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B40.2302 Course Review

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Title: B40.2302 Course Review


1
B40.2302 Course Review
  • Modified 12/5/2001 by Jeffrey Wurgler

2
Topics Covered
  • Course overview
  • Key slides from Classes 1-11

3
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Finance and the Financial Manager
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 1
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
4
Role of The Financial Manager
(1)
(2)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
(4a)
manager
operations
markets
(4b)
(3)
(1) Cash raised from investors (external finance)
(2) Cash invested in firm
(3) Cash generated by operations
(4a) Cash reinvested (internal finance)
(4b) Cash returned to investors
5
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Present Value and The Opportunity Cost of
    Capital
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 2
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
6
Net Present Value
7
Risk and Present Value
  • Higher-risk projects require higher discount
    rates.
  • Higher discount rates cause lower PVs.

8
A Fundamental Result
  • Investors with free and equal access to borrowing
    and lending markets will always invest in
    positive NPV projects, no matter what their
    preferred time pattern of consumption.
  • Corollary Shareholders A and G both agree that
    firm should maximize its NPV.

9
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • How to Calculate Present Values
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 3
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
10
Short Cuts
  • Perpetuity - A constant cash flow is received
    forever, starting at the end of the first period.

11
Short Cuts
  • Growing perpetuity - A cash flow growing at rate
    g is received forever. The first cash flow,
    arriving at the end of the first period, is C1.

12
Short Cuts
  • Annuity A constant cash flow that arrives only
    for t periods. The first cash flow arrives at end
    of first period.

13
Discount nominal cash with nominal rate, real
cash with real rate
  • NPV rule gives same answer whether discounting
    nominal cash by nominal rate or real cash by real
    rate.
  • Just dont mix them up!

14
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • The Value of Common Stocks
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 4
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
15
Valuing Common Stocks
  • Dividend Discount Model - Model of todays stock
    price which states that share value equals the
    present value of all expected future dividends.
  • H - Time horizon for your investment. Can be
    infinity.

16
Valuing Common Stocks
  • Constant Growth DDM - A version of the dividend
    growth model in which dividends grow at a
    constant rate g.
  • When you use the growing perpetuity formula to
    value a stock, you are using the Gordon Growth
    Model.

17
EPS, P/E, and share price
  • Rearranging,
  • Growth stocks sell at high P/E ratios because
    PVGO is high.
  • But utilities sell at high P/E ratios because r
    is low

18
FCF and PV
  • Valuing a Business
  • The value of a business is often computed as the
    present value of FCF out to a valuation horizon
    (H).
  • The value at H is sometimes called the terminal
    value or horizon value

19
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Why Net Present Value Leads to Better
    Investment Decisions than Other Criteria
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 5
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
20
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Making Investment Decisions with the Net
    Present Value Rule
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 6
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
21
Topics Covered
  • What To Discount
  • IMC Project
  • Project Interaction
  • Timing
  • Equivalent Annual Cost
  • Replacement
  • Cost of Excess Capacity
  • Fluctuating Load Factors

22
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Introduction to Risk, Return, and the
    Opportunity Cost of Capital
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 7
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
23
Measuring Risk
24
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Risk and Return
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 8
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
25
Security Market Line / CAPM
Expected return
SML
rf
Beta
1.0
SML/CAPM Eri rf Bi (Erm - rf )
26
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Capital Budgeting and Risk
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 9
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
27
Company Cost of Capitalsimple approach
  • The overall company cost of capital is based on
    the weighted-average beta of the individual asset
    / project betas.
  • The weights in the weighted average are
    determined by the of firm value attached to
    each asset / project.
  • Example Say firm value is split as
  • 1/3 New ventures investment (B2.0)
  • 1/3 Expand existing business investment (B1.3)
  • 1/3 Plant efficiency investment (B0.6)
  • Average asset beta (1/3)2.0 (1/3)1.3
    (1/3)0.6 1.3
  • This average beta determines the company cost of
    capital.

28
Risk and DCFPutting it all together
  • Example
  • Project A is expected to produce CF 100 mil
    for each of three years. Given a risk free rate
    of 6, a market risk premium of 8, and an asset
    beta of .75, what is the PV of the project?

