Capital Structure and Leverage
Capital Structure and Leverage
Capital Structure and Leverage
Part 2 Valuation of Financial Assets Part 5 Liquidity Management and Special Topics in Finance
(Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10) (Chapters 17, 18, 19, 20)
Chapter Outline
15.1 A Glance at Capital Structure Objective 1. Describe a firm’s capital structure.
15.2 Capital Structure Theory Objective 2. Explain why firms have different capital
structures and how capital structure influences a
(pgs. 520–531)
firm’s weighted average cost of capital.
15.4 Making Financing Decisions Objective 4. Use the basic tools of financial analysis
to analyze a firm’s financing decisions.
(pgs. 532–545)
514
Finance Their
financing Debt
financing
Investments?
A firm’s capital structure—the mix of the dif- Risk
Risk
ferent sources of capital it uses to finance its Risk
investments—is a critical determinant of both
the risk and the expected rate of return earned
from investing in the firm’s shares of common
stock. As we discussed in Chapter 1, the firm’s
financing decision is one of the three funda-
mental decisions that are made by the financial
manager.1 However, different firms tend to make very different financing decisions. Some firms finance their
investments primarily with debt, whereas others finance their investments primarily with equity. For example,
in 2012 Apple (AAPL) had no bank debt or bonds outstanding, whereas American Electric Power (AEP) borrowed
almost $18 billion in short- and long-term debt to help finance its $52 billion of total assets. The question of why
different firms make different financing choices forms the basis of our study of capital structure in this chapter.
We open our discussion of capital structure by taking a closer look at the capital structures of a variety of
different firms. After observing that different firms can have very different capital structures, we then turn to
capital structure theory to help us understand why these differences exist. Finally, we conclude by discussing the
tools used by financial managers to measure the costs and benefits that determine the optimal mix of debt and
equity financing. To achieve this objective, the financial manager must consider several factors, including the tax
consequences of debt versus equity financing, the costs of financial distress brought on by having too much debt,
the effect of debt financing on managerial incentives, and the importance of information differences between
company managers and outside investors.
1
The three basic questions addressed in the study of finance concern (1) what long-term investments the firm should undertake, (ii)
how the firm should raise the money needed to fund its investments (the subject of this chapter), and (iii) how the firm can best manage
the cash flows that arise in its day-to-day operations.
515
“
Capital Structure When a firm borrows money, it is obligated by
the terms of the loan agreement to repay it,
Matters to You!” and if it does not meet the terms of the agree-
ment, it can be forced into bankruptcy. So
when a firm uses more debt than it can afford to service, it faces the risk of defaulting on its
financial obligations and being forced into bankruptcy. This has very costly implications for the
firm’s employees, creditors, and stockholders. This is exactly what happened in 2008 to the
investment bank Lehman Brothers, which had a debt-to-equity ratio of 33 to 1, and in 2009 to
the automaker General Motors, which owed more than $26 billion that it could not repay. If you
were an employee of one of these companies, you may have lost your job, or at the very least,
you were faced with a very uncertain future as the company attempted to work its way out
of bankruptcy. If you were a stockholder, you probably lost all of your investment, and if
you were a bondholder, you may have recovered pennies on the dollar. So, regardless of
whether you work in sales, operations, or finance, you need to understand some basic facts
about the different ways that firms raise capital and how these financing choices affect their earn-
ings and their ability to invest in the future.
obligations because it may not be possible to observe the market value of a firm’s debt since
debt obligations are not as actively traded as equity securities. Enterprise value is defined as
follows:
Enterprise Book Value of Excess Market Value of
= a - b + (15–2)
Value Interest@Bearing Debt Cash Equity
Alternatively, where the term net debt is used to refer to the term in parenthesis, we de-
fine enterprise value as follows:
Enterprise Net Market Value of
= + (15–2a)
Value Debt Equity
By subtracting excess cash from the firm’s interest-bearing debt, the analyst is simply recog-
nizing that the business could operate without these cash and near-cash investments and could
use them to pay down the firm’s debt. Therefore, the firm’s use of debt financing is actually
its net debt.
Note that the enterprise value is not the same as the market value of the firm’s equity
(often referred to as the firm’s market capitalization). The enterprise value equals the sum
of the firm’s market capitalization (or market value of the firm’s equity) and its net debt. We
can measure a firm’s use of debt financing using the debt-to-enterprise-value ratio, as follows:
The book value of a firm’s interest-bearing debt includes short-term notes payable (e.g.,
bank loans), the current portion of the firm’s long-term debt (a current liability because this
portion of the firm’s long-term debt must be repaid within one year or less), and the firm’s
long-term debt (loans that mature in more than one year plus bonds the firm has issued). Note
that in both the numerator and the denominator of Equation (15–3), we net out the firm’s ex-
cess or non-operating cash and near-cash assets. Keep in mind that we are not subtracting out
the entire amount of the firm’s cash and marketable security holdings because it would not be
feasible to liquidate all cash holdings and still keep the firm running. As a consequence, we
subtract only excess cash holdings.2
Table 15.1 contains the book-value-based debt ratio of total liabilities to total assets and
the market-value-based debt-to-enterprise-value ratio of net debt to enterprise value for a
sample of large U.S. corporations. Note that the debt ratio is always higher than the debt-to-
enterprise-value ratio—and sometimes dramatically higher. There are two reasons for this:
First, the book value of the firm’s equity, which is part of the denominator in the first ratio, is
almost always lower than its market-value counterpart, which is used in the denominator of
the second ratio. Second, the net debt used in the numerator of the debt-to-enterprise-value
ratio includes only interest-bearing debt and excludes non-interest-bearing debt such as ac-
counts payable and accrued expenses. Thus, the numerator is larger and the denominator is
smaller in the debt ratio than in the debt-to-enterprise-value ratio.
If we were to calculate the weighted average cost of capital for Wal-Mart (WMT), we
would use the 16.8 percent debt-to-enterprise-value ratio as the weight for debt financing.
Because Walmart does not have any preferred stock, the weight assigned to equity financing
would be 1 minus 16.8 percent, or 83.2 percent.
In addition to the two debt ratios, Table 15.1 includes the times interest earned ratio. In
Chapter 4, where we first introduced this ratio, we learned that it measures the firm’s ability
to pay the interest expense on its interest-bearing debt out of operating earnings. Specifically,
the ratio is defined as follows:
Net Operating Income or EBIT
Times Interest Earned = (15–4)
Interest Expense
2
Although this is technically true, when the enterprise value is reported in the financial press, it is standard practice to
subtract the entire amount of the firm’s cash and near-cash assets.
Table 15.1 Financial and Capital Structures for Selected Firms (Year-End 2015)
The debt ratio equals the ratio of the firm’s total liabilities to its total assets. Total liabilities equal the sum of current and long-term liabilities,
including both interest-bearing debt and non-interest-bearing liabilities such as accounts payable and accrued expenses. The debt-to-
enterprise-value ratio equals the ratio of the firm’s short- and long-term interest-bearing debt less excess cash and marketable securities to
its enterprise value. The times interest earned ratio equals the ratio of the firm’s net operating income or earnings before interest and taxes
(EBIT) to its interest expense. The first two ratios measure the proportion of the firm’s investments financed by borrowing, whereas the third
ratio measures the ability of the firm to make the interest payments required to support its debt.
Times interest Net Operating Income or EBIT • Measures the firm’s ability to pay its interest
earned Interest Expense expense from operating income.
• A higher ratio indicates a greater capability of
the firm to pay its interest expense in a timely
manner.
3
Some firms actually have negative net debt. That is, they have larger excess cash and marketable securities balances
than they have interest-bearing debt outstanding. This is fairly common for high-tech firms like Apple (AAPL) that
maintain very large cash balances as a reserve source of funding for investments in new technologies that are difficult
to finance in the public markets.
Financial Leverage
The term financial leverage is often used to describe a firm’s capital structure. This terminol-
ogy arises from the fact that borrowing a portion of the firm’s capital at a fixed rate of interest
provides the firm an opportunity to “leverage” the rate of return it earns on its total capital
into an even higher rate of return on the firm’s equity. We will look into this phenomenon
much more closely later in the chapter; however, it should be noted that if the firm is earning
15 percent on its investments and paying only 9 percent on borrowed money, the 6 percent dif-
ferential goes to the firm’s owners. As a result, the firm’s return on equity will be much higher
than 15 percent. This is what is known as favorable financial leverage. If the firm earns only
9 percent on its investments and must pay 15 percent on borrowed money, then the 6 percent
differential here must come out of the owners’ share of the investment return, and they thus
suffer and experience unfavorable financial leverage. The key determinant of whether the
use of financial leverage is favorable is whether the firm is able to invest the borrowed money
at a rate of return that exceeds its cost.
Figure 15.1
Average Debt-to-Enterprise-Value Ratios for Firms in Selected Industries
The net debt of a firm includes only the book value of its interest-bearing short- and long-term debt
less excess cash. We measure the enterprise value of a firm as the sum of the book value of its
interest-bearing debt less excess cash and the market value of its equity. Note that because of the
difficulty of calculating excess cash, we have assumed excess cash to be zero in these calculations.
