Final Notes 1 12 Lecture Notes
Final Notes 1 12 Lecture Notes
FNCE10002
PRINCIPLES OF FINANCE
SUBJECT OVERVIEW
Finance is the study of how individuals and businesses acquire, spend and manage financial resources.
INVESTMENT ANALYSIS
Where and How to invest and how to finance these investments.
Valuation of bonds, equities and derivatives
Modern Portfolio theory
Asset pricing and Market efficiency
CORPORATE FINANCE
Decisions of companies and their management
Capital budgeting – what investments to make
Capital structure, how to finance these investments
Payout policy – what to pay out to shareholders
According to Capital Market Efficiency the share price of a company should reflect all
relevant information available to the market at a point in time.
The time value of money is the difference between the value of money today and the
value of money in the future.
We can earn interest to turn a PV cash flow into a higher FV cash flow, or we can pay
interest to exchange a FV cash flow for a PV cash flow.
Simple interest calculates the value of a cash flow based purely on the principal.
Compound Interest calculates the value of a cash flow based on both the principal and
accrued (earned) interest.
In order to compare cash flows we must consider them at the same point in time
We can turn a PV into a FV by compounding it and turn a FV into a PV by discounting it.
The PF & FV depend on the time period, the interest rate and the compounding periods.
The value additivity principle states that the PV[FV] of a series of cash flows is equal to
the sum of the PVs[FVs] of each cash flow
Managers must ensure they balance the needs of both shareholders and other stakeholders such as
customers and employees. By maintaining and pleasing customers then they will be able to continue as an
effective company to boost shareholder returns.
The share price may drop if shareholders are not confident in the future of a company and may rise if the
company seems to be promising. Capital Market Efficiency means that the market prices that we observe
should reflect all relevant information available at a point in time.
Compound interest – Interest is earned on any principal cash flows and on any accrued interest.
E.g. we would earn the 2% interest on the total balance, therefore we would earn (100*0.02) $2 in
the first year, (102*0.02) $2.04 interest in the second year, (104.04*0.02) $
The future value of a cash flow is calculated based on the principal and interest accrued.
Future Value – The value of a cash flow at a specific point in the future.
It is the value at which the Present Value is expected to grow to after n periods using a r% interest rate. We
call this compounding to move cash forward in time
The interest rate, number of periods and compounding periods will all impact upon the present and future
values of cash.
Cash flows are assumed to occur at the end of the period unless otherwise stated.
This means that to find the Net Present Value of an investment we need to take the present value of the
benefits and subtract the present value of the outflows. We may need to discount some of the future cash
flows in order to bring them back to the present.
The typical outflow in a question is the initial investment.
We should accept the investment if the NPV is above 0 because it will lead to an overall increase in
benefits.
ORDINARY ANNUITIES
ANNUITIES DUE
ORDINARY PERPETUITIES
DEFERRED PERPETUITIES
IMPORTANT: Make sure you use cash flows from the right period (e.g. C0 is cash flow now, C1 is CF in 1 year)
ORDINARY ANNUITIES
An ordinary annuity is a series of equal, periodic cash flows that occur at the end of each period and last
for n months. The first cash flow occurs at the end of period 1 and the last cash flow at the end of period n.
ANNUITIES DUE
An annuity due is a series of equal, periodic
cash flows that occur at the beginning of each
period and last for n months. The first cash
flow occurs at the end of period 0 and last cash flow at the end of period n-1
The beginning of period n is the same as the end of period n-1
We calculate an annuity due by calculating it as an ordinary annuity and then compounding it by an extra
period.
ORDINARY PERPETUITIES
An ordinary perpetuity is a series of equal periodic cash flows that go on forever, with cash flows occurring
at the end of each period.
If there is a cash flow at time period 0 then we just add this onto the PV as a cash flow at time period 0 is
already at its present value (since present value = time period 0)
DEFERRED PERPETUITIES
A deferred perpetuity is an equal periodic cash flow that starts at a future date and goes on forever, with
cash flows at the end of each period. The first cash flow occurs at the end of time period n+1 when time
period n is the deferred time of the first payment in the future.
Effective annual interest rates are used when interest is compounded more than once
per year. The below formula-sheet formula only works for a 1 year time horizon.
