Capital Structure Concepts
Capital Structure Concepts
Capital Structure Concepts
Capital Structure
Concepts
17.1 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Capital Structure
Assumptions:
• V = B + S = total market value of the firm
• O = I + E = net operating income = interest
paid plus earnings available to common
shareholders
17.5 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Capitalization Rate
B S
ko = ki + ke
B+S B+S
0.20
ke (Required return on equity)
0.15
ko (Capitalization rate)
0.10
ki (Yield on debt)
0.05
0
0 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.0 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.0
Financial Leverage (B/S)
17.11 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Summary of NOI Approach
• Critical assumption is ko remains
constant.
• An increase in cheaper debt funds is
exactly offset by an increase in the
required rate of return on equity.
• As long as ki is constant, ke is a linear
function of the debt-to-equity ratio.
• Thus, there is no one optimal capital
structure.
17.12 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Traditional Approach
17.13 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Optimal Capital Structure:
Traditional Approach
Traditional Approach
ke
0.25
ko
Capital Costs (%)
0.20
0.15
ki
0.10
Optimal Capital Structure
0.05
0
Financial Leverage (B / S)
17.14 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Summary of the
Traditional Approach
• The cost of capital is dependent on the capital
structure of the firm.
• Initially, low-cost debt is not rising and replaces more
expensive equity financing and ko declines.
• Then, increasing financial leverage and the
associated increase in ke and ki more than offsets
the benefits of lower cost debt financing.
• Thus, there is one optimal capital structure
where ko is at its lowest point.
• This is also the point where the firm’s total
value will be the largest (discounting at ko).
17.15 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Total Value Principle:
Modigliani and Miller (M&M)
• Modigliani and Miller approach to capital theory,
devised in the 1950s advocates capital structure
irrelevancy theory. This suggests that the
valuation of a firm is irrelevant to the capital
structure of a company. Whether a firm is highly
leveraged or has lower debt component, it has no
bearing on its market value. Rather, the market
value of a firm is dependent on the operating
profits of the company.
17.16 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Total Value Principle:
Modigliani and Miller
17.17 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Total Value Principle:
Modigliani and Miller
Market value Market value
of debt ($35M) of debt ($65M)
• Assumptions:
• Total market value is not altered by the capital
structure (the total size of the pies are the same).
Assumptions:
There are no taxes.
Transaction cost for buying and selling securities as well as
bankruptcy cost is nil.
There is a symmetry of information. This means that an investor
will have access to the same information that a corporation would
and investors would behave rationally.
The cost of borrowing is the same for investors as well as
companies.
There is no floatation cost like underwriting commission, payment
to merchant bankers, advertisement expenses, etc.
There is no corporate dividend tax.
17.19 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Two Propositions without Taxes
1.
With the above assumptions of “no taxes”, the
capital structure does not influence the valuation
of a firm. In other words, leveraging the company
does not increase the market value of the
company. It also suggests that debt holders in
the company and equity shareholders have the
same priority i.e. earnings are split equally
amongst them.
17.20 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
2.
It says that financial leverage is in direct
proportion to the cost of equity. With an increase
in debt component, the equity shareholders
perceive a higher risk to for the company. Hence,
in return, the shareholders expect a higher return,
thereby increasing the cost of equity. A key
distinction here is that proposition 2 assumes
that debt-shareholders have upper-hand as far as
the claim on earnings is concerned. Thus, the
cost of debt reduces.
17.21 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Propositions with Taxes (The
Trade-Off Theory of Leverage)
The Modigliani and Miller Approach assumes that there are
no taxes. But in the real world, this is far from the truth.
Most countries, if not all, tax a company. This theory
recognizes the tax benefits accrued by interest payments.
The interest paid on borrowed funds is tax deductible.
However, the same is not the case with dividends paid on
equity. To put it in other words, the actual cost of debt is
less than the nominal cost of debt because of tax benefits.
The trade-off theory advocates that a company can
capitalize its requirements with debts as long as the cost of
distress i.e. the cost of bankruptcy exceeds the value of tax
benefits. Thus, the increased debts, until a given threshold
value will add value to a company.
17.22 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Propositions with Taxes (The Trade-
Off Theory of Leverage)
17.23 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Arbitrage and Total
Market Value of the Firm
17.25 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Arbitrage Example