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Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Page 1: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Chapter 15

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Page 2: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Capital

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Page 3: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Chapter Outline

• Financial Capital And Real Capital• The Demand For Real Capital• The Relationship Between The Rental Rate And

The Interest Rate• The Criterion For Buying A Capital Good• Interest Rate Determination• Real Versus Nominal Interest Rates• The Market For Stocks And Bonds• The Anomaly Of The Investment Newsletter• Tax Policy And The Capital Market• Economic Rent• Peak-load Pricing• Exhaustible Resources As Inputs In Production

Page 4: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Financial Capital And Real Capital

• Financial capital: money or some other paper asset that functions like money.

• Real capital: productive equipment that generates a flow of services; also called physical capital.

Page 5: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Demand For Real Capital

• If the firm can acquire the services of as much capital as it wishes at a constant rental rate of r/yr, it should employ capital up to the point at which its marginal revenue product (MRPK) is exactly equal to the rental rate.

Page 6: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The RentalRate And The Interest Rate

• Technological obsolescence: the process by which a good loses value not because of physical depreciation, but because improvements in technology make substitute products more attractive.

Page 7: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Criterion For Buying A Capital Good

• The machine will bolster the firm’s rate of production not only in the current period, but also in the future.

• The firm should buy the machine if and only if PV is greater than or equal to PK.– Since PV is inversely related to the market

rate of interest the firm that owns its capital will want to employ more of it the lower the market rate of interest is.

Page 8: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Interest Rate Determination

• A firm’s demand for capital equipment depends on the rate of interest, the purchase price of capital, and the rates of technological and physical depreciation.– Interest rates are determined by the

intersection of the supply and demand curves for loanable funds.

Page 9: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Figure 15.1: Equilibrium in the Market

for Loanable Funds

Page 10: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Real Versus Nominal Interest Rates

• When banks expect the overall level of prices to rise, they will charge an interest premium to counteract the erosion of the real purchasing power of future loan payments.

– The actual number that appears on the bank loan contract is called the nominal rate of interest.

– The real rate of interest is given by:

i = (n –q) / (1 + q)

– n - nominal annual rate of interest (expressed as a fraction)

– q - annual rate of inflation

Page 11: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Market For Stocks And Bonds

• A bond is essentially a promissory note issued by the firm.– The face value of the bond is the

amount for which it was sold to the investor who bought it from the firm.

– Short-term bonds: often promise to return their face value in full within 90 days.

– Long-term bonds: reach maturity only after 30 years, and some have even longer lifetimes.

Page 12: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Market For Stocks And Bonds

• Perpetual bond: a bond that pays a fixed payment each year in perpetuity; also called a consol.

• Risk premium: a payment differential necessary to compensate the supplier of a good or service for having to bear risk.

Page 13: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Figure 15.2: The Trade-Off between Safety and Expected

Return

Page 14: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Efficient Markets Hypothesis

• Efficient stock market: the price of a stock embodies all available information that is relevant to its current and future earnings prospects.

Page 15: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Tax Policy And The Capital Market

• The interest earned on municipal bonds is exempted from the federal income tax.– The interest earned on federal

government bonds, by contrast, is fully taxable, as is the interest on bonds issued by corporations.

• Which kind of bond you should buy depends on the marginal rate at which your income is taxed.

Page 16: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Economic Rent

• Economic rent: the difference between what a factor of production is paid and the minimum amount necessary to induce it to remain in its current use.

Page 17: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Figure 15.3: Economic Rent

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Peak-load Pricing

• Peak-load pricing: the practice whereby higher prices are charged for goods or services during the periods in which they are consumed most intensively.

Page 19: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Figure 15.4: The Effect ofPeak-Load Pricing

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Exhaustible Resources As InputsIn Production

• An exhaustible resource is one that cannot be replenished by people.

• How does a competitive market allocate exhaustible resources?

• The owner of an exhaustible resource has two options: – (1) he can hold the resource for the time

being.• Opportunity cost is the interest that could have

been earned had the resource been sold and the proceeds deposited in a bank (or used to purchase a stock or bond).

– (2) he can sell it.

Page 21: Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Figure 15.5: The EquilibriumPrice Path for an Exhaustible

Resource

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Exhaustible Resources As InputsIn Production

• Because the demand curves for exhaustible resources are downward sloping the gradual rise in price will cause a gradual reduction in the quantity of the resource demanded.

• Rising prices also stimulate the production of substitutes for the exhaustible resource.

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Figure A15.1: The Growth Curvefor a Tree

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Figure A15.2: The Optimal Timeof Harvest

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Figure A15.3: The Effect of Rising Prices on the Use of an Exhaustible

Resource

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Figure A15.4: The Stock Exhaustion Path

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Figure A15.5: Adjustment When Investors Expect to be Stuck with

Excess Oil

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Figure A15.6: Adjustment When Investors Expect Oil to Run Out Too

Soon

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Figure A15.7: Response to a Fallin the Price of Solar Energy