Banking 61%
Power 60%
Coal 22%
Railroads 21%
Retail (apparel) 16%
Entertainment (tech) 9%
E-commerce 6%
Figure 15.2
Assumption 1: Cash Distributions to Bondholders and Stockholders
Are Not Affected by Financial Leverage
Assumption 1 of the M&M capital structure theory states that the total cash flows a firm has avail-
able to distribute to its common stockholders and bondholders are not affected by the firm’s capital
structure decision. Assumption 2 states that the value of the firm is determined by how much cash
the firm has to distribute, not by what proportion of it goes to common stockholders or to bond-
holders. In this example, the firm’s investments generate cash flows equal to $500,000, regardless
of how the firm is financed.
Debt or bonds
20% or $100,000
Debt or
bonds
40% or Equity or Total cash flows are
$200,000 common stock the same, regardless
Equity or
60% or of the financing mix.
common stock
$300,000 80% or
$400,000
also increases. However, this does not mean that the levels of their risks are the same. Firm
Half-Debt’s stock will be a riskier investment: The firm’s positive and negative returns will
both be magnified because of the debt in its capital structure. For example, if Firm No-Debt’s
stock price increases by 10 percent, Firm Half-Debt’s stock price might increase by 15 per-
cent. This is the effect of financial leverage we described earlier. However, a portfolio that
appropriately combines stock in Firm Half-Debt with a risk-free bond can have exactly the
same risk as the stock in Firm No-Debt. In effect, investing in a risk-free bond (lending) can-
cels out the effect of Firm Half-Debt’s borrowing. For example, if Firm Half-Debt is financed
50 percent with debt and 50 percent with equity, then a portfolio that includes an investment
of $10,000 in debt and $10,000 in Firm Half-Debt stock will produce exactly the same returns
as a portfolio that is 100 percent invested in Firm No-Debt stock. In other words, investors
can undo the effect of the financial leverage in Firm Half-Debt’s capital structure by including
more bonds in their personal portfolios.
In reality, the relationship between Firm No-Debt stock and Firm Half-Debt stock just
described may not be exact because of transaction costs and other market imperfections. This
is why Assumption 2, which assumes that such costs do not exist, is required. If Assumption
2 holds, an investor who likes the returns generated by an investment of $20,000 in the stock
of Firm No-Debt will be indifferent between directly purchasing the stock of Firm No-Debt
and purchasing $10,000 of Firm Half-Debt’s stock along with a $10,000 investment in a bond.
Similarly, an investor who likes the returns generated by an investment of $10,000 in the stock
of Firm Half-Debt can either directly purchase the stock of Firm Half-Debt or equivalently
purchase $20,000 of Firm No-Debt’s stock, financing $10,000 of the purchase by borrowing.
The latter option, which combines debt and Firm No-Debt’s shares, will produce exactly the
same returns to the investor as purchasing Firm Half-Debt’s shares.
This ability—in perfect markets—to transform the returns from investing in levered firms
into the returns of investing in unlevered firms, and vice versa, means that no investor will
ever pay more or less for a firm’s shares simply because the firm either borrowed money or
not. We will have more to say about how debt financing affects the risk and returns of a firm’s
stock, and in the appendix to this chapter, we will more explicitly demonstrate that this argu-
ment implies that capital structure does not affect how financial markets value a firm’s cash
flows. If a firm’s capital structure choice does not affect the total cash flows it earns from
its investments and if it does not affect how the total cash flows are valued by the financial
markets, then there will be no relation between a firm’s capital structure and its total value.
In effect, if these two assumptions hold, then the total market value of the firm’s debt and eq-
uity is independent of its capital structure decision, and the particular mix of debt and equity
financing does not matter.
where, as you will recall from Chapter 14, the firm’s WACC for the case with no taxes is
computed as follows:
Cost of Debt to Cost of Equity to
kWACC = c * d + c * d (15–6)
Debt (kd) Value (D>V) Equity (ke) Value (E>V)
Because firm value is unaffected by the firm’s choice of capital structure and firm cash flows
are likewise unaffected by capital structure, this implies that the firm’s WACC is also unaf-
fected. If we use the fact that, in this case, the firm’s k WACC will equal k Unlevered, which is the
cost of capital for an unlevered firm (one that uses no debt financing), it follows that, with the
use of some algebra, the relationship between the cost of equity and the debt-to-equity ratio
(D/E) is as follows:
Cost of D
= kUnlevered + (kUnlevered - kd) a b (15–7)
Equity (ke) E
4
Yogi Berra played for the New York Yankees, was one of four players to be named the American League’s Most
Valuable Player three times, and was one of only six managers to lead both American and National League teams to
the World Series. He also was famous for unusual quotes or “Yogi-isms,” of which two of the most famous are “It
ain’t over until it’s over” and “In theory there are no differences between theory and practice. In practice there is.”
To illustrate the relationship among the capital structure, cost of equity, and WACC,
consider the case of Elton Enterprises, Inc. Elton can borrow money at 8 percent, and its
cost of capital if it uses no financial leverage (its unlevered cost of capital) is 10 percent. If
Elton has a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.0 (which means that 50 percent of its capital structure
is debt), the cost of debt is 8 percent, and the WACC is 10 percent, then the cost of equity,
using Equation (15–7), is equal to 12 percent:
Cost of D
= kUnlevered + 1kUnlevered - kd 2 a b = .10 + 1.10 - .082 * 1.0 = .12 or 12%
Equity (ke ) E
Note that the cost of equity found in Equation (15–7) increases with the debt-to-equity ratio,
as we see in Figure 15.3. However, because there is less weight on the more expensive equity,
the firm’s WACC—as expressed in Equation (15–6)—does not change and is always equal to
the cost of capital for an unlevered firm.
Figure 15.3
Cost of Capital and Capital Structure: M&M Theory
Under the M&M theory of capital structure (where there are no taxes), firm value and the firm’s
WACC are not affected by changes in the capital structure. Elton Enterprises has a weighted aver-
age cost of capital of 10 percent no matter how much debt the firm uses. Holding constant the
cost of debt financing, this implies an increasing cost of equity, as found in Equation (15–7).
30%
Cost of equity, ke
25% Weighted average
cost of capital, kWACC
Cost of capital
20%
Cost of debt, kd
15%
10%
5%
0%
0 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00
Debt-to-equity ratio
Debt-to-Equity Ratio Weighted Average Cost of Capital Cost of Debt Cost of Equity
0.00 10% 8% 10.00%
0.11 10% 8% 10.22%
0.25 10% 8% 10.50%
0.43 10% 8% 10.86%
0.67 10% 8% 11.33%
1.00 10% 8% 12.00%
1.50 10% 8% 13.00%
2.33 10% 8% 14.67%
4.00 10% 8% 18.00%
9.00 10% 8% 28.00%
Legend:
Cost of Debt to Cost of Equity to
kwacc = c * d + c * d
Debt 1kd 2 Value 1D>V2 Equity 1ke 2 Value 1E>V2
Cost of D
= kwacc + 1kwacc - kd 2 a b
Equity 1ke 2 E
where D/E is the ratio of debt to equity.
>> END FIGURE 15.3
Violations of Assumption 2
Assumption 2 is clearly violated in reality. Transaction costs can be important, and, because of
these costs, the rate at which investors can borrow may differ from the rate at which firms can bor-
row. When this is the case, firm values may depend on how firms are financed because individuals
cannot substitute their individual borrowing for corporate borrowing to achieve a desired level of
financial leverage. For example, if firms can borrow more cheaply than individuals, it might be
better to have firms take on more financial leverage. This would increase both the risk and the re-
turn of their stocks and allow individuals who want to take substantial risk in their own portfolios
to do so without borrowing. However, these violations of the M&M theorem provide very little in
the way of insights regarding why some firms include much more debt in their capital structures
than other firms because the transaction costs that cause differences between the borrowing rates
faced by corporations and those faced by individuals tend to affect all firms equally.
Violations of Assumption 1 are much more fundamental and provide important insights
regarding why different firms choose different capital structures. As we will discuss, the cash
flows generated by firms are in fact influenced by how the firm is financed.
Violations of Assumption 1
Why might the extent to which the firm is financed by debt or equity affect the total after-tax
cash flows generated by a firm? As we discuss here, there are three important reasons why
the firm’s capital structure affects the total cash flows available to its debt and equity holders:
1. Under the U.S. tax code, interest is a tax-deductible expense, whereas dividends paid to
stockholders are not. Thus, after taxes, firms have more money to distribute to their debt
and equity holders if they use more debt financing.5
2. Debt financing creates a fixed legal obligation. If the firm defaults on its payments, the
creditors can force the firm into bankruptcy, and the firm will incur the added costs that
this process entails.
3. The threat of bankruptcy can influence the behavior of a firm’s executives as well as its
employees and customers. On one hand, it can focus managerial attention on improving
firm performance. On the other hand, too much debt can lead to changes that make a firm
a less desirable employer and supplier.
Firm A Firm B
Net operating income (EBIT) $200.00 $200.00
Note that Firm B pays $37.50
Interest expense 0.00 (50.00) in taxes, which is $12.50 less
Earnings before taxes $200.00 $150.00 than Firm A. This is a result of
the fact that the $50 Firm B
Income taxes (50.00) (37.50)
paid in interest is tax-deductible.