IF purchase price = Face Value THEN Coupon rate = Coupon yield = Yield-to-maturity
Short Term (ST) – No Coupon Long term (LT) - Coupon LT - Zero Coupon
LOAN PAYMENTS
Loan – borrowing money and making repayments to pay off the loan over a fixed period of time.
Fixed Rate loans means we fix the interest rate for 1-3 years and then rates can change after that.
PERIODIC LOAN PAYMENTS (C) are represented by an ordinary annuity because they are a series of equal
cash outflows that occur at the end of every period and last for the number of period the loan exists over.
The loan repayment (C) is composed of two parts:
The principal we are repaying
The interest being charged on the principal borrowed
The Present Value of a loan is found by discounting the periodic payments (C) to the current period.
Alternatively, we an find the value of the periodic payments (C) by substituting in the PV of the loan, the
interest rate and the number of periods and solving for C.
This works because by discounting the payments we are stripping off the interest being charged on them,
leaving us with the sum of the principal balances.
The annual payment is the value of C and is therefore the same across all periods
The interest paid is the principal remaining x interest rate
The Principal Repaid is the annual payment – interest paid.
The Principal Remaining is the previous balance of principal remaining – Principal Repaid
ALTERNATIVE FORMULA
I prefer to use this formula as it works for periods other than annually, which is the downfall of the formula
on the formula sheet.
The USA uses 360 rather than 365 (days) when calculating compounding on an annual basis. If we want to
calculate on US terms then we will divide the r rate by 360 instead of 365, however we still put it to the
power of 365 like we do in Australia (just an industry convention)
CONTINUOUS COMPOUNDING
If the compound rate is continuous (ie. infinite compounding per second, therefore infinite compounds per
month/year) then we use the following rule:
DEBT SECURITIES
SHORT TERM DEBT SECURITIES / DISCOUNT DEBT SECURITIES - Treasury BILLS (issued by the
government), Bank BILLS (issues by banks)
Matures in less than a year (usually 90/180 days)
Face value/Par value is the amount we are paid at maturity which contractually MUST be paid
No ‘interest’ is paid – the return earned on the investment is the difference between what we pay
(lower) and what we receive as face value (higher) (assuming interest rates are positive, price < face
value)
LONG TERM DEBT SECURITIES – Treasury BONDS (commonwealth bonds) and Corporate Bonds
mature after one year (usually several)
Some have coupon (interest) payments, some do not.
Face value/Par value is the amount we are paid at maturity. It is usually $100 (if no face value has
been given in a question then assume the FV = $100) and contractually MUST be paid. Coupon
payments, if applicable, also must contractually be paid
𝐶𝑜𝑢𝑝𝑜𝑛 𝑌𝑖𝑒𝑙𝑑 =
YIELD TO MATURITY
The yield-to-maturity a type of rate of return. It is the rate earned on an investment that is held until it
matures, assuming no default occurs on the security (ie. all coupons are paid as planned). It is the
maximum return that can be earned by the investment because we assume that no default will occur
The yield to maturity never changes throughout the life of the investment.
Yield-to-maturity is quoted on an annual basis by default.
Discount securities are short term and mature in less than one year however the yield is on an annual
basis, therefore we use the following equation to determine the rate to discount the race value where
n is the number of days until maturity at any point:
𝑛
× 𝑟 𝑎𝑛𝑛𝑢𝑎𝑙 𝑦𝑖𝑒𝑙𝑑 𝑡𝑜 𝑚𝑎𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑖𝑡𝑦
365
The market price of a bond at time period 0 does not take into consideration the value of the coupon in
the current period. We assume that the coupon was paid yesterday and we are starting our analysis from
today, day 0. This is called the ex-coupon price as it is the price after the current coupon was paid.
Eg. The price at the end of year 3 considering the coupon in year 3 has already been paid:
We already know that the yield-to-maturity is the required rate of return if we hold an investment until
maturity, assuming no defaults occur. We can use the yield to discount back a bond’s future cash flows to
find the market price today. Therefore the yield is called an ‘internal rate of return’.
Bonds are issued at par when the yield to maturity is the same as the coupon rate and therefore the face
value is the same as the price paid.
