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Capital Structure Theories
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Page 1: Capital Structure Theory

Capital Structure Theories

Page 2: Capital Structure Theory

CAPITAL STRUCTURE THEORY

USE OF FINANCIAL LEVERAGE –

INCREASES SHAREHOLDERS EXPECTED RETURNS

ALSO IT INCREASES RISK FOR SHAREHOLDERS

BECAUSE OF FINANCIAL LEVERAGE THE SHAREHOLDERS

WILL ALSO HAVE TO BEAR FINANCIAL RISK ALONG WITH BUSINESS RISK

Page 3: Capital Structure Theory

The question is:

Is the increase in expected return sufficient to compensate the risk?

TO HELP ANSWER THIS QUESTION

IT’S USEFUL TO EXAMINE CAPITAL STRUCTURE THEORY

THEORY DOES NOT PROVIDE INSIGHTS INTO THE EFFECTS OF DEBT VERSUS EQUITY FINANCING AN UNDERSTANDING OF “CAPITAL STRUCTURE THEORY”

WILL AID MANAGERS IN ESTABLISHING THEIR FIRM’S OPTIMAL CAPITAL STRUCTURE

Page 4: Capital Structure Theory

ASSUMPTIONS OF THE THEORY

1. Firms employ only two types of capital: debt and equity

2. The degree of leverage can be changed by selling debt to repurchase shares or selling shares to retire debt.

3. Investors have the same subjective probability distributions of expected future operating earnings for a given firm.

4. The firm has a policy of paying 100 per cent dividends

5. The operating earnings of the firm are expected to be constant

6. The business risk is assumed to be constant and independent of capital structure and financial risk

7. The corporate and personal income taxes do not exist (Though the assumption is relaxed later)

Page 5: Capital Structure Theory

NET INCOME APPROACH

ACCORDING TO NET INCOME APPROACH:

THE FIRM CAN INCREASE ITS VALUE

OR

LOWER THE OVERALL COST OF CAPITAL

BY

INCREASING THE PROPORTION OF DEBT

IN THE CAPITAL STRUCTURE

Page 6: Capital Structure Theory

ASSUMPTIONS OF NET INCOME APPROACH

1. The use of debt does not change the risk perception of investors; as a result, the equity capitalisation rate, ke, and the debt capitalisation rate kd, remain constant with changes in leverage

2. The debt capitalisation rate is less than the equity capitalisation rate

3. The corporate income taxes do not exist.

Page 7: Capital Structure Theory

Assume that a firm has an expected annual net operating income of Rs.200,000, an equity rate, ke, of 10% and Rs. 10,00,000 of 6% debt.

The value of the firm according to NET INCOME approach:Net Operating Income NOI 2,00,000

Total cost of debt Interest= KdD, (10,00,000 x .06) 60,000

Net Income Available to shareholders, NOI – I 1,40,000

Therefore:

Market Value of Equity (Rs. 140,000/.10) 14,00,000Market value of debt D (Rs. 60,000/.06) 10,00,000Total 24,00,000

The cost of equity and debt are respectively 10% and 6% and are

Assumed to be constant under the Net Income Approach

Page 8: Capital Structure Theory

Ko= NOI/V = 200,000/24,00,000 = 0.0833

Or

Ko = Kd (D/V) + Ke (S/V)

= 0.06 (10,00,000/24,00,000) + 0.10 (14,00,000/24,00,000)

= 0.025 + 0.0583 = 0.0833 or 8.33%

If the firm employs a debt or Rs.14,00,000 instead of Rs. 10,00,000

The value of the firm under NET INCOME approach will be

Page 9: Capital Structure Theory

The value of the firm according to NET INCOME approach:

Net Operating Income NOI 2,00,000

Total cost of debt Interest= KdD, (14,00,000 x .06) 84,000

Net Income Available to shareholders, NOI – I 1,16,000

Therefore:

Market Value of Equity (Rs. 116,000/.10) 11,60,000Market value of debt D (Rs. 60,000/.06) 14,00,000Total 25,60,000

Ko= NOI/V = 200,000/25,60,000 = 0.078125Or

Ko = Kd (D/V) + Ke (S/V)= 0.06 (14,00,000/25,60,000) + 0.10 (11,60,000/25,60,000)

= 0.03281+ 0.04531 = 0.07812 or 7.81%

Page 10: Capital Structure Theory

NET OPERATING INCOME APPROACH

ACCORDING TO NET OPERATING APPROACH (NOI)

THE MARKET VALUE OF THE FIRM IS NOT AFFECTED

BY THE CHANGE IN CAPITAL STRUCTURE

THE WEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF CAPITAL

IS SAID TO BE CONSTANT

Page 11: Capital Structure Theory

ASSUMPTIONS OF NOI APPROACH

1. The market capitalises the value of the firm as a whole. Thus, the split between debt and equity is not important.

2. The market uses an overall capitalisation rate, Ko to capitalise the net operating income. Ko depends on the business risk. If the business risk is assumed to remain unchanged, Ko is a constant.