Net income $150.00 $112.50
5
This is not the case in all countries. The taxing authorities in a number of countries have changed their tax laws to
reduce or eliminate the tax preference for debt financing.
Because Firm B incurs interest expenses, its after-tax net income is less than that of Firm
A. To simplify our analysis, let’s assume that both firms pay out 100 percent of their earnings
in common stock dividends. By adding the total dividends paid to equity holders to the interest
expense paid to the debt holders, we get the following:
Firm A Firm B
Equity dividends $150.00 $112.50
Interest payments 0.00 50.00
Total distributions (to stockholders and bondholders) $150.00 $162.50
Total distributions to the firm’s owners (equity dividends) and to its creditors (interest
payments) are only $150 for Firm A, whereas they are $162.50 for Firm B. The reason for
the $12.50 difference can be traced directly to the fact that the $50 in interest payments is
deductible from Firm B’s taxable income and saves the firm .25 * $50 = $12.50 in taxes.
We refer to the tax savings due to the tax deductibility of interest on the firm’s debt as interest
tax savings. These interest tax savings increase the total distributions Firm B can make to its
stockholders without reducing the distribution to the debt holders and so add value to the firm
and, in particular, to its stockholders. If the firm saves $12.50 in taxes every year, then the
present value of these tax savings is the extra value added by using debt financing. In effect,
Cash Flows to Cash Flows to Interest
£ a Firm with § = £ the Firm Without § + £ Tax § (15–8)
Financial Leverage Leverage Savings
This tax deductibility of interest expense leads firms to include more debt in their capital
structures. In essence, corporate income taxes subsidize the firm’s use of debt financing by
allowing interest to be deducted before corporate taxes are calculated. So if a firm pays a tax
rate of 25 percent, it gets a $0.25 tax refund for every dollar it pays in interest but gets nothing
for the dividends it pays to the firm’s common stockholders.
Corporate Taxes and the WACC. It is also the case that the tax deductibility of interest
payments causes the firm’s weighted average cost of capital to decline as it includes more debt
in its capital structure. To illustrate this, consider the example found in Figure 15.4, where the
cost of unlevered equity financing is assumed to be 10 percent and the cost of debt is 8 percent
before taxes. If we assume a 40 percent tax rate, the after-tax cost of debt is 4.8 percent; that
is, .08 * (1 – .4) = .048. As before, the cost of equity increases with the increased use of
debt in the capital structure; however, with tax-deductible interest payments, the cost of equity
increases less, as shown below:
Cost of D
= kUnlevered equity + c (kUnlevered equity - kd) a b * (1 - Tax Rate) d (15–9)
Equity (ke) E
Once again consider the cost of equity for a capital structure with 50 percent debt and
50 percent equity or a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.0. We calculate the cost of equity (levered
equity because the firm is assumed to finance half the value of its assets using debt) as
follows:
Cost of
= .10 + (.10 - .08) (1.0) * (1 - .40) = .112, or 11.2%
Equity (ke)
Substituting this result for the cost of equity in the formula for the weighted average cost of
capital, we get the following:
Cost of Tax Debt to Cost of Equity to
kWACC = c a1 - b * d + c * d (15–10)
Debt (kd) Rate Value (D>V) Equity (ke) Value (E>V)
If we make similar calculations for different debt-to-equity ratios, we see that the firm’s
weighted average cost of capital declines as the debt ratio rises. For example, in Figure 15.4,
we see that with a debt-to-equity ratio of 4 to 1, the cost of equity rises to 15 percent, but the
Figure 15.4
The Cost of Equity and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital with Tax-Deductible Interest Expense
Where interest expense is tax-deductible, there is a cost advantage to the use of debt financing. This, in turn, means that the value of
the firm increases with the use of debt financing and, correspondingly, that the firm’s weighted average cost of capital declines. In this
figure, the cost of unlevered equity financing is 10%, and, assuming a 40% tax rate, the cost of debt is 8% before taxes and 4.8% after
taxes: .08 * (1–.4) = .048.
25%
Cost of equity, ke
20% Weighted average
Cost of capital
5%
0%
0 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00
Debt-to-equity ratio
Debt-to-Equity Ratio After-Tax Cost of Debt Cost of Equity Weighted Average Cost of Capital
0.00 4.8% 10% 10.0%
0.11 4.8% 10% 9.6%
0.25 4.8% 10% 9.2%
0.43 4.8% 11% 8.8%
0.67 4.8% 11% 8.4%
1.00 4.8% 11% 8.0%
1.50 4.8% 12% 7.6%
2.33 4.8% 13% 7.2%
4.00 4.8% 15% 6.8%
9.00 4.8% 21% 6.4%
Legend:
Cost of Tax Debt to Cost of Equity to
kWACC = c a1 - b * d + c * d
Debt (kd) Rate Value (D>V) Equity (ke) Value (E>V)
Cost of D
= kUnlevered equity + c (kUnlevered equity - kd) a b d
Equity (ke) E
where kUnlevered equity is the cost of equity for a firm that uses no debt and D/E is the debt-to-equity ratio.
>> END FIGURE 15.4
kWACC declines to 6.8 percent. Clearly, the tax deductibility of interest expense causes those
setting capital structure policy to favor the use of debt over equity.6
6
What about personal taxes? In general, personal taxes tend to favor equity financing. The individual tax rate on income
that comes in the form of either a dividend or a capital gain upon the stock’s appreciation is generally lower than the
individual tax rate on interest income. Calculating the total tax benefits associated with debt financing is somewhat dif-
ficult because different individuals are subject to different tax rates that depend on the states in which they live as well as
their incomes. However, because the majority of the equity for most large U.S. corporations is held by institutions that
are not subject to corporate taxes, we can safely assume that at least for these firms the tax code favors debt financing.
obligations exceed its ability to generate cash. When this is the case, the firm will need to work
out a deal with its bankers and bondholders to restructure its debt, or the firm might be forced
into bankruptcy. In either case, a failure to meet its debt obligations can generate substantial
costs to the firm, costs that we collectively refer to as financial distress costs.
For instance, consider what happens to Firm A and Firm B when the economy goes from
rapid expansion to deep recession, as illustrated in Table 15.2. In Panel A, we see that even
in a deep recession Firm A (which uses no debt financing) will have some, but very modest,
earnings. In Panel B, we see that Firm B, on the other hand, will barely meet its debt obliga-
tions in a mild recession and will be unable to pay its interest obligations in the event of a
deep recession.
In both a mild and a deep recession, Firm B will be subject to what economists call dead-
weight costs, which reduce the total amount of the cash flows that the firm can distribute to its
debt and equity holders. These costs arise from the threat of bankruptcy, or what we will call
financial distress, because the firm’s financial troubles distract its managers, forcing them to
spend their time negotiating with bankers rather than developing new products. They are also
likely to generate large legal bills.
Being forced into bankruptcy is obviously costly to the firm, but it is also true that finan-
cial distress can cause problems for a firm long before the firm finds itself filing for bank-
ruptcy. A firm that is close to bankruptcy is likely to be viewed by its customers and its
suppliers as an unreliable business partner. As a result, it is likely to lose sales as customers
seek out more reliable suppliers; it may find it difficult to get competitive quotes from its sup-
pliers, who are increasingly worried about being repaid; and it may find it difficult to attract
high-quality employees as prospective workers worry more about future layoffs.
Most financial managers will say that another important factor that limits their use of debt
financing is that debt financing severely limits their flexibility. For example, if Firms A and B
in Table 15.2 were to find themselves in a mild recession and also in need of funds to finance
a new business opportunity, Firm B would find it very difficult to borrow more because it
can barely pay the interest it owes on its existing debt. Firm A, on the other hand, has some
financial slack in that it has $50 in operating earnings that is not obligated for the payment of
interest. In this situation, Firm B’s owners may also be unwilling to issue new shares, believ-
ing that in this depressed state of the economy the firm’s shares are undervalued. As a result,
they may have to pass up a profitable investment opportunity. Firm A, on the other hand,
will be able to finance the investment. It has more of its cash flows available to be reinvested
(because it is not obligated to pay a dividend), and, because it has no existing debt, it still has
the ability to borrow.
• Interest expense is tax-deductible. This fact makes the use of debt financing less costly
and lowers the firm’s WACC.
• Debt makes it more likely that a firm will experience financial distress costs. The
contractual interest and principal payments that accompany the use of debt financing in-
crease the likelihood that a firm will go into bankruptcy at some time in the future, which
can lead to losses that reduce the cash flows of the firm.
When firms make financing decisions, they must trade off these positive and negative
factors. On one hand, firms that have substantial amounts of taxable income they can elimi-
nate by taking on debt and that face relatively modest risks of incurring the costs of financial
distress will tend to choose relatively high debt ratios. On the other hand, firms that are not
generating a lot of taxable income and that will be subject to substantial costs of financial
distress if they have financial difficulties will want relatively low debt ratios.