- If the yield to maturity is higher than the constant coupon rate then the market price will be lower
than the face value of $100
- If the yield to maturity is lower than the constant coupon rate then the market price will be higher
than the face value of $100.
ZERO-COUPON BONDS
If there are no coupon payments and we only receive the face value at maturity then the Present Value is:
We can find the PV of the potential coupons over a period by subtracting the zero-coupon bond from the
coupon-paying bond. Zero-coupon bonds sell for cheaper than coupon bonds because the PV is lower.
The Price/Earnings ratio compares the current market price to the rE. The P/E ratio will
increase when the dividend payout ratio (a) increases, the growth rate (g) increases or
the required return on equity (rE) decreases.
Capital Market Efficiency: market prices should reflect all relevant information available.
ORDINARY SHARES
ORDINARY SHARES AND TRADING
Ordinary shares represent part ownership of a company. Investors purchase shares from a company. The
company receives the price paid and the investor receives the right to receive a portion of the company’s
profits. Earnings are distributed amongst shareholders as ‘dividend’ payments. In America ‘Shares’ are
called ‘Stocks’ (hence the terms ‘Stock market’ used in US media)
Publicly listed companies sell shares to investors in the primary market through an Initial Public Offering
(IPO) where investors purchase directly from the company. Then shareholders are able to trade shares
they have purchased to others through secondary markets such as the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)
where investors purchase existing shares from other investors.
A positive return on the first day of trading a new share is referred to as under-pricing of an IPO as the
price of the share closed at a higher amount than it was originally traded at.
We don’t include D0 (the dividend in the current year) when we calculate P0 because we want to calculate
the ex-dividend price (price right after the current period dividend, D0, is paid). This is the same concept as
the ex-coupon price used when calculating the price of bonds.
We can also rearrange this formula to solve for the expected rate of return.
To use this method we have to estimate what the value of the dividend will be at the end of the year which
is not usually accurate, therefore analysts make general estimates as to the expected pattern of dividends.
g
represents:
the growth rate of dividends
the expected % change in the price of shares over n periods
Reinvesting earnings and lowering dividends will only raise the share price if the new investment is
expected to result in a positive NPV (ie. the P0 is higher than the share price)
PREFERENCE SHARES
Preference Shares are shares which give their holders preference over ordinary shareholders with regard
to payment of dividends. This means if the company goes into liquidation or their earnings are way below
the expected level the preference shareholders will receive their dividend payments before the ordinary
shareholders will.
Dividends on preference shares are stated upfront and are guaranteed to be fixed over its life.
( )
Current PE ratio
( )
PRICE/EARNINGS RATIO
We can substitute the D with the equation we use to calculate the dividends paid out.
Dividends paid out = dividend payout ratio (a) x total earnings
We can then transform this equation into the expected PE ratio by dividing by E1
The PE ratio will increase when we:
- Increase the dividend payout ratio
- Increase the growth rate
- Decrease the required return on equity
All of these factors impact upon each other and don’t act independently.
Fisher Relationship: Real return = includes inflation, Nominal return = excludes inflation
Geometric Average Return – return per period over the entire time horizon, assuming there is
compounding. There is reinvestment of returns.
MEASURES OF RISK
Risk is measured by the variability in realised returns around the arithmetic average return.
In simple terms, a risky return means the returns are more variable and have a higher variance/standard
deviation (relevant to SD/Var covered in ECON10005 QM1)
A risk-free investment generally has returns that hover close to the interest rate, meaning returns are not
that high. The simplest example of a risk-free investment is a bank account which pays out at around the
interest rate and therefore doesn’t have as high returns as riskier investments such as shares.
However there IS a clear risk-return relationship in the returns on PORTFOLIOS OF SHARES because
individual movements in a large number of investments balance each other out with the extremities and
irregularities cancelling out, leading to overall returns that correlate with the level of risk. The outcome of
the entire portfolio as a whole does tend to reflect the principle of higher risk, higher return.
𝐸𝑥𝑝𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑒𝑑 𝑅𝑒𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑛 = (𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑏𝑎𝑏𝑖𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑦 𝑆𝑡𝑎𝑡𝑒 1 × 𝑅𝑒𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑛 𝑓𝑟𝑜𝑚 𝑆𝑡𝑎𝑡𝑒 1) + (𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑏 2 × 𝑅𝑒𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑛 2)+. ..
