Chapter Two: Financing Decisions / Capital Structure
Chapter Two: Financing Decisions / Capital Structure
Risk Premium
Risk-Free
Rate
Time Value
of Money
Risk
Treasury Corporate Preference Hybrid Ordinary
Bond Bond Share Securities Shares
Significance of cost of capital
Ordinary Shares
Capital Structure
• In the Balance Sheet:
• Debt (LT) + Preference Shares + Ordinary shares in
financing primary the long term/fixed assets
Balance Sheet
Capital
Structure
Ordinary Shares
Capital Structure (cont.)
• Why should we care about Capital Structure?
• By altering capital structure, firms have the
opportunity to change their cost of capital and –
therefore – the market value of the firm.
• Note , the value of firm (price of share) is:
Cost
ko
Debt
MM's Proposition I
Cont’d
• In other words it states that If the investment
opportunity is fixed, there are no taxes, and capital
markets function well, the market value of a company
does not depend on its capital structure.
• It tells us that the value of the firm is independent of
the firms capital structure under certain assumption.
(No taxes, no costs etc.)
Arbitrage
Cont’d
MM’s Proposition II
Cost
ke
ko
kd
Debt
MM's Proposition II
Cont’d
According to MM proposition II as a firm increases
its use of debt, its cost of equity also increases; but its
WACC remains constant.
• If we ignore taxes, WACC is;
WACC = RA = (E/V)RE + (D/V)RD ……..V=D+E
RE = RA+ RA-RD (D/E) …….........This is MM
Position II
Cont’d
Although changing capital structure of the firm does
not change the firms total value, it does cause
important changes in the firms debt-equity ratio.
MM Position II tells us that cost of equity depends on
3 things: (1)Required rate of return of the firms cost
of asset, RA, (2) Firms cost of debt RD, and (3) Firms
debt to equity ratio (D/E).
Example
The Ricardo Corporation has a weighted average cost
of capital (ignoring taxes) of 12 percent. It can
borrow at 8 percent. Assuming that Ricardo has a
target capital structure of 80 percent equity and 20
percent debt, what is its cost of equity? What is the
cost of equity if the target capital structure is 50
percent equity? Calculate the WACC using your
answers to verify that it is the same.
solution
According to M&M Proposition II, the cost of equity,
RE, is:
RE =RA + (RA - RD) * (D/E)
In the first case, the debt-equity ratio is .2/.8 = .25, so
the cost of the equity is:
RE= 12% +(12%- 8%) * .25=13%
In the second case, verify that the debt-equity ratio is
1.0, so the cost of equity is 16 percent.
Cont’d
We can now calculate the WACC assuming that the
percentage of equity financing is 80 percent, the cost of
equity is 13 percent, and the tax rate is zero: WACC =
(E/V )* RE+ (D/V) * RD=.80 * 13% + .20 *8%=12%
In the second case, the percentage of equity financing is
50 percent and the cost of equity is 16 percent. The
WACC is: WACC= (E/V ) * RE+ (D/V )* RD= .50 *
16% + .50 *8%= 12%
As we have calculated, the WACC is 12 percent in both
cases.
MM Hypothesis With Corporate Tax
Under current laws in most countries, debt has an important
advantage over equity: interest payments on debt are tax
deductible, whereas dividend payments and retained
earnings are not. Investors in a levered firm receive in the
aggregate the unlevered cash flow plus an amount equal to
the tax deduction on interest.
The value of the levered firm is equal to the value of the
unlevered firm plus the interest tax shield which is tax rate
times the debt.
It is assumed that the firm will borrow the same amount of
debt in perpetuity and will always be able to use the tax
shield.
Cont’d
In short,
MM proposition I with tax states that a firm’s WACC
decreases as the firm relies more on debt financing
MM proposition II with tax implies that a firm’s cost
of equity rises as the firm relies more on debt
financing
MM’s propositions with tax
MM’s proposition 1
It states that a firm’s WACC decreases as the firm relies
heavily on debt financing
WACC=(E/V)*RE+(D/V)*RD*(1-Tc)
• Firm value = value of all equity firm + PV (tax shield)
• Present value of the interest tax shield (TC* D *RD)/RD
= TC* D
MM’s proposition 2
• The weighted average cost of capital is decreasing with the ratio of
D/E, and the cost of equity is increasing with D/E.
• Re=RU+(RU-RD)*(D/E)*(1-Tc)
Modigliani and Miller Summary
Value of Firm, V
VL
TD
VU
0 Debt
Costs of
financial distress
Market Value of The Firm
PV of interest
tax shields
Value of levered firm
Value of
unlevered
firm
Optimal amount
of debt
Debt
Trade-off Theory : Optimum Capital Structure