3. The use of less costly debt funds increases the risk to shareholders. This causes the equity capitalisation rate to increase. Thus the advantage of debt is offset exactly by the increase in the equity capitalisation rate, Ke.

4. The debt – capitalisation rate, Kd is a constant.

5. The corporate income taxes do not exist.

Page 12: Capital Structure Theory

PROBLEM ON NOI APPROACH

Assume that a firm has annual net operating income of Rs. 2,00,000, an average cost of capital Ko, of 10 % and initial debt of Rs.10,00,000 at 6%

Net Operating Income, 2,00,000Therefore:

Market value of the Firm, V = S + D = 2,00,000/0.10 = 20,00,000

Market value of the Debt, D -10,00,000

Market value of the Equity S = V – D 10,00,000

Page 13: Capital Structure Theory

Ko= NOI/V = 200,000/0.10 = 20,00,000Here, Ke is not a constant as that in NI approach

It is computed by using the formulaKe = Ko + (Ko-Kd)D/S

= 0.10 + (0.10 – 0.06) 10,00,000/10,00,000= 0.10 + 0.04 (1) = 0.14

To verify that the weighted average cost of capital is a constant:

Ko = Kd (D/V) + Ke (S/V)

= 0.06 (10,00,000/20,00,000) + 0.14 (10,00,000/20,00,000)

= 0.06 (0.50) + 0.14 (0.5)

= 0.03 + 0.07 = 0.10

Page 14: Capital Structure Theory

IF DEBT IS INCREASED FROM 10,00,000 TO 14,00,000

Ke is not a constant in NOI approachIt has to be computed by using the formula

With the increase in leverage the cost of equity tends to go up

Ke = Ko + (Ko-Kd)D/S= 0.10 + (0.10 – 0.06) 14,00,000/6,00,000= 0.10 + 0.04 (2.33) = 0.1933 or 19.33%

To verify that the weighted average cost of capital is a constant:Ko = Kd (D/V) + Ke (S/V)

= 0.06 (14,00,000/20,00,000) + 0.1933 (6,00,000/20,00,000) = 0.06 (0.70) + 0.1933 (0.3)

= 0.042 + 0.05799 = 0.9999 or 10%

Page 15: Capital Structure Theory

THE TRADITIONAL VIEWTHIS IS ALSO KNOWN AS INTERMEDIATE APPROACH

IT IS A COMPROMISE BETWEEN THE NI & NOI APPROACHACCORDING TO THIS VIEW

THE VALUE OF THE FIRM CAN BE INCREASED OR THE COST OF CAPITAL CAN BE REDUCED BY A JUDICIOUS MIX OF

DEBT AND EQUITY CAPITAL

THIS APPROACH IMPLIES THAT THE COST OF CAPITAL DECREASES WITHIN THE REASONABLE LIMIT OF DEBT

AND THEN INCREASES THE WITH LEVERAGE

Page 16: Capital Structure Theory

TRADITIONAL VIEW

FIRST STAGE

In the first stage, the cost of equity rises less than proportionate to cost of debt ie

It does not increase fast enough to offset the advantage of low cost debt

During this stage the cost of debt, Kd, remains constant or rises negligibly

on the assumption that the market views use of debt as a reasonable policy

Page 17: Capital Structure Theory

SECOND STAGE

Once the firm has reached a certain degree of leverage,

A further increase in leverage will have a negligible effect on the value, or the cost of the capital of the firm.

B’cause

The increase in the cost of equity due to the added financial risk offsets the advantage of low cost debt.

At a specific point, the value of the firm will be maximum or the cost of capital will be minimum

Page 18: Capital Structure Theory

THIRD STAGE

Beyond the acceptable limit of leverage, the value of the firm decreases with leverage or the cost of the capital increases with

leverage

B’cause the investors perceive a high degree of financial risk and increase equity capitalisation rate by more than to offset the

advantage of low cost debt.

