Homework Questions For Tutorial in Week 4 With Solution
Homework Questions For Tutorial in Week 4 With Solution
You don’t need to submit these questions, but you are encouraged to do them before
your tutorial.
Chapter 10
3 In a variable rate loan contract, how does a commercial bank allow for higher or
lower credit risk on the part of the prospective borrowers?
b. Explain why a financial institution would incorporate loan covenants into a loan
contract.
• Loan covenants are designed to protect the credit risk exposure of the lender to the
borrower.
• A firm is in technical default on its loan contract if it breaches a loan covenant. The
lender then has the right, within the terms specified in the loan contract, to act to
protect its exposure. This might involve taking possession of the assets of the
company. However, if the company has not defaulted on actual loan repayments, it
is more likely that the term loan may become repayable on demand.
c. Discuss the nature of positive and negative covenants and give two examples of
each.
6. As the owner of a small architectural firm, you approach the Commonwealth Bank
to obtain a term loan so that the firm can buy a new computer-aided drawing
machine. The bank offers your company a loan of $28 500 over a three-year period
at a rate of interest of 8.65 per cent per annum, payable at the end of each month.
Calculate the monthly loan instalment.
where:
R is each monthly instalment amount
A is the loan amount (present value)
i is the current nominal interest rate expressed as a decimal
n is the number of compounding periods
A = $28 500
i = 0.0865 / 12 = 0.007208
n = 3 years x 12 months = 36
7. The architectural firm owner in Question 6 also approaches the National Australia
Bank to obtain a quote on the loan facility. The competitor bank (NAB) also offers the
company a fully drawn advance of $28 500 over a three-year period at a rate of
interest of 8.65 per cent per annum, but payable in advance at the beginning of each
month. Calculate the monthly loan instalment. Explain why the instalment payment
is different from the instalment in Question 6.
where:
R is the instalment amount
A is the loan amount (present value)
i is the current nominal interest rate expressed as a decimal
n is the number of compounding periods
A = $28 500
i = 0.0865 / 12 = 0.007208
n= 3 years x 12 months = 36
$28500
R=
1 - (1 + 0.007208)− 36
(1 + 0.007208)
0.007208
R = $895.20
• In question 6, the series of cash flows occurred at the end of each period; this is an
ordinary annuity.
• In question 7, the loan instalments are payable at the beginning of the period; this is
an annuity due.
• The change in the formulae recognizes the change in the timing of the cash flows.
• The earlier loan instalment repayments at the start of each month mean that the
monthly instalment is lower; that is, the principal outstanding is being repaid earlier.
Total outlays:
• cost of premises $1 250 000
• establishment expenses $6 250
• legal expenses $15 000 $1 271 250
Funding arrangements:
Formula: R = A
1 – (1 + i)-n
i
where: A = $1 046 250
i = 0.00679167 (8.15% p.a. / 12 months)
n = 144 (12 years * 12 months)
R = 1 046 250
1 – (1.00679167) -144
0.00679167
R = $11 411.39 monthly instalment
a. What amount will Woodside raise on the initial issue of the debentures?
b. After three years, yields on identical types of securities have risen to 8.75
per cent per annum. The existing debentures now have exactly seven years to
maturity. What is the value, or price, of the existing debentures in the
secondary market?
c. Discuss why the value of the debenture has changed; that is, explain the
bond price/yield relationship using the above example.
• The price of the existing fixed interest security (debenture) has fallen
because yields in the market have risen.
• That is, there is an inverse relationship between interest rate movements
and price.
• The coupon payments on the existing bond are fixed; therefore, the lower
coupon (7.70% p.a.) being paid on the existing bond is worth less to an
investor. However, the investor will require the current yield of 8.75%
p.a. and as the fixed 7.70% coupon cannot be adjusted, the equalizing
adjustment occurs with the lowering of the price of the existing bond.
14. On 1 January 2019 a company issued five-year fixed-interest bonds with a face
value of $2 million to an institutional investor, paying half-yearly coupons at 8.36 per
cent per annum. Coupons are payable on 30 June and 31 December each year until
maturity. On 15 August 2020 the holder of the bonds sells at a current yield of 8.84
per cent per annum. Calculate the price at which the institutional investor sold the
bonds.
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15 At GE Finance you are the manager of lease finance. You have begun to talk to
local companies to try and sell the concept of lease finance for their businesses.
a. Explain to the companies the nature of lease finance, and distinguish between
operating leases, finance leases, sale and lease-back leases, and cross-border
leases.
b. Provide examples of how a business might use each of these forms of lease
arrangement.
• Leasing does not involve the use of the company's capital and other unused
lines of credit. This allows the company to use its capital to take advantage
of other investment opportunities that may arise.
• Leasing provides 100 per cent financing in that the lessor provides the asset
required for use by the company. Other forms of debt funding may require
the borrower to contribute a portion of its own funds.
• Rental payments under the lease agreement may be structured to reflect the
cash flows generated by the asset, that is, repayment scheduling may be
more flexible under lease agreements than under other forms of debt
repayment schedules.
• Lease rental payments are generally tax-deductible, and so it is important to
structure the repayments to match taxable income streams.
• Existing borrowing covenants in loan and note agreements may allow lease
financing while restricting further debt funding.
• Where the asset that is the subject of the lease is required for only a
relatively short term, it may be preferable to lease, rather than to buy and
then have to seek to dispose of the asset at the end of the period.
d. From the perspective of a lessor, explain the structure of a direct finance lease
versus a leveraged finance lease contract.
• A direct lease involves two parties, the lessor and the lessee. The lessor
retains ownership of the asset and may also seek additional guarantees to
support the lease contract.
• A leveraged lease is an arrangement whereby the lessor borrows to fund the
purchase of an asset that is to be leased. Often a lessor partnership is
formed for very large ticket items such as ships and aircraft. Because of the
complexity of leveraged leasing arrangements, a lease manager will be
responsible for the management of the contract.