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Chapter 12 Capital Structure. Quick Review of Capital Markets Benefits of Borrowing Pecking Order Hypothesis Modigliani and Miller Optimal Capital Structure Theory. Quick review of Capital Markets. Capital Markets Borrow from more than one year Various types of markets Bond Equity
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Chapter 12Capital Structure • Quick Review of Capital Markets • Benefits of Borrowing • Pecking Order Hypothesis • Modigliani and Miller Optimal Capital Structure Theory
Quick review of Capital Markets • Capital Markets • Borrow from more than one year • Various types of markets • Bond • Equity • Investors return is borrower’s cost • Not all borrowers get the same rate • Function of risk to investor • See Example 12.1, Lucky Larry at 11.11% and Sometimes Lucky Sherry at 42.86%
Benefits of Borrowing • Using other people’s money • Financial leverage • Cost of debt is less than the anticipated return of the investment • Financial leverage benefit measured via EPS • Owners of the firm can be better off with debt financing • Example 12.2 – Jordan Enterprises • Adding debt improves EPS if earnings exceed $960,000 • Adding debt hurts EPS if earnings less than $960,000 • Jordan Enterprises will add debt if it believes earnings will be greater than $960,000
Pecking Order Hypothesis (POH) • Preferred borrowing pattern • Borrow from cheapest source first • Asymmetric information • Firms know more than lenders • Information is costly to obtain • Information may be proprietary • Borrowing pattern from POH • Internal first • Avoid swings in dividend payments • External financing – cheapest first (debt) and equity as last resort
Pecking Order Hypothesis (POH) • Example 12.3 – Abbot and Costello borrowing choices • Outsiders believe managers only issue equity when stock over priced • Outsiders therefore lower price they will pay for equity • Managers thus choose to issue debt if possible • More profitable companies • Borrow less from external sources • Therefore have lower debt-equity ratios
Modigliani and Miller Optimal Capital Structure Theory • Starts with a world of no taxes • Two Propositions • Proposition I – It is irrelevant what borrowing pattern a firm chooses…the value of the firm remains the same • Proposition II – cost of equity is a function of three things • Require return on assets • Cost of debt • Debt-Equity ratio • In world of no taxes, WACC is constant and the firm is insensitive to the funding choice
Modigliani and Miller Optimal Capital Structure Theory • Modified to a world of corporate taxes • Proposition I – all debt financing is optimal • Proposition II – the WACC of the firm falls as more debt is added • What is happening in this world? • Government is losing out to equity holders • Tax shield due to interest payments reduces government’s direct share of profits and captured by equity holders • VL = VE + D x TC
Modigliani and Miller Optimal Capital Structure Theory • One more modification – World of corporate taxes and bankruptcy • Bankruptcy is costly • When debt payments cannot be made equity holders lose company to debt holders • Must avoid bankruptcy • Optimal debt-equity ratio arises • At point where marginal benefits of debt financing equal marginal costs of bankruptcy • At this point WACC is lowest and value of firm highest
Problems • Problem 3 – Benefits of Borrowing • Problem 7 – Pecking Order Hypothesis • Problem 9 – Finding WACC • Problem 11 – M&M in World of No Taxes