Page 19: Capital Structure Theory

GRAPHIC PRESENTATION

XX

Y

Threshold Debt Level Where bankruptcy

costs become material

Optimal capital structure Marginal tax shelter benefits = marginal Bankruptcy related costs

VALEU OF STOCK

LEVERAGE

Page 20: Capital Structure Theory

Some considerations in the Capital Structure Decision:

1. Managerial conservatism

2. Lender and Rating Agency Attitudes

3. Reserve Borrowing capacity and Financing Flexibility

4. Control

5. Business Risk

6. Asset Structure

7. Growth Rate

8. Profitability

9. Taxes

10. Market conditions

Page 21: Capital Structure Theory

MM HYPOTHESIS1. Securities are traded in the perfect capital market situation.

2. Investors are free to buy and sell securities

3. They can borrow without restriction at the same terms as the firms do;

4. Investors behave rationally

5. There is no transaction cost

6. Firms can be grouped into homogeneous risk classes

7. The expected NOI is a random variable, with a constant mean probability distribution and a finite variance

8. Firms distribute all net earnings to the shareholders, which means the dividend payout ratio is 100%

9. No corporate income taxes (later they relaxed)

Page 22: Capital Structure Theory

Assignment ProblemCapital Structure Debt (Rs.) Kd% Ke%

I 3,00,000 10.0 12.0

II 4,00,000 10.0 12.5

III 5,00,000 11.0 13.5

IV 6,00,000 12.0 15.0

V 7,00,000 14.0 18.0

Page 23: Capital Structure Theory

SOLUTIONParticulars Plan I II III IV V

EBIT 300000 300000 300000 300000 300000

Less Interest 30,000 40,000 55,000 72,000 98,000

Net Profit 270,000 260,000 245,000 228,000 202,000

Ke 0.12 0.125 0.135 0.15 0.18

MV of Eq.

MV of Debt

Total Mkt. Value

Ko

22,50,000

300,000

25,50,000

11.76

20,80,000

400,000

24,80,000

12.10

18,14,815

500,000

23,14,815

12.95

15,20,000

600,000

21,20,000

14.15

11,22,222

7,00,000

18,22,222

16.46

Page 24: Capital Structure Theory

CASE – SOFT DRINK COMPANY

A SOFT DRINK MANUFACTURING COMPANY IS PREPARING TO MAKE CAPITAL STRUTURE DECISION.

IT HAS OBTAINED ESTIMATE OF SALES AND THE ASSOCIATED LEVELS OF EARNINGS BEFORE INTEREST AND TAXES FROM ITS FORECASTING GROUP.

THE PROJECTED SALES ACCORDING TO THE GROUP ARE AS FOLLOWS:

Page 25: Capital Structure Theory

PROJECTED SALES

SALES (25% CHANCE) 400,000

SALES (50% CHANCE) 600,000

SALES (25% CHANCE) 800,000

FIXED OPERATING COSTS

200,000

VARIABLE OPERATING COSTS

50% OF SALES

Further . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 26: Capital Structure Theory

COMPANIES CURRENT CAPITAL STRUCTURE

ASSUME THAT THE SHARE VALUE IS Rs. 20

LIABILITIES AMOUNT ASSETS AMOUNT

EQUITY 500,000 FIXED AND CURRENT

500,000

LONG TERM DEBT

000,000 MISC. EXPENSES

000,000

TOTAL 500,000 TOTAL 500,000

Page 27: Capital Structure Theory

ASSUMPTIONS UNDERLYING THE CASE

1. THE FIRM HAS NO CURRENT LIABILITIES2. ITS CAPITAL STRUCTURE CURRENTLY

CONTAINS ALL EQUITY AS IN THE B/S.3. THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CAPITAL

REMAINS CONSTANT.

THAT THE FIRM IS CONSIDERING SEVEN ALTER-NATIVE CAPITAL STRUCTURES WITH A DEBT OF 0, 10, 20, 30,40,50 AND 60 PER CENTS AND THE RATE OF INTEREST WILL BE 9.0%, 9.5%, 10.0%, 11.0%, 13.5%, AND 16.5% RESPECTIVELY.

Page 28: Capital Structure Theory

WHAT TO DO?

AS A FINANCE MANAGER – USING THE DATA – DECIDE UP ON A CHOICE OF THE CAPITAL STRUCTURE THAT YOU WOULD ADVISE THE FIRM.

THE REASONS FOR THE SPECIFIC PROPORTION OF USAGE OF DEBT i.e. LEVERAGE

WHAT CAN BE THE BEST OPTION FOR THE FIRM;

WHY YOUR OPTION IS THE BEST BET – REASONS TO SUBSTANTIATE THE SAME.