Capital Structure Flashcards
Operating Gearing
Fixed costs/Total costs or Variable costs
OR
% change in EBIT/% change in revenue
OR
Contribution/EBIT
Use Fixed/Variable
Gearing
Equity D/E: Debt+preference shares/share capital and reserves
Total/capital gearing: long-term debt+preference shares/all equity
Interest gearing:
Debt interest/Operating profits before debt interest and tax
Impact of financial gearing
E.g. if a company has high gearing (debt), then it means even just a 10% fall in sales can mean even larger decreases percentage wise in operating PBIT and PBT
Gearing trade off
Financial manager’s role to balance business risk in the market, operating gearing and financial gearing.
In reality, a manager can’t control business risk, limited opportunity to affect investment in fixed costs (e.g. service firms have mostly fixed costs)
Optimal Capital Structure
If a company can increase shareholder wealth by changing gearing - it should.
MV of a company = Future cashflows/WACC
A reduction in WACC should increase the MV of a company
Traditional view of capital structure
At low gearing, equity holders perceive the risk to not change, and benefit as WACC falls, however, once gearing rises, equity holders perceive:
Increased financial risk
Less assets as collateral, even debt holders may get worried
Increase in Ke to compensate
WACC rises again
M&M Theory - No Tax
Argues:
Investors are rational. Linear relationship between Kd and Ke
Increase in Ke offsets the cheaper debt finance - WACC doesn’t change
Choice of finance is irrelevant
Companies value depends on it’s abiliy to make future operating income from assets
M&M Theory with tax
Still argues as gearing increases, Ke increases in proportion
But the tax relief on debt if greater than the cost of Ke, therefore optimum capital structure is 99.9% debt
Problems of high gearing
Bankruptcy risk as gearing increases
Agency costs: Restrictions on level of dividends, additional debt taken on, and disposal of non-current assets
Tax exhaustion: after a certain point, no more tax relief can be claimed on debt
Borrowing capacity/collateral
Cost of debt increases as higher gearing ensues
Pecking order theory
Retained earnings, debt, then new issue
Issue costs are higher
Myers and Maljuf - with asymmetric (inside information), new equity issues are only made when shares are overpriced
Bennett Steward - Raising equity conveys doubt. New issues of equity ahead of rough-times through overpriced shares
Asquith and Mulins - New equity issues will decrease stock prices;