Figure 15.5 contains a saucer-shaped cost-of-capital curve for a firm that trades off the
benefits and costs of using debt. In this illustration, the tradeoff between the interest tax sav-
ings benefit of using more debt and the increasing expected costs of financial distress results
in an optimal capital structure consisting of a debt-to-equity ratio of roughly 1 to 1, or a debt–
to-firm value of 50 percent.
This example illustrates that the use of financial leverage increases the risk of financial distress. With debt financing, the firm is contractually
obligated to pay interest and principal to the lender in accordance with the terms of the debt agreement (bond indenture). Consequently,
the likelihood that the firm will default on its debt obligations increases as the firm increases the proportion of its capital structure that con-
sists of debt financing. In this example, both firms have invested $2,000 in assets, with Firm A financing 100 percent of its assets using
equity and Firm B financing $1,000 with equity and borrowing the remaining $1,000 at 5 percent.
Cash Distributions
Equity dividends $ 7.50 $37.50 $ 75.00 $150.00 $225.00
Interest payments 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Total distributions $ 7.50 $37.50 $ 75.00 $150.00 $225.00
Cash Distributions
Equity dividends $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $ 37.50 $112.50 $187.50
Interest payments 10.00 50.00 50.00 50.00 50.00
Total distributions $ 10.00 $50.00 $ 87.50 $162.50 $237.50
a
We simplify the tax treatment of income in this example by ignoring the carryforward/carryback provision of the tax code that would allow a firm that suf-
fered losses to carry those losses back to reduce taxes paid in a prior period (or carry the losses forward to reduce its taxes in a future period). For exam-
ple, in Panel B when the deep recession state is experienced, the firm has a ($40.00) taxable loss that can be used to reduce taxable income from a prior
period or a future period and save the firm 25% of the loss in taxes, or $10.
Figure 15.5
The Cost of Capital and the Tradeoff Theory
The tradeoff theory says that the tax savings benefits of debt financing drive down the firm’s WACC
over reasonable ranges of the debt-to-equity ratio. However, as the firm issues more and more
debt, the expected costs of bankruptcy begin to rise, which, in turn, increases the cost of debt.
This increase in the cost of debt can offset the tax savings benefits of debt, eventually causing the
WACC to increase.
35%
Cost of equity, ke
30% Weighted average
cost of capital, kWACC
25%
After-tax
Cost of capital
= kd (1 – Tax Rate)
cost of debt
20%
Note: The cost of
15% debt is rising with
the debt-to-equity
10% ratio as a result of
the increasing risk
5% of financial distress.
0%
0 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00
Debt-to-equity ratio
uncommon for managers of companies to believe that their share price is too low, and when
this is the case, they may be reluctant to issue new shares. For many smaller closely held com-
panies, this unwillingness to issue what they perceive as underpriced shares is compounded by
the fact that issuing shares often means sharing control. For both of these reasons, firms often
prefer to raise external capital with debt rather than equity.
This preference for raising external debt is compounded by the fact that investors tend to
be skeptical of the motives of firms that issue new shares. As a result, when a firm does issue
shares, it is often seen as a signal that the firm’s stock is overpriced. Indeed, when a firm an-
nounces its intention to issue equity, its share price generally falls.
MIT financial economist Stewart Myers suggested that because of the information issues
that arise when firms issue equity, firms tend to adhere to the following pecking order when
they raise capital:
• The firm first relies on internal sources of financing, or the retention of the firm’s earn-
ings. If the firm generates more cash than is needed to fund its investments, the cash will
be used to repay debt, purchase marketable securities, or repurchase some of the firm’s
stock.
• When internally generated cash flows fall short of the firm’s need for funds, the firm
will use its available cash balances and raise additional cash by selling short-term debt
securities.
• If the firm’s cash and marketable securities are insufficient to meet the firm’s financial
requirements, then the firm will begin issuing securities, beginning with the safest secu-
rity it can sell, which is debt. The firm will sell debt up until the point where either the
costs are prohibitive or the debt puts the firm at serious risk of default.
• Next, the firm will sell hybrid securities such as convertible bonds, and then, as a last
resort, it will sell equity to the public markets.
Managerial Implications
Our brief overview of capital structure theory has revealed the following important learning
points:
1. Higher levels of debt in its capital structure can benefit a firm for two reasons: First, inter-
est on the firm’s debt is tax-deductible, whereas dividends to common stock are not, and,
second, the use of debt financing can sometimes help align the incentives of managers
with those of shareholders.
2. Higher levels of debt in its capital structure increases the probability that a firm will be-
come financially distressed or bankrupt. There are costs to the firm from financial distress
and bankruptcy that offset the tax and incentives benefits of debt.
The fact that managers tend to be better informed about the value of their firms tends to
reduce the frequency of equity issues. This occurs because managers are reluctant to issue
equity when they believe that their shares are underpriced. In addition, because investors un-
derstand that managers have an incentive to issue stock when it is overpriced, announcements
of equity issues generally result in a decline in share prices.
This relationship is presented graphically in Figure 15.6. Here we see that the tax shield
effect is dominant until point A is reached. After point A, the rising costs of the likelihood of
firm failure (financial distress) and agency costs cause the market value of the levered firm
to decline. The objective for the financial manager is to find point A by using all of his or her
analytical skills; this effort must also include a good dose of seasoned judgment. At point A,
the actual market value of the levered firm is maximized, and the firm’s weighted average cost
of capital is at a minimum.
Figure 15.6
Capital Structure and Firm Value with Taxes, Agency Costs, and Financial Distress Costs
This figure considers the value of the firm in three different scenarios, with Scenario 3 being the most realistic because it incorporates the
added value of the interest tax savings as well as the costs of financial distress, bankruptcy, and agency that go along with the use of debt.
Scenario 1—the green horizontal line. In this scenario, the M&M capital structure theorem holds, so firm value is not affected by the
level of debt.
Scenario 2—the blue upward-sloping line. In this scenario, debt payments are tax-deductible, but there are no agency, bankruptcy, and
financial distress costs.
Scenario 3—the hump-shaped red line. In this scenario, debt influences firm value because of interest tax savings as well as the
costs of agency, bankruptcy, and financial distress. In this last scenario, the optimal amount of debt for the firm is found where firm
value is maximized.
$ Value
Value reduction
Maximum due to agency,
firm value financial distress Scenario 2: Firm value equals the value of the unlevered
and bankruptcy firm plus the value of interest tax savings (no agency,
related costs bankruptcy, or financial distress costs).
Point A optimal
amount of debt
Debt-to-
firm value
Financial distress and bankruptcy costs also differ in importance across industries. For
a computer and software firm such as Apple (APPL), financial distress could be devastating.
Customers would be very reluctant to buy an Apple computer with its proprietary operating
system if they believed that Apple may not stay in business. For similar reasons, Apple would
find it difficult to attract the best programmers if it were financially distressed. It is sometimes
said that the “scent of death” can kill a company. Although this applies to software firms, it
does not apply equally to all firms. For example, you probably would not hesitate to enter a
casino or stay at a hotel because of concerns about the financial health of the company. These
firms can take on lots of debt without jeopardizing the viability of their businesses.
Although we tend to observe firms with lower financial distress costs and higher tax gains
using more debt financing than firms with higher financial distress costs and lower tax gains,
there are a number of exceptions to this general rule. In particular, there are a number of firms
with capital structures that include very little debt even though they could benefit from the tax
deductibility of interest payments and would increase the potential for financial distress costs
very little. The incentive issues that we described earlier provide perhaps the most plausible
explanation for these firms. The values of these firms would probably increase if they took on
more financial leverage, but their top executives may personally prefer operating their busi-
nesses in a less risky environment with less debt.
Table 15.3 Worksheet for Benchmarking When Making a Capital Structure Decision
Benchmarking is a tool for analyzing financing alternatives that simulates the effects of these alternatives on the firm’s financial ratios. The
benchmarking process involves calculating a set of financial leverage ratios for the firm under three scenarios: (1) prior to any new financing
episode (the firm as it exists today), (2) with common equity financing, and (3) with debt financing. The resulting ratios are then compared to
these same ratios for similar firms.
Two types of financial ratios are typically used: balance-sheet-based measures of the extent to which debt financing has been used by
the firm (i.e., the debt ratio and interest-bearing debt ratio found below) and coverage ratios, which indicate the ability of the firm to meet the
financial requirements of its debt (i.e., the interest earned ratio and the EBITDA coverage ratio found below). These financial leverage ratios
are then compared to the financial leverage ratios of similar firms (the final column).
to the lender. Specifically excluded are the firm’s non-interest-bearing liabilities such as ac-
counts payable and accrued expenses that do not have an explicit interest expense.7 The only
difference in these two ratios is the fact that the latter restricts the definition of debt to debt on
which explicit interest payments must be made.
Table 15.3 also includes two measures of the firm’s ability to pay the interest and princi-
pal on its debt. The first measure is the times interest earned ratio, which is equal to the ratio of
the firm’s net operating income or EBIT to interest expense. The second ratio is the EBITDA
coverage ratio. This latter ratio differs from the times interest earned ratio in both its numera-
tor, which adds noncash charges such as depreciation and amortization back to EBIT, and its
denominator, which includes not only interest expense but also the principal repayments the
firm is obligated to make. Note that the principal payments are “grossed up” to reflect the fact
that they are paid using after-tax earnings, whereas interest expense is paid before taxes are
paid. Thus, assuming that the firm must make a $100,000 principal payment, it will have to
earn $100,000 ÷ (1 – Tax Rate). For example, if the tax rate is 40 percent, the firm will have to
earn $100,000 ÷ (1 – .40) = $166,666.67 before taxes in order to have the needed $100,000
to repay the principal on its debt.
