debt

Chapter 16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information-7 V. Asymmetric Information and Capital Structure Basic idea: management generally knows more about the firm than outside investors A. Leverage as a Credible Signal Basic idea: an increase in debt signals management confidence in firm => signal is credible since costly to send false signal Q: Why is debt a credible signal? B. Adverse Selection 1. Key ideas: => if additional debt drives firm into bankruptcy, management likely fired 1) sellers typically know more than buyers about the quality of an item. 2) at any given price, those who have low quality goods will be more eager to sell 2. Results: 1) products available for sale are likely below average quality 2) buyers will demand a discount when buying Note: 1) and 2) feed off each other 3. Implications for Equity Issuance 1) stock prices should fall (on average) when firms announce plans to issue equity => an equity issue signals that management believes the stock price exceeds its value Note: stock prices do indeed fall (on average) when firms announce plans to issue equity 2) current stockholders will prefer that the firm fund investments with retained earnings or debt rather than equity