Choosing The Optimal Capital Structure-Example Chapter 16
Choosing The Optimal Capital Structure-Example Chapter 16
Company is all-equity financed. Expected EBIT = $500,000. Firm expects zero growth. 100,000 shares outstanding; Re = 12%; P0 = $25; T = 40%; b = 1.0; RRF = 6%; RPM = 6%.
Company has decided to recapitalize its capital structure by borrowing and repurchasing its shares
30%
40%
8.5%
10.0%
50% 12.0% Debt would be issued to repurchase stock, but the cost of debt will increase as the financial risk increases
Question 1
(1.) For each capital structure under consideration, calculate the levered beta, the cost of equity, and the WACC. Hamada developed his equation by merging the CAPM with the Modigliani-Miller model. We use the model to determine beta at different amount of financial leverage, and then use the betas associated with different debt ratios to find the cost of equity associated with those debt ratios. Here is the Hamada equation: bL = bU [1 + (1 - T)(D/E)]
40% 50%
0.67 1.00
1.400 1.600
14.40% 15.60%
30%
40% 50%
8.5%
10.0% 12.0%
13.54%
14.40% 15.60%
11.01%
11.04% 11.40%
Returns
Leverage Effect
90%
100%
Debt-to- Value
RL
RU
Returns
RL
WACC
Question 2
(2.) What is the corporate value, the value of the debt that will be issued, and the resulting market value of equity.
0%
0.0%
12.00%
12.00%
2,500,000
20%
8.0%
12.90%
11.28%
2,659,574
30%
8.5%
13.54%
11.01%
2,724,796
40%
10.0%
14.40%
11.04%
2,717,391
50%
12.0%
15.60%
11.40%
2,631,579
$2,000,000 $1,000,000 $0
D/V
wd Value WACC
WACC
Value of Debt
wd 0% 20% 30% 40% Debt, D $0 $531,915 $817,439 $1,086,957
50%
$1,315,789
Question 4
Calculate the market value of equity, the price per share, the number of shares repurchased, and the remaining shares. Considering only the capital structures under analysis, what is the optimal capital structure?
P
Total shareholder wealth: S + Cash
$25.00
$2,500,000
P
Total shareholder wealth: S + Cash
$25.00
$2,500,000
$26.60
$2,659,574
VTotal
Debt S n P Total shareholder wealth: S + Cash
$2,500,000
0 $2,500,000 100,000 $25.00 $2,500,000
$3,191,489
531,915 $2,659,574 100,000 $26.60 $2,659,574
$2,659,574
531,915 $2,127,660 80,000 $26.60 $2,659,574
Key Points
ST investments fall because they are used to repurchase stock. Stock price is unchanged. Value of equity falls from $2,659,574 to $2,127,660 because firm no longer owns the ST investments. Wealth of shareholders remains at $2,659,574 because shareholders now directly own the funds that were held by firm in ST investments.
Shortcuts
The corporate valuation approach will always give the correct answer, but there are some shortcuts for finding S, P, and n. Shortcuts on next slides.
20%
30%
$2,127,660
$1,907,357
$26.60
$27.25
80,000
70,000
40%
50%
$1,630,435
$1,315,789
$27.17
$26.32
60,000
50,000