29
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Spotting and Valuing Options
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 20
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
30
Option Value
  • Determinants of Call Option Price
  • 1 - Underlying stock price ()
  • 2 - Exercise (strike) price (-)
  • 3 - Standard deviation of stock returns ()
  • 4 - Time to option expiration ()
  • 5 - Interest rate ()

31
Black-Scholes
  • Our examples have just been simple up-or-down
    movements
  • In these cases, the binomial method is perfect
  • In reality, there may be a continuum of outcomes
  • Black-Scholes formula uses a replicating
    portfolio
  • argument to derive European call option value
    under these circumstances

VCall N(d1)P- N(d2)PV(S)
32
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Real Options
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 21
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
33
Topics Covered
  • Real Options
  • Follow-on investments
  • Abandon
  • Wait (and learn)
  • Vary output or production methods
  • Valuation examples mixed in

34
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • An Overview of Corporate Financing
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 14.1-14.3
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
35
Patterns of Corporate Financing
  • Two ways to finance investment
  • Raise equity or debt (external finance)
  • Plow back profits rather than distribute them to
    shareholders (internal finance)

36
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • An Overview of Corporate Financing
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 14.4
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
37
Corporate Debt
  • General features of debt
  • Borrower (stockholder) promises a certain stream
    of interest and principal payments
  • But borrower may choose to default
  • Lender doesnt usually have voting rights, but in
    case of default lender gets assets
  • Asset administration handled by bankruptcy court

38
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • The Many Different Kinds of Debt
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 24
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
39
Topics Covered
  • Domestic Bonds and International Bonds
  • The Bond Contract
  • Interest, Security, Seniority
  • Asset-Backed Securities
  • Repayment/Retirement Provisions
  • Covenants
  • Private Placements and Project Finance

40
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Warrants and Convertibles
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 22.1-22.3
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
41
Warrants
  • Warrant - Right to buy a security (usually
    shares) from a company at a stipulated price, on
    or before a stipulated date.
  • - A call option!

42
Convertible Bonds
  • Convertible Bond - Bond that the holder may
    exchange for a specified amount of another
    security (usually shares).
  • Convertibles are thus a combined security,
    combining a straight bond and a call option
  • Like bond-warrant combo, except in bond-warrant
    combo you dont have to surrender one to get the
    other you have both
  • Example to understand terms ALZA
  • 5 Convertible 2006, face value 1000
  • Convertible into 26.2 shares
  • Conversion ratio 26.2
  • Conversion price 1000/26.2 38.17
  • Market price of shares 28

43
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Valuing Debt
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 23
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
44
Topics Covered
  • The Term Structure
  • Term Structure Theories
  • Risk Duration and Volatility
  • Risk Default

45
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • How Corporations Issue Securities
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 15.2-15.6
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
46
Topics Covered
  • The Initial Public Offering
  • The Underwriters
  • Underpricing and The Winners Curse
  • General Cash Offers

47
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • The Dividend Controversy
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 16.1-16.4
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
48
MM Dividend irrelevance
  • Modigliani Miller dividend proposition
  • Dividend policy is irrelevant in perfect capital
    markets

49
MM Dividend irrelevance
  • Some key assumptions
  • Investment policy held constant
  • No transaction costs (e.g. repurchasing premium
    for company, cost of mailing dividend checks)
  • Dividends and capital gains taxed at same rate
  • If you claim dividends do matter, one or more of
    these assumptions must be violated. That is the
    power of the theorem it clarifies how dividends
    could matter.

50
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Does Debt Policy Matter?
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 17
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
51
MM Debt Policy Proposition I
  • Modigliani Miller debt policy proposition
  • The market value of a company is independent of
    its capital structure.

52
MM Debt Policy Irrelevance
r
rE
rA
rD
D E
Risk free debt
Risky debt
53
Corporate Taxes
  • Taxes dont change the total size of the pretax
    pizza.
  • But now the government gets a slice.
  • Governments slice is smaller (and investors
    slices are bigger) when debt is used.
  • MM proposition I with corporate taxes
  • Firm Value Value of All Equity Firm
  • PV(Tax Shield)
  • and in special case where debt is permanent
  • Firm Value Value of All Equity Firm TcD

54
Costs of Financial Distress
  • Costs of Financial Distress - Costs arising from
    bankruptcy or distorted business decisions on the
    brink of bankruptcy.
  • Firm value Value of All Equity Firm
  • PV(Tax Shield)
  • - PV(Costs of Financial Distress)

55
Trade-off Theory
Costs of financial distress
PV of interest tax shields
Market Value
Value of levered firm
Value if All Equity
Debt ratio
Optimal amount of debt
56
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Financing and Valuation
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 19
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
57
After-Tax WACC vs. APV
  • With consistent assumptions, get same answer.
  • WACC assumes constant debt ratio ?, but then
    dont have to value tax shield explicitly ?
  • APV lets tax shields vary over time ?, but have
    to calculate them yourself ?.
  • APV more flexible can handle other financing
    effects besides interest tax shields ?