7
For example, when a firm purchases items for its inventories from one of its suppliers, the credit terms might simply
require that the amount of credit extended be repaid in 90 days. We would expect that the price of the items purchased
would include an implicit charge for the 90-day period for which credit is extended. However, because no explicit rate
of interest is stated, we cannot separate out the cost of credit from the pricing of the items purchased.
Checkpoint 15.1
The firm’s 2016 income statement and pro forma income statements that reflect the equity and debt financing
options are as follows:
Pro Formas Adjusted for New Financing
2016 Equity Debt
Revenues $ 50,000,000 $ 60,000,000 $ 60,000,000
Cost of goods sold (25,000,000) (30,000,000) (30,000,000)
Gross profit $ 25,000,000 $ 30,000,000 $ 30,000,000
Operating expenses (10,000,000) (12,000,000) (12,000,000)
Depreciation expense (2,000,000) (3,000,000) (3,000,000)
Net operating income $ 13,000,000 $ 15,000,000 $ 15,000,000
(EBIT)
Interest expense (480,000) (480,000) (1,280,000)
Earnings before taxes $ 12,520,000 $ 14,520,000 $ 13,720,000
Income taxes (3,756,000) (4,356,000) (4,116,000)
Net income $ 8,764,000 $ 10,164,000 $ 9,604,000
Benchmarking Sister Sarah’s capital structure against these norms, it is apparent that the debt alternative is a
more aggressive use of debt financing than is the norm for the industry. Notice that we are evaluating the impact
of the financing decision on the firm only for the year in which the financing is raised. Because the debt will be
repaid according to the debt agreement, these ratios will improve over time. Specifically, the firm will pay down
$2 million per year of the new debt in 2017 in addition to $1.2 million of the firm’s existing debt. Consequently,
we need to think beyond the current year when making the financing decision. Ultimately, the decision of whether
or not to use more debt cannot be made based solely on the benchmark comparison to industry norms. For
example, Sister Sarah’s managers may be sufficiently confident about the firm’s future earnings prospects that
they feel they can afford the higher use of debt financing today.
Your Turn: For more practice, do related Study Problems 15–1, 15–3, 15–5, 15–9, at the end
of this chapter. >> END Checkpoint 15.1
Let’s take a look at how financial leverage works. The founders of a newly formed busi-
ness venture, the House of Toast, Inc., estimate that the firm will need $200,000 to purchase
the assets needed to get the business up and running. The company founders are considering
the three possible financing plans:
• Plan A. No financial leverage is used. Instead, the entire $200,000 is raised by selling
2,000 common shares for $100 each.
• Plan B. Moderate financial leverage equal to 25 percent of the assets ($50,000) is bor-
rowed using a debt issue that carries an 8 percent interest rate and requires the payment
of annual interest. The remaining $150,000 is raised through the sale of 1,500 shares of
common stock at a price of $100 per share.
• Plan C. Even more financial leverage is used in this plan, as $80,000 of the $200,000
needed is borrowed (40 percent). The debt issue carries an interest rate of 8 percent and
requires the payment of annual interest. The remaining $120,000 is raised by selling
1,200 shares of common stock for $100 per share.
Table 15.4 contains the balance sheets for the House of Toast, Inc., under each financing
plan.
Table 15.5 Structure and Level of EPS for the House of Toast, Inc.
This example illustrates the effect of the use of financial leverage on a firm’s EPS and return on common equity. The important thing to note
here is that the use of financial leverage magnifies the effects of increases and decreases in the firm’s operating income on EPS and return
on common equity.
Worst Case Best Case Worst Case Best Case Worst Case Best Case
Operating return on assets 5% 20% 5% 20% 5% 20%
Net operating income (EBIT) $ 10,000 $ 40,000 $10,000 $40,000 $10,000 $40,000
Interest expense 0 0 (4,000) (4,000) (6,400) (6,400)
Earnings before taxes $ 10,000 $ 40,000 $ 6,000 $36,000 $ 3,600 $33,600
Income taxes (5,000) (20,000) (3,000) (18,000) (1,800) (16,800)
Net income $ 5,000 $20,000 $ 3,000 $18,000 $ 1,800 $16,800
Assumptions: Legend:
Total assets $200,000 Operating return on assets = EBIT/Total assets
Share price $ 100.00
Borrowing rate 8% EPS = Net income/Shares outstanding
Corporate tax rate 50% Return on equity = Net income/Common equity
it used the all-equity plan (Plan A). However, in the best-case scenario where the firm earns
a return on assets of 20 percent (EBIT/Total Assets = $40,000/$200,000), Plans B and C
provide higher EPS and higher rates of return on equity than the all-equity plan.
The $30,000 or 300 percent increase in EBIT from the worst- to best-case scenario results
in a 300 percent increase in EPS under Plan A, which has no financial leverage. However, the
same increase in EBIT results in a 500 percent increase in the firm’s EPS under Plan B and
an 833 percent increase under Plan C. The key learning point here is that increasing financial
leverage, holding everything else the same, leads to greater volatility in EPS.
What happens if the direction of the change in EBIT is reversed? In other words, what if
EBIT drops from $40,000 to only $10,000? As this example illustrates, financial leverage is a
double-edged sword in that it works in both the positive and the negative directions—in effect,
demonstrating P Principle 2: There Is a Risk-Return Tradeoff. When EBIT is high, a more
levered firm will realize higher EPS. However, if EBIT falls, a firm that uses more financial
leverage will suffer a larger drop in EPS than a firm that relies less on financial leverage.
Checkpoint 15.2
Figure 15.7
EBIT-EPS Chart for the House of Toast, Inc., Under New Financing Alternatives
$4.25
21,000 4.25 4.25
4.00
30,000 6.50 7.25
3.00 40,000 9.00 10.58
2.00 $21,000
1.00
0 10 20 30 40 50
EBIT ($ thousands)
$4,000 $8,250
>> END FIGURE 15.7
Both are considerably above the $5.33 EPS the firm will earn if the new project is rejected and the additional
financial capital is not raised. If the firm selects the financing plan that will provide the highest EPS, the debt alter-
native is clearly favored. However, debt (bond) financing increases the risk of the returns to the equity investors.
That is, changes in the firm’s EBIT cause bigger changes in the firm’s EPS where debt financing is used. To ana-
lyze this issue, we calculate the EPS that will be earned under the equity financing and debt financing plans over
a range of EBIT corresponding to the CFO’s estimates of what the firm might actually earn (which are $20,000 to
$40,000). We plot these EPS estimates for each of the capital structures in the EBIT-EPS chart in Figure 15.7.
For EBIT of $20,000, EPS are $3.92 for the debt financing alternative and $4.00 for the equity financing
alternative. If EBIT is equal to $40,000, however, the debt plan produces $10.58 in EPS compared to only $9.00
for the equity plan. In fact, for EBIT levels above $21,000, EPS for the debt financing alternative are greater than
EPS for the equity financing alternative.
For the present example, we calculate the indifference level of EBIT using Equation (15–11)
as follows:
(EBIT - $4,000) (1 - .50) (EBIT - $8,250) (1 - .50)
=
2,000 1,500
When the expression above is solved for EBIT, we see that when EBIT is $21,000, then EPS
will be $4.25 under both plans. If EBIT exceeds $21,000, then the debt plan produces higher
EPS than the equity plan; if EBIT is lower than $21,000, then the equity plan produces higher
EPS than the debt plan.
Before concluding this section, it should be noted that managers do tend to be very
aware of how their capital structure choices affect their firm’s EPS. However, our discussion
of capital structure theory taught us that EPS should not be the primary driver of a firm’s
capital structure choice. Thus, the type of analysis considered in this section must be used in
conjunction with other basic tools in reaching the objective of capital structure management.
In 2016 Walmart’s repaid (net of new issues) $3,158 billion, its depreciation expense equaled
$9.454 billion, and it had no amortization expenses. The resulting EBITDA coverage ratio for
Walmart is calculated as follows:
EBITDA $24.105 billion + $9.454 billion
= = 5.97 times
Coverage Ratio $2.457 billion + $3.158 billion
This ratio more realistically captures Walmart’s ability to service its debt and suggests that
EBITDA could drop by over 80 percent of the 2016 level before the firm is in jeopardy of not
being able to pay its interest plus principal out of its 2016 EBITDA of $33.459 billion =
$24.105 billion + $9.454 billion .
We now have the financial decision tools to evaluate the firm’s capital structure. The lat-
est addition to our decision tools is the EBDITA coverage ratio.
Figure 15.8
CFO Opinions Regarding Factors That Influence Corporate Debt Use
The CFOs of 392 firms were asked to rank a list of 14 factors in the order of importance to their
firms in making the decision to use debt financing. The percentages of respondents that rated
the individual factors as either important or very important are listed below for the eight highest-
rated factors.