Variance/SD – measure of the dispersion around the expected return. The higher the dispersion the
greater the risk and uncertainty (and therefore a higher expected return in a portfolio)
INVESTOR PREFERENCES
Investors are assumed to be risk averse,
meaning they prefer a lower level of risk for the
same return.
Given a level of risk they will choose the
investment with the highest return.
Alternatively, given a level of return they will
choose the investment with the lowest risk.
Expected Return
Variance
COVARIANCE – the level of co-movement between security returns. It tells us only the direction of the
relationship – the size can only be determined if we standardise the result and find the correlation:
CORRELATION – standardised measure of comovement. It shares the same sign as covariance and tells us
about the direction and strength of the relationship.
PORTFOLIO LEVERAGING
Investor borrows funds at the risk-free rate of return and invests both the borrowed funds and their
original wealth in a risky security/portfolio. This allows them to invest more than their original wealth and
therefore increase the expected return on their portfolio, however it also increases the SD (risk)
SHORT SELLING
Investor borrows security A (usually shares) from someone else and sells them while expecting the price to
drop in the future. They can use the money they made to invest in their own projects. If the share price
does drop then the investor purchases back the shares at the lower price, returns them to their owner and
benefits from the money to invest they made in the middle by selling high and buying back low.
As we short sell more of stock A the risk increases as we have to make back more funds, however there is
also an increase in expected returns of stock B which we are investing the extra funds in because more is
being invested as we short sell more of A.
𝑤ℎ𝑒𝑟𝑒 𝜎 = 𝜌 ( , ) ×𝜎 ×𝜎
𝑪𝒐𝒗𝒂𝒓𝒊𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒆(𝑟 ,𝑟 ) 𝜎
𝜷𝒔𝒆𝒄𝒖𝒓𝒊𝒕𝒚 𝒋 = = 𝜌𝑪𝒐𝒓𝒓𝒆𝒍𝒂𝒕𝒊𝒐𝒏 ×
𝑉𝑎𝑟(𝑟 ) 𝜎
𝜷 < 𝟏 lower risk than market 𝜷 > 𝟏 higher risk m 𝜷 < 𝟎 higher risk m, opposite movement
CAPM is used to find the required rate of return for securities from their systematic risk
𝑺𝑴𝑳 = 𝑬(𝒓𝑨 ) = 𝑟 + 𝛽 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
Market risk premium: 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟 Security risk premium: 𝛽 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
CAPM to value ordinary shares and give a $:
ℎ𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑒𝑟 𝒔𝒚𝒔𝒕𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒕𝒊𝒄 𝒓𝒊𝒔𝒌 = ℎ𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑒𝑟 𝒓𝒆𝒒𝒖𝒊𝒓𝒆𝒅 𝒓𝒂𝒕𝒆 𝒐𝒇 𝒓𝒆𝒕𝒖𝒓𝒏 (𝑏𝑒𝑐𝑎𝑢𝑠𝑒 ℎ𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑒𝑟 𝑆𝐷 = ℎ𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑒𝑟 𝑟𝑖𝑠𝑘)
As N increases, the first term approaches 0 and the second term approaches 𝜎 , as approaches 1
ASSUMPTIONS OF CAPM
- Investors are risk averse and base decisions only on E(X) and SD
- Investors all have the same assumptions about volatilities, correlations and expected returns
- Returns are jointly normally distributed
- Capital markets have no taxes, transaction costs or government interference
- Unlimited borrowing and lending at the risk free rate is possible
- Investors only hold efficient portfolios of securities (see below)
𝑬 𝒓𝒋 = 𝑟 + 𝛽 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
Risk Premium (one security) = how much return it should offer due to risk = 𝛽 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
Market risk premium = bonus return market portfolio offers in excess of the risk-free rate = 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
No beta is used in the market risk premium because we are considering all stocks (therefore 𝛽 = 1)
𝑬 𝒓𝒋 = 𝑟 + 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟
𝑟 tells us the y intercept of the SML and 𝐸(𝑟 ) − 𝑟 gives us the slope.
The securities that lie on the Security Market Line are 0 NPV securities.
