ACF Lecture 14 5
ACF Lecture 14 5
ACF Lecture 14 5
Basic Securities:
Stocks and Zero-Coupon Bonds
Consider a firm that has only two securities
outstanding: zero-coupon bonds maturing at
time T and common stock. The total current
market value of the firm, V, is
V = S + B,
where S is the current market value of the stock
on which no dividends are paid before the
maturity date of the bonds, T, and B is the
current market value of the zero-coupon bonds
with a face value F payable at date T.
Solution
120
100
80
= [(1 + r) d] / (u d)
= (1.1 0.8) / (1.2 0.8) = 0.75
Bond value = (0.75 x 100 + 0.25 x 80) / 1.1
= 86.36
Coupon Bonds
If a firm has coupon bonds outstanding with
more than one period left until maturity, we can
view the common stock as a compound option
or an option on an option.
- Option 1: On the maturity date, the stockholders
have the option to buy the firm from the
bondholders for the face value plus the last
coupon of the bonds
Option 3
N2
Option 2
N1
Coupon
Coupon
Option 1
N
Mature
Coupon + face value
150
(100)
180 6.02 =
173.98
(100.97)
208.78
Bond
106.02
139.18
106.02
120 6.02 =
113.98
(95.67)
136.78
106.02
91.18
91.18
YTM = 6.02%
Default premium = 1.02% per period
Value of an otherwise equivalent riskless bond
Callable Bonds
Many corporate bonds have a call provision that
allows the firm to repurchase (i.e., call) the bond
during a specified period (call period) for a prespecified price (call price) plus the accrued
coupon since the last coupon date.
The firm calls its bonds either to refinance the
debt at a lower interest cost or to obtain
operating flexibility by removing restrictive
covenants that may impede M&A or other major
investment projects.
180 6.02 =
173.98
208.78
139.18
150
120 6.02 =
113.98
136.78
91.18
B
99.43
Bu
100.97
(106.02/1.05)
Bd
95.67
208.78 106.02
139.18 106.02
136.78 106.02
91.18 106.02
(default)
10
180 6.56 =
173.44
208.13
138.75
150
120 6.56 =
113.44
136.13
90.75
B
100
Bu
101.49
(106.56/1.05)
Bd
95.84
208.13 106.56
138.75 106.56
136.13 106.56
90.75 106.56
(default)
11
Convertible Bonds
A convertible bond offers investors the right to
convert the bond into the stock of the issuing
firm during the conversion period at the specified
conversion terms.
Conversion ratio: The number of shares of
common stock into which a bond can be
converted.
Conversion price: The face value of the bond
divided by the conversion ratio.
Dilution factor, a: The fraction of the postconversion equity value that accrues to the
bondholders.
12
180 6.02 =
173.98
208.78
139.18
150
120 6.02 =
113.98
136.78
91.18
13
(No conversion)
108.00 118.45
Bu
112.43
(converted) 125.27
139.18 106.02
82.07
136.78 106.02
54.71
91.18 106.02
B
106.82
Bd
95.67
(No conversion)
72
208.78 106.02
(default)
101.69
178.78
119.18
150
120 31.02 =
88.98
106.78
71.18
14
Converted
101.72
Not converted
Converted
98.05
No conversion
88.53
(default)
Warrants
A warrant is a security that gives the owner the
right to purchase a common stock at a
prespecified price before an expiration date.
A warrant differs from a call option on stocks in
three ways:
A warrant is issued by a firm rather than by an
investor.
The expiration dates of warrants are typically
several years from the issue date.
The exercise of warrants results in the dilution of
the value of the underlying equity.
15
16
= dilution factor
= number of warrants per share outstanding upon
exercise of warrants
17
Solution:
216
180
150
144
120
96
Call X = 150
39.28
23.38
0
18
Warrant X = 150
19.64
11.69
(0.5 x 23.38)
19