Customer/supplier comfort
Bankruptcy/distress costs
Credit rating
Financial flexibility
Source: John Graham and Campbell Harvey, “How Do CFOs Make Capital Budgeting and Capital Structure
Decisions?,” Journal of Applied Corporate Finance 15, no. 1 (Spring 2002): 14.
>> END FIGURE 15.8
Financial flexibility received the highest rating, with over 59 percent of the respon-
dents rating this factor as either an important or a very important factor influencing their
decision to use debt financing. Clearly, maintaining the ability to issue either debt or eq-
uity by not pushing the firm’s capital structure to the limits of the firm’s debt capacity is an
important consideration to these practicing CFOs. The next factor, in order of importance
to the CFOs, is the firm’s credit rating. Pushing the use of debt financing past the point
where it triggers a credit rating downgrade is a signal that bankruptcy and financial distress
are more likely, and this, in turn, makes the firm a less attractive business partner. Indeed,
concerns about bankruptcy and the firm’s relationship with its customers and suppliers are
also listed as factors that influence the capital structure choice. Finally, slightly less than
50 percent of the CFOs listed the tax benefits of debt financing as an important influence
on their capital structure choice. In sum, the CFOs’ opinions support the theory of capital
structure policy.
Figure 15.9
Buying Versus Leasing
Title Title
1 Use value 1 Use value
2 Salvage value Equipment Dealer 2 Salvage value
The right-hand side of Figure 15.9 depicts the leasing choice. The firm that acquires use
of the equipment is now denoted as the lessee, and the entity leasing the equipment is the
lessor. The lessor or leasing company raises the funds needed to acquire the equipment, buys
the equipment, and enters into a long-term capital lease with the lessee company. The lessor
may be an independent leasing company, the equipment dealer, or the financial institution that
provides the financing for the purchase of the leased equipment. The key thing to note about
the leasing arrangement is that the use of the equipment is transferred to the lessee while the
title to the equipment is not.
Residual Value
The lessor retains ownership of the value of the leased equipment when it comes off the lease.
For example, if you lease a car for three years, after the three-year period is up, you must return
the car to the lessor. The value of the equipment after the lease term, the residual value, can-
not be known at the time the lease agreement is negotiated, so there is room for disagreement
between the lessor and lessee that might favor leasing or buying. For example, if you lease an
automobile, you receive the use of the automobile over the lease term in return for a set of lease
payments (which might include a down payment), and the lessor receives the lease payments
plus the estimated value of the automobile at the end of the lease term. If the lessor builds in an
estimated residual value of $30,000 and your best guess is that it will be worth $25,000, you
may find the lease agreement an attractive alternative to buying the car. Very simply, the leasing
company has built in a higher residual value for the automobile than you think is appropriate.
Tax Consequences
When a firm buys a piece of equipment, there are tax consequences. First, the cost of the
equipment is depreciated over its useful life, which reduces the firm’s income tax liability.
In addition, the interest payments on the debt used to finance the purchase are tax-deductible.
Finally, there can be investment tax credits associated with buying new equipment that
directly reduce the firm’s taxes by the amount of the credits.
When the firm leases a piece of equipment, the lessor gets the tax benefits of ownership
described above, and the lessee gets to expense the rental payments. So are net tax savings
greater for buying or leasing? To answer this question, one should first note that the party with
the higher tax rate will get greater tax benefits from owning the equipment. For example, sup-
pose the lessee firm is not currently paying income taxes and does not expect to pay taxes over
the term of the lease agreement (perhaps due to operating loss carryforwards). In this instance,
the tax benefits of ownership are not directly available to the lessee firm. However, if the les-
sor firm enjoys the tax benefits, those tax benefits are at least partially passed on to the lessee
through more favorable lease terms, and in this way part of the tax benefits are captured by
the lessor firm. In this case, taxes favor leasing. Taxes can also favor leasing if the lessor is a
financial institution that is able to take advantage of more tax favored debt financing than the
lessee could do if they owned the property directly.
Purchase price $24,500.00 • With no taxes and transaction costs, the costs of leasing
and buying are the same if the lessor breaks even on the
Borrowing rate 8%
transaction.
• The lease-versus-buy choice hinges on a comparison of the
Dealer’s estimated residual value $12,000.00 total costs of the alternatives.
Barry’s estimated residual value $12,000.00 • Cost differences in leasing versus buying arise out of differ-
ences in the embedded cost of money (the interest rates)
Lease and loan term (in years) 5 and the estimated residual value for the leased asset.
Purchase payments $496.77
http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/auto/buy-or-lease-
Lease payments $333.45 calculator.aspx.
sometimes take on more debt in their capital structures in an attempt to in- and the subsequent need to cover interest payments limit managers’ discre-
crease the rate of return stockholders receive. However, as we know from tionary spending and thereby add discipline to spending decisions that helps
Principle 2, the increased return is offset by an increase in risk, which results in avoid agency problems.
an increased required rate of return.
C H A P T E R
Chapter Summaries
15.1 Describe a firm’s capital structure. (pgs. 516–520)
SUMMARY: A firm’s financial structure is the mix of all items that appear on the right-hand
side of its balance sheet. This includes all of the firm’s current liabilities as well as long-term debt
and owners’ equity. For purposes of analyzing a firm’s financing decisions, we typically limit our
consideration to the firm’s capital structure, which includes interest-bearing liabilities, such as
short- and long-term debt, and equity (preferred and common). Although it is common practice
to evaluate a firm’s capital structure using book values, as we learned in Chapter 14, we should
use market values when analyzing a firm’s capital structure as part of a cost of capital estimation.
KEY TERMS
Enterprise value, page 517 The sum of the the sum of the firm’s total liabilities plus owners’
firm’s market capitalization plus net debt. equity.
Favorable financial leverage, page Net debt, page 517 The book value of inter-
519 When the firm’s investments earn a rate est-bearing debt less excess cash.
of return (before taxes) that is greater than the Optimal capital structure, page 516 The
cost of borrowing, this results in higher EPS and mix of financing sources in the capital structure
a higher rate of return on the firm’s common that maximizes shareholder value.
equity.
Unfavorable financial leverage, page
Financial structure, page 516 The mix of 519 When the firm’s investments earn a rate of
sources of financing used by the firm to finance return (before taxes) that is less than the cost of
its assets. Commonly described using the ratios borrowing, this results in lower EPS and a lower
found by dividing each source of financing on rate of return on the firm’s common equity.
the right-hand side of the firm’s balance sheet by
KEY EQUATIONS
Total Liabilities
Debt Ratio = (15–1)
Total Assets
15.2 Explain why firms have different capital structures and how capital
structure influences a firm’s weighted average cost of capital.
(pgs. 520–531)
SUMMARY: Under the Modigliani and Miller (M&M) assumptions, the financing mix or capital
structure of the firm does not have any effect on the value of the firm. However, when we relax the
M&M assumptions, we learn that capital structure can be an important factor in determining the
value of the firm. In particular, there are three primary reasons that capital structure can be impor-
tant. First, because interest payments on the firm’s debt are tax-deductible but dividend payments
on the firm’s equity are not, debt financing is favored by the U.S. tax code. Second, interest on debt
is a fixed obligation, and firms that default on this obligation can be forced into bankruptcy, which
can create numerous costs for the firm. The third factor is that the threat of bankruptcy and, more
generally, of financial distress can influence the behavior of a firm’s executives, employees, and
customers. In particular, the threat of bankruptcy can make the firm a less attractive supplier and
employer, but at the same time, it can focus the attention of the firm’s executives on decisions that
contribute to the firm’s value and thereby keep it out of financial trouble.
KEY TERMS
Agency costs, page 529 The costs incurred by Interest tax savings, page 525 The reduc-
a firm’s common stockholders when the firm’s tion in income tax resulting from the tax deduct-
management makes decisions that are not in the ibility of interest expense.
shareholders’ best interests but instead further the Internal sources of financing, page
interests of the management of the firm. 530 The retained earnings of a firm that can be
Financial distress costs, page 527 The costs reinvested in the firm.
incurred by a firm that cannot pay its bills (in-
cluding principal and interest on debt) in a timely
manner.
KEY EQUATIONS
Firm Cash Flow
Firm Value(V) = (15–5)
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (kWACC)
Study Questions
15–1. In Regardless of Your Major: Capital Structure Matters to You! on page 516, we
learned about the dangers of using a high proportion of debt financing faced by both
General Motors (GM) and Lehman Brothers. How could the failure of these firms
possibly matter to you personally or to your parents?
15–2. How does a firm’s financial structure differ from its capital structure?
15–3. What are non-interest-bearing liabilities? Give some examples. Why are non-
interest-bearing liabilities not included in the firm’s capital structure?
15–4. What is financial leverage? What is meant by the use of the terms favorable and
unfavorable with regard to financial leverage?
15–5. What is the financial argument for greater stakeholder awareness in the boardroom in
a more highly leveraged organization?
15–6. What are the two fundamental assumptions that are used to support the M&M capital
structure theory? Describe each in commonsense terms.
15–7. What does Figure 15.2 have to say about the impact of a firm’s financing decisions
on firm cash flows?