REGRESSION
Betas are estimated using the market model regression
Regression models look at the error terms and minimises the errors around the line to create the best fit.
𝑅, = 𝛼 + 𝛽𝑅 , + 𝑒 , , 𝑤ℎ𝑒𝑟𝑒 𝑡 = 1, 2, 3 … 𝑇 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑒 = 𝑒𝑟𝑟𝑜𝑟 𝑡𝑒𝑟𝑚𝑠
Only applicable in real life – in exam questions these figures will be given
SHARPE RATIO
It tells us the expected return per unit of total risk, so a higher ratio indicates better performance.
However we are using the total risk (standard deviation) as a measure of risk, when only systematic risk is
priced in the market.
TREYNOR RATIO
It tells us the expected return per unit of systematic risk, so a higher ratio indicates better performance.
Because we are using 𝛽 now we are only considering systematic risk.
It may give us different outcomes as the recommendations from the Sharpe ratio.
JENSEN’S ALPHA
EFFICIENT PORTFOLIOS
RISK RETURN FRONTIER
Efficient Frontier (FF) is the envelope of risk-return frontiers made up of individual securities. It plots the
lowest risk for a given E(r) by combining individual and portfolio securities.
8: CAPITAL BUDGETING I
Methods of project evaluation are used to choose which is the best project to invest in
NPV is the difference between the PV of cash inflows and PV of cash outflows
DECISION: NPV>0, accept. +ve NPV will increase the market value of a company
IRR is max rate of return earned over life based on the cash flows and initial investment.
DECISION: IRR>r, accept. Will give same decision as NPV when cash flows are normal
Choose the highest Prof. Indexes of independent projects until the budget is 100% full.
Payback period measures the time for the investment to be recovered in cash flows.
DECISION: project/s lowest time within allowed range
Biased against later developing cash flow projects, ignores time value of money.
Profitability Index:
An NPV profile is a linear graph of the relationship between NPV and discount rates.
INCREMENTAL PROJECTS
Finding the difference between the cash flows of the two projects gives us the incremental project, or
project B-A (A-B)
The NPV of the incremental project B-A will tell us whether B is worth investing in over project A (IRR>r) or
whether we would be better off investing in A instead (IRR<r)
(note: if you do A-B then the signs of the cash flows switch, it becomes a delayed investment and the
decision rule flips, giving a consistent outcome to above)
PAYBACK PERIOD
Payback period is the time it takes for the initial cash outlay on a project to be recovered from the net
cash flows. Decision Rule: accept the project/s with the lowest time within the acceptable time frame.
9: CAPITAL BUDGETING II
A number of issues exist when estimating cash flows for choosing projects
TIMING OF CASH FLOWS: predict short-term cash flows, then assume perpetual g rate
- PV known CF, value of single CF at end of known period > PV perpetual CF, add all
FINANCING CHARGES: not included in CF analysis, included in the discount rate
TYPES OF COSTS: incremental (change from the project) included, sunk not included
CHANGE NET WORKING CAPITAL: ∆𝑵𝑾𝑪 = 𝑵𝑾𝑪 − 𝑵𝑾𝑪
- Calculate the value of the cash flow for the next period 𝐶𝐹 = 𝐶𝐹 (1 + 𝑔)
FINANCING CHARGES
We evaluate a project independent of the cash flows to finance it
The discount rate (require rate of return) already considers the financing charges so we are already
considering it in our calculations, therefore including the cash flows again in calculations would be double
counting their impact.
TYPES OF COSTS
Only costs that change as a result of the project are considered
- Incremental Cash Flows: cash flows that change (increase or decrease) as a result of undertaking
the project. They are relevant when evaluating a project
- Sunk Costs: Occurred in the past, won’t be impacted by the acceptable/rejection of the project and
therefore are irrelevant when evaluating a project
- Fixed Overhead Costs: they are relevant only when they change with the decision to take the
project
TAX AND TAX EFFECTS: INCREMENTAL NET AFTER TAX CASH FLOWS (FREE CF)
𝐹𝑟𝑒𝑒 𝐶𝑎𝑠ℎ 𝐹𝑙𝑜𝑤𝑠 = (𝑅𝑒𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑢𝑒 − 𝑂𝑝𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝐶𝑜𝑠𝑡