Tradeoff
Tradeoff
In practice, the trade-off theory does not specify a precise target but
rather a range, an order of magnitude.
The range may change over time, in response to changes in the firms
operating performance.
Debt increases firm value by reducing the corporate tax bill because
interest payments are tax deductible.
Then,
the interest expense per year is rf D
rf D
the present value of the tax shield over all years is rf = D
Remember that
1 1 1
the infinite sum 1+r + (1+r )2
+ (1+r )3
+ = 1r .
Nathalie Moyen Applied Financial Management Trade-Off Theory 5 / 20
A Debt-Financed Stock Repurchase Grows Size of the Pie
In 2000, Microsoft had sales of $23 billion, earnings before taxes of $14.3
billion and net income of $9.4 billion. Microsoft paid $4.9 billion in taxes,
had a market value of $423 billion, and had no long-term debt outstanding.
Taking into account personal taxes tends to reduce but not offset the
tax shield.
Tax credits (e.g. tax loss carry-forward) reduce the tax shield.
However, you cant create value by borrowing and putting the cash in
a bank account.
Excess Cash:
It is the part of cash that is not useful in running operations.
It is hopefully invested in financial assets.
It is like negative debt for the company: Net Debt = Debt Cash
The firm has an existing debt face value of $35m to repay next year.
Will shareholders want to pay (from cash) the $15m today to fund the
project?
The assets in place are the same as before: $100m or $10m with
equal probability next year, so either $100m and $54m will realize or
$10m and -$10m.
NPV= 21 + 0.554+0.5(10)
1.1 = 1m
The firm should not undertake the project.
The firm still has the existing debt face value of $35m to repay next
year.