15–8. Under the conditions of the M&M capital structure theory, the firm’s financing deci-
sions do not have an impact on firm value. When this theory holds (i.e., is true), how
do the firm’s financing decisions affect the firm’s weighted average cost of capital?
Describe how the cost of equity and cost of debt behave as the firm increases its use
of debt financing.
15–9. Describe why capital structure is relevant to the value of the firm. Discuss the potential
violations of both of the basic assumptions that support the M&M capital structure theory.
15–10. Why do some managers believe that debt is a more tax-efficient manner of funding a
business? What are the two presumptive requirements for this to be true?
15–11. Does the debt: equity structure affect the EPS? How does this relate to the M&M
concept of irrelevancy?
15–12. How does the presence of financial distress costs, combined with the tax deduct-
ibility of interest (and the resulting interest tax savings), affect a firm’s weighted
average cost of capital as the firm increases its use of debt financing from no debt to
higher and higher levels of debt?
15–13. What is a capital finance lease agreement?
15–14. What does the term benchmarking mean with respect to making financing decisions?
15–15. Describe how each of the four financial ratios found in Table 15.3 is used to help
managers make financing decisions.
15–16. What is EBIT-EPS analysis, and how is it used in making financing decisions?
15–17. The Ballard Corporation is considering adding more debt to its capital structure and
has asked you to provide it with some guidance. After looking at future levels of Bal-
lard’s EBIT, you feel very confident that in the future it will consistently be above
the EBIT-EPS indifference point calculated using Ballard’s current capital structure
and its proposed capital structure. Based on this analysis, do you think you would be
more inclined to recommend that the company keep its current capital structure or
go with the proposed capital structure that will add more debt? Discuss the reasons
underlying your recommendation.
15–18. Is sector benchmarking an important driver in the funding structure decision?
15–19. How would shareholders benefit from a rapid growth in profitability in a highly
geared (leveraged) company? What is the main future risk?
15–20. What is financial flexibility, and why is it an important consideration when evaluat-
ing a financing decision?
15–21. A firm is considering replacing its current production facility with a new robotics
production facility. As a result of this move, the firm’s fixed costs will increase dra-
matically. To finance this new project, the firm is considering either issuing common
stock or issuing debt. Should the firm consider these two decisions (whether to build
the robotics facility and how to finance it) separately? How might the investment de-
cision impact the financing decision?
15–22. In Finance in a Flat World: Capital Structures Around the World on page 542, we
learned that capital structures differ dramatically in different countries around the
world. What are some possible causes for the observed differences?
15–23. Use Figure 15-9 to describe potential differences between leasing a piece of equip-
ment with a capital lease and purchasing the equipment using a bank loan.
15–24. The tax implications of leasing versus buying a piece of equipment can sometimes
favor leasing and at other times favor buying. Explain.
Study Problems
MyLab Finance Capital Structure Policies
Go to www.myfinancelab.com
to complete these exercises online 15–1. (Calculating debt ratio) (Related to Checkpoint 15.1 on page 534)
and get instant feedback.
Sharpgas plc £m £m
Current assets 6 Current liabilities 8
Non-current assets 30 Long-term debt 20
Shares 2
Reserves 6
36 36
You have just taken over a portfolio of bank clients including Sharpgas Plc. Their latest
balance sheet is as above. What questions would you ask immediately with regard to
their capital structure?
15–2. (Calculating capital structure weights) The following figures were extracted from the
latest annual report of Critsim Plc.
The directors of Critsim Plc have the opportunity to acquire a competitor company for
£2 million, which would need to be funded by debt; the bank has agreed to finance this on
the same basis as the existing debt. What level of profitability will be required from the ac-
quisition to maintain a similar relationship between operating profit and distributable profit?
15–3. (Calculating capital structure weights) (Related to Checkpoint 15.1 on page 534)
Returning to Study Problem 15–2, describe the capital structure both before and after the
acquisition. Suggest three concerns that the shareholders ought to raise at the next AGM.
15–4. (Adjusting a firm’s capital structure) Curley’s Fried Chicken Kitchen operates two south-
ern-cooking restaurants in St. Louis, Missouri, and has the following financial structure:
The firm is considering an expansion that would involve raising an additional $2 million.
a. What are the firm’s debt ratio and interest-bearing debt ratio for its present capital
structure?
b. If the firm wants to have a debt ratio of 50 percent, how much equity does the firm
need to raise in order to finance the expansion?
15–5. (Describing a firm’s capital structure) (Related to Checkpoint 15.1 on page 534) Home
Depot, Inc. (HD), operates as a home improvement retailer primarily in the United
States, Canada, and Mexico. The balance sheet for Home Depot for February 3,
2008, included the following liabilities and owners’ equity:
a. What are Home Depot’s debt ratio and interest-bearing debt ratio?
b. If Home Depot has common equity with a market value of $44.9 billion and no
excess cash, what is the firm’s debt-to-enterprise-value ratio? (Hint: Assume that
the market value of the firm’s interest-bearing debt equals its book value.)
15–6. (Describing a firm’s capital structure) Lowe’s Companies, Inc. (LOW), and its sub-
sidiaries operate as a home improvement retailer in the United States and Canada. As
of February 1, 2008, they operated 1,534 stores in 50 states and Canada. The compa-
ny’s balance sheet for February 1, 2008, included the following sources of financing:
a. Calculate the values of Lowe’s debt ratio and interest-bearing debt ratio.
b. If Lowe’s has common equity with a market value of $35.86 billion and no ex-
cess cash, what is the firm’s debt-to-enterprise-value ratio? (Hint: Assume that
the market value of the firm’s interest-bearing debt equals its book value.)
c. (Optional) Compare your analysis of Lowe’s capital structure to that of Home
Depot (HD) in Study Problem 15–5. Can you determine which of the two firms is
more highly levered (i.e., uses the most financial leverage)? If so, what is your as-
sessment of the two firms’ capital structures?
d. (Optional) What is the credit rating for Lowe’s, and how does it compare to that
of Home Depot? (Hint: Look up bond credit ratings online.)
15–8. (Computing interest tax savings) Presently, H. Swank, Inc., does not use any finan-
cial leverage and has total financing equal to $1 million. It is considering refinancing
and issuing $500,000 of debt that pays 5 percent interest and using that money to buy
back half the firm’s common stock. Assume that the debt has a 30-year maturity and
that Swank will have no principal payments for 30 years. Swank currently pays all of
its net income to common shareholders in the form of cash dividends and intends to
continue to do this in the future. The corporate tax rate on the firm’s earnings is 35
percent. Swank’s current income statement (before the debt issue) is as follows:
a. If Swank issues the debt and uses it to buy back common stock, how much money
can the firm distribute to its stockholders and bondholders next year if the firm’s
EBIT remains equal to $100,000?
b. What are Swank’s interest tax savings from the issuance of the debt?
c. Are Swank’s stockholders better off after the debt issue? Why or why not?
a. Calculate the times interest earned ratio for each of the years for which you have
data.
b. What is your assessment of how the firm’s ability to service its debt obligations
has changed over this period?
15–10. (Analyzing coverage ratios) The income statements for Lowe’s Companies, Inc.
(LOW), spanning the period 2014–2016 (just before the housing crash, so these are
representative years) are as follows:
a. Calculate the times interest earned ratio for each of the years for which you
have data.
b. What is your assessment of how the firm’s ability to service its debt obligations
has changed over this period?
c. (Optional) How does Lowe’s compare to Home Depot (HD) in Study Problem
15–9? Is it better able to service its debt than Home Depot? Why or why not?
15–11. (Calculating leverage and EPS) You have developed the following pro forma income
statement for your corporation. It represents the most recent year’s operations, which
ended yesterday.
Sales $45,750,000
Variable costs (22,800,000)
Revenue before fixed costs $22,950,000
Fixed costs (9,200,000)
Net operating income (EBIT) $13,750,000
Interest expense (1,350,000)
Earnings before taxes $12,400,000
Income taxes (50%) (6,200,000)
Net income $ 6,200,000
Your supervisor in the controller’s office has just handed you a memorandum asking
for written responses to the following questions:
a. If sales increase by 25 percent, by what percentage will earnings before interest
and taxes and net income increase?
b. If sales decrease by 25 percent, by what percentage will earnings before interest
and taxes and net income decrease?
c. If the firm reduces its reliance on debt financing such that interest expense is cut
in half, how does this affect your answers to parts a and b?
15–12. (Using EBIT-EPS analysis) (Related to Checkpoint 15.2 on page 538) Abe Forrester
and three of his friends from college have interested a group of venture capitalists
in backing their business idea. The proposed operation would consist of a series of
retail outlets to distribute and service a full line of vacuum cleaners and accessories.
These stores would be located in Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio. To finance the
new venture, two plans have been proposed:
• Plan A is an all-common-equity structure in which $2 million would be raised by
selling 80,000 shares of common stock.
• Plan B involves issuing $1 million in long-term bonds with an effective interest
rate of 12 percent and raising another $1 million by selling 40,000 shares of com-
mon stock. The debt funds raised under Plan B have no fixed maturity date, in
that this amount of financial leverage is considered a permanent part of the firm’s
capital structure.
Abe and his partners plan to use a 40 percent tax rate in their analysis, and they have
hired you on a consulting basis to do the following:
a. Find the EBIT indifference level associated with the two financing plans.
b. Prepare a pro forma income statement for the EBIT level found in part a that
shows EPS will be the same, regardless of whether Plan A or Plan B is chosen.
15–13. (Using EBIT-EPS analysis) Three recent graduates of the computer science program
at the University of Tennessee are forming a company that will write and distribute
new application software for the iPhone. Initially, the corporation will operate in the
southern region of Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. A small
group of private investors in the Atlanta, Georgia, area is interested in financing the
start-up company, and two financing plans have been put forth for consideration:
• Plan A is an all-common-equity capital structure in which $2 million would be
raised by selling common stock at $20 per common share.
• Plan B involves the use of financial leverage, with $1 million raised by selling
bonds with an effective interest rate of 11 percent (per annum) and the remaining
$1 million raised by selling common stock at $20 per share. The use of financial
leverage is considered to be a permanent part of the firm’s capitalization, so no
fixed maturity date is needed for the analysis. A 30 percent tax rate is deemed
appropriate for the analysis.
a. Find the EBIT indifference level associated with the two financing plans.
b. A detailed financial analysis of the firm’s prospects suggests that the long-term
EBIT will be above $300,000 annually. Taking this into consideration, which plan
will generate the higher EPS?
15–14. (Using EBIT-EPS break-even analysis) Return to Study Problems 15–1 and 15–7. You
are now preparing your analysis of Sharpgas Plc. You have been asked to comment
on the likely share price at the end of 2017. You know that there are 4 million shares
in issue with a nominal value of £0.50 and that the Price Earnings Ratio is 10; this is
still based on the 2015 income statement as the 2016 figures have not yet been released
to the market. If the directors project an operating profit of £3 million for 2017 and
estimate that the business will still suffer an interest charge of £2 million for 2017,
assuming that other things are equal, and not allowing for any market or real-world
systematic or unsystematic additional change (the theoretical world of M&M), what
will be the likely percentage change in share price?
Mini-Case
Hewlett-Packard Co. Balance Sheet (October 31, Hewlett-Packard Company
2007) Balance Sheet, October 31, 2007
On September 27, 2007, Apple Inc. (AAPL) reported the fol-
lowing sources of financing in its balance sheet: ($ thousands) Financial Structure
Apple Inc. Liabilities
Balance Sheet, September 27, 2007 Accounts payable $25,822,000
Short-term/current debt 3,186,000
Other current liabilities 10,252,000
($ thousands) Financial Structure
Total current liabilities $39,260,000
Liabilities Long-term debt 4,997,000
Accounts payable $ 6,230,000 Other long-term liabilities 5,916,000
Short-term/current debt 0 Long-term liabilities $10,913,000
Other current liabilities 3,069,000 Stockholders’ equity $38,526,000
Total current liabilities $ 9,299,000 Total $88,699,000
Long-term debt 0
Other long-term liabilities 1,516,000 Hewlett-Packard Company
Long-term liabilities $ 1,516,000 Income Statements ($ thousands)
Stockholders’ equity $14,532,000
Total $25,347,000
Period Ending 31-Oct-07 31-Oct-06 31-Oct-05
Net operating 9,466,000 7,440,000 3,759,000
Moreover, the firm’s 2007 income statement reported earnings income (EBIT)
of $3.496 billion with no interest expense: Interest expense (289,000) (249,000) (216,000)
Earnings before 9,177,000 7,191,000 3,543,000
Apple Inc. taxes
Income Statements ($ thousands) Income taxes (1,913,000) (993,000) (1,145,000)
Net income 7,264,000 6,198,000 2,398,000
Period ending 29-Sep-07 30-Sep-06 24-Sep-05
a. Describe the capital structure of Hewlett-Packard using
Net operating 5,008,000 2,818,000 1,815,000 both the debt ratio and the interest-bearing debt ratio.
income (EBIT)
Interest expense 0 0 0 b. What is Hewlett-Packard’s times interest earned ratio? If
Earnings before 5,008,000 2,818,000 1,815,000 the company faces a principal payment equal to $3 bil-
taxes lion, what is its EBITDA coverage ratio for 2007? (Hint:
Income taxes (1,512,000) (829,000) (480,000) Hewlett-Packard’s tax rate is 20 percent.)
Net income 3,496,000 1,989,000 1,335,000 c. Suppose Apple has decided to issue debt financing and use
the proceeds to purchase some of its shares of stock from
If Apple’s management had been considering the possibility the open market. What fraction of the firm’s 2.47 billion
of using debt financing for the first time, it might have looked shares does the firm need to repurchase in order to make its
at Hewlett-Packard Company (HPQ) as a benchmark firm for interest-bearing debt ratio equal to that of Hewlett-Packard?
comparison purposes. Hewlett-Packard used debt financing as If Apple had carried out the transaction by issuing bonds
shown on the following balance sheet and income statement: with an 8 percent rate of interest, what would its earnings
per share have been in 2007?
d. Do you think that Apple’s proposed change of capital struc-
ture makes good financial sense? Why or why not?
Figure 15A.1
Illustrating the M&M Capital Structure Irrelevance Proposition
This example illustrates how the firm’s capital structure (debt plus equity) does not affect the value of the firm where the two assumptions
underlying the M&M capital structure theorem hold. Specifically,
• Panel A shows how we arrive at the valuation of Firm B’s equity, given that the unlevered firm (Firm A) has a value of $75 million.
• Panel B illustrates the correct valuation of the levered firm’s (Firm B) equity at $35 million.
• Panels C and D identify the arbitrage opportunities that arise where Firm B’s equity is under- and overvalued, respectively.
The critical takeaway from this figure is that under the conditions assumed by M&M, the values of the unlevered firm (Firm A) and the levered
firm (Firm B) must be equal, which means that each firm’s capital structure is not important to the value of the firm.
(Panel A) Value of Firm B’s Equity Assuming the M&M Proposition Holds
Investment in Firm B
Value of Firm B’s equity $35.00 million
Amount invested 7.50 million
Price of 10% of Firm B’s shares 3.50 million
Amount invested in risk-free debt 4.00 million
Firm A Firm B
State of the Economy ($ millions) Cash Flow Equity Debt + Equity = Total
Recession $50 $ 5 $ 4.2 $ 0.8 $ 5
Normal 100 $10 $ 4.2 $ 5.8 $10
Boom 150 $15 $ 4.2 $10.8 $15
After investing the $7.5 million in Firm A’s equity, you will receive $5, $10, or $15 million in cash flows, depending on the state of
the economy. Similarly, summing the debt plus equity cash flows corresponding to purchasing 10% of Firm B and using the unused
funds to purchase risk-free debt, the cash flows are identical to those you would receive from investing in Firm A. Thus, if Firm B’s
equity is priced at $35 million, you will be indifferent between buying stock in either of the two firms.
Investment in Firm B
Cash flows from investing in
Value of Firm B’s equity $30.00 million Firm B are greater than from
Amount invested 7.50 million investing in Firm A because
Price of 10% of Firm B’s shares 3.00 million Firm B’s equity is underpriced.
Amount invested in risk-free debt 4.50 million
Firm A Firm B
State of the Economy ($ millions) Cash Flow Equity Debt + Equity = Total
Recession $ 50 $ 5 $4.725 $0.8 $ 5.525
Normal 100 $10 $4.725 $5.8 $10.525
Boom 150 $15 $4.725 $0.8 $15.525
Firm A cash flows to the 10% investor. The result here is the same as before.
Firm B cash flows to the 10% investor. The cash flows in this instance are higher for Firm B, whose shares are underpriced. Since
Firm B’s equity is valued at $30 million, you can purchase 10% of the firm’s shares using only $3 million; this gives you an addi-
tional $500,000 to invest in risk-free debt, which earns an additional $0.525 million in interest (i.e., $4.725 million – $4.2 million).
Firm A Firm B
State of the Economy ($ millions) Cash Flow Equity Debt + Equity = Total
Recession $50 $ 5 $3.15 $ 0.80 $ 3.95
Normal 100 $10 $3.15 $ 5.80 $ 8.95
Boom 150 $15 $3.15 $10.80 $13.95
Firm A cash flows to the 10% investor. The result here is the same as before.
Firm B cash flows to the 10% investor. The cash flows in this instance are lower for Firm B, whose shares are overpriced. Since
Firm B’s equity is valued at $45 million, you can purchase 10% of the firm’s shares using $4.5 million; this leaves you only $3 mil-
lion to invest in risk-free debt, which reduces your interest income by $1.05 million (i.e., $4.2 million – $3.15 million).
>> END FIGURE 15A.1
investment in Firm A. Obviously in this case you will prefer an investment in Firm A over Firm B. In this instance, investors
will sell Firm B shares, thereby driving their price down to $35 million, at which point there is no longer be a profitable arbitrage
opportunity.
Summing Up
So what does this mean? Very simply, under the two basic assumptions of the M&M capital structure theory, investors will force
the values of otherwise identical firms to be equal even though they have different capital structures. The process by which investors
force this to happen is called arbitrage, whereby they buy the shares of the undervalued firm and sell the shares of the overvalued firm.