58
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Leasing
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 25.2-25.6
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
59
Operating Leases
  • Bottom line for lessee Operating lease or buy?
  • Buy if the lessees equivalent annual cost of
    ownership and operation is less than the best
    available operating lease rate
  • Otherwise lease
  • Complication If operating lease includes option
    to cancel/abandon, need to factor that in

60
Financial Leases
  • Bottom line for lessee Financial lease or
    buy-and-borrow?
  • Buy-and-borrow if can devise a borrowing plan
    that gives same cash flow as lease in every
    future period, but higher immediate cash flow
    (equivalently, buy-and-borrow if incremental
    lease cash flows are NPVlt0)
  • Otherwise lease

61
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Managing Risk
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 26
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
62
Topics Covered
  • Insurance
  • Futures contracts
  • Forward contracts
  • Swaps
  • How to set up a hedge

63
Hedging
  • Hedging
  • Taking on one risk to offset another
  • Some basic tools for hedging
  • Futures
  • Forwards
  • Swaps

64
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Managing International Risk
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 27
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
65
Exchange Rate Relationships
  • In simplest world (people are risk-neutral and
    face no transaction costs for international
    trade), they are all equal (!)





66
International Capital Budgeting
Equivalent Intl. Capital Budgeting Techniques
  • 1) (Easy) Discount foreign CFs at foreign cost of
    capital. (Can then convert this present value to
    using spot exchange rate.)
  • 2) (Hard) Convert to assuming all currency risk
    was hedged (use forward exchange rates), and then
    discount with cost of capital.
  • These techniques are equivalent (verify BM6 p.
    806-807)
  • Thus, hedging allows you to separate the
    investment decision from decision to take on
    currency risk

67
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Corporate Financing and the Six Lessons
    of Market Efficiency
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 13
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
68
Return to NPV
  • How does market efficiency affect financing?
  • But in inefficient markets, maybe NPV(financing)
    gt0
  • Financing may be relevant if firm can find
    ways to finance at below-market costs, i.e.
    ways to finance below its rational cost of
    capital
  • So market efficiency is central to MM conclusion
  • Are markets efficient or not?
  • A controversial issue in finance
  • Evidence that markets are approximately efficient
  • However, can find exceptions if one looks
    carefully at the data
  • These may be important enough to affect financing
    decisions

69
Market Efficiency 3 versions
  • Weak Form Efficiency
  • Market prices reflect past price information.
  • Prices move as a random walk
  • Semi-Strong Form Efficiency
  • Market prices reflect all publicly available
    information, not just past prices
  • Strong Form Efficiency
  • Market prices reflect all information, both
    public and private.

70
Pecking Order Theory
  • Pecking Order Theory of Incremental Financing
    Decisions - Theory that uses asymmetric
    information to argue that firms prefer to fund
    their investments using internal finance, then
    (if internal finance is insufficient) by debt
    issues, then (as a last resort) by equity issues.
  • Pecking Order Theory of Capital Structure
  • Theory in which capital structure evolves as the
    cumulative outcome of past incremental financing
    decisions, each of which is taken using the above
    rule.

71
Market Timing Theory
  • Market timing theory of financing decisions
  • Financing theory when markets are not semi-strong
    efficient, e.g. when investors underreact to the
    bad news in equity issue or the good news in a
    repurchase
  • Says raise whatever form of finance is currently
    available at the lowest risk-adjusted cost. (In
    MM efficient markets, this makes no sense, since
    all forms of finance are efficiently priced at
    the same risk-adjusted cost.)
  • For example, issue equity if it is relatively
    overpriced, or long-term debt if it is relatively
    overpriced, or short-term debt if it is
    relatively overpriced
  • Consistent with empirical evidence that firms can
    time the market

72
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Making Sure Managers Maximize NPV
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 12.3
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
73
The Principal-Agent Problem
The problem How do owners get managers to act
in their interests? (i.e. to maximize NPV)
Shareholders Owners Principals
Managers Control Shareholders agents
74
The Principal-Agent Problem
How might managers interests differ from
shareholders interests?
  • Low effort (slacking/shirking)
  • Expensive perks (corporate jets)
  • Empire building (overinvestment)
  • Entrenching investment (to keep job)
  • Avoiding risk (so as not to lose job)

75
Potential solutions
  • Incentives
  • Monitoring
  • Debt finance
  • Takeover pressure
  • Managerial outside labor market
  • Proxy fights

76
Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers
Sixth Edition
  • Mergers
  • Slides by
  • Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler

Chapter 33
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

Irwin/McGraw Hill
77
Topics Covered
  • Sensible Motives for Mergers
  • Some Dubious Reasons for Mergers
  • Estimating Merger Gains and Costs
  • Takeovers Unsolicited/hostile mergers
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