Lecture 2 - Capital structure basic concepts Flashcards
2 choices to raise long term capital for new investments
Issue new shares (equity)
Borrow funds through financial institutions
Capital structure
Refers to the mix of equity and debt making up a company’s long term capital
Ordinary shares
Refers to equity that has no special preference in either dividends or bankruptcy
Called up share capital
Par or nominal value of share multiplied by number of issued shares
Additional paid in capital
Directly contributed capital in excess of par value
Treasury shares
The shares the company has bought back from the market
Earnings per share =
Net income/ shares outstanding
Key features of debt compared to equity
Debt is not an ownership interest
Interest on debt is an expense, dividends are return of capital
Debt is a liability and unpaid creditors can force a liquidation to claim assets of the firm
Preference shares
Equity shares with a preference over ordinary shares in terms of dividends or bankruptcy
MM proposition I
Vl = Vu
Value of levered firm is the same as the value of the unlevered firm because individuals can undo the effects of leverage through homemade leverage
MM proposition II
Rs = R0 + B/S (R0-Rb)
The cost of equity rises with leverage because the risk to equity uses with leverage
What do the MM propositions without taxes assume?
No taxes
No transaction costs
Individuals and companies borrow at the same rate
Difference between unlevered and levered firm
Unlevered is financed through equity
Levered is financed through equity and debt
Financial leverage and risk
Leveraged equity has greater risk. Do it should have a greater return as compensation
Meaning the expected return on equity is positively related to leverage as the risk to equity holders increases with leverage
Define components for MM II
Rs = R0 + B/S(R0 - Rb)
Rs = Cost of equity capital
R0 = Cost of unlevered equity capital
Rb = Cost of debt capital
B/S = Debt equity ratio