Ch.9 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a dividend yield?

A

The % of share price paid in dividends (per dividend)

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2
Q

Should a company expect to pay more for debt or equity and why?

A

Equity: investors require a premium for the additional exposure to risk and uncertainty over future payments (also more liable to losses than debt-holders if company goes under)

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3
Q

To what type of company will equity finance be attractive to and why? What might put them off equity finance? Why might they struggle to get equity finance?

A

Attractive to fast growing companies; can pay low/no dividend to allow fast growth in early years

Cons: can lead to loss of firm control

Also if not well-known company yet may struggle to attract investors

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4
Q

Which type of companies may be more attracted to debt financing and why?

A

Medium/small firms who are not listed publicly because debt will be easier and quicker for them to obtain

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5
Q

What type of debt is typically most expensive and why?

A

LT because need to pay a liquidity premium!

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6
Q

Problem with ST debt?

A

Don’t want to become too dependent on it in case it isn’t renewed

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7
Q

2 equity types, explain the rights they have?

A

Ordinary(common stocks) shares: dividend rights, voting rights, ownership, right to see annual report

Preference shares: Same rights as above, plus first claimant right on dividends and assets if firm liquidates (after debt-holders)

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8
Q

2 advantages of share issues?

A

1) no obligation to pay dividends

2) capital does not have to be repaid

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9
Q

2 disadvantages of share issues?

A

1) costly (return required to satisfy SHs, direct costs of issuing shares)
2) loss of control of firm

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10
Q

What is short-selling?

A

The process of borrowing a security and selling it in the hope of buying it back at a lower price, and then returning it to the lender

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11
Q

How does a short seller ‘cover’ their position?

A

By purchasing the shares back at a future date

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12
Q

2 advantages of short selling?

A

1) Allows investors who believe a share is overvalued to profit of this
2) Helps to prevent an upward bias in share prices that would occur since shares would ONLY BE HELD BY INVESTORS OPTIMISTIC ABOUT THE SHARE (also can be used to help burst bubbles)

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13
Q

Disadvantage of short-selling?

A

It is very risky! UNLIMITED LIABILITY since share price could rise an unlimited amount!

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14
Q

Explain how to derive the fundamental arbitrage relationship?

A

1) Ex-dividend share has price P0
2) Expectation of price and dividend at end of this period: E(P1+D1)
3) Need to discount this by R1 (getting P1+D1 in say 6 months is not same as getting it now!)
4) Equilibrium occurs when price of share today = discounted value of expected future price and dividend

ie. P0 = E(P1+D1)/(1+R1)

Note: for risk-free assets (eg. some bonds) use the risk-free rate for discount (possibly with D1=0)

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15
Q

According to the dividend pricing approach, when should one buy/sell a share?

A

BUY if discounted value of expected future price and dividend is GREATER than price of share today (P0)

SELL if discounted value of expected future price and dividend is LESS than price of share today (P0)

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16
Q

Using the fundamental arbitrage relationship, derive the fundamental value of a share?

A

Notes P1S2

17
Q

What does the Gordon Growth Model assume?

A

That dividends will grow by a certain growth rate % each year of g%/yr

18
Q

What do both the GGM and the FV relationships assume?

A

That bubble term =0

19
Q

4 points to criticise the GGM on?

A
R constant and known (not realistic)
g known (is it? end of civilisation/financial crisis/bankruptcy???)
Assumes no tax is paid (unrealistic)
Precision required (small changes in g or R can drastically change outcomes)
20
Q

Explain Miller and Modigliani’s dividend irrelevance theorem? What does this contradict?

A

They show that under certain assumptions, reductions in dividends can lead to systematically higher values of g, leaving share prices UNAFFECTED

This is contrary to the dividend pricing approach, which suggests that increasing the current dividend leads to an increase in share price and vice versa

21
Q

What are the three measurements of required rate of return from investors?

A

Judgmental risk premium basis (nominal interest rate+risk premium)
GGM estimate of R (rearrangement of GGM eqn. as n tends to infinity)
CAPM estimate of R (risk-free interest rate + beta.market risk premium)

22
Q

3 advantages of financial ratios?

A

1) Useful for comparative assessments between similar firms
2) They provide a summary of key financial data (intra-industry comparisons)
3) Can help determine if stock is over/under-valued

23
Q

4 problems with financial ratios?

A

1) Different firms have different methods of calculating them and different reporting years
2) Allowance must be made for firm size
3) No weighting system exists to suggest which FRs are best for predicting success/failure of a company
4) The past is not necessarily a good guide to the future!!!

24
Q

What is the required rate of return?

A

Minimum level of return that an investor can achieve by investing in a ‘risk-free’ asset (tells us opp cost of investment)

25
Q

What does he GGM do?

A

It equates the value of a share to the present value of its future (expected) dividends.

26
Q

What does term 1 on the GGM do? What about the second term?

A

Sums the discounted value of future dividends from year 1->n

Second term calculates the discounted value of dividends from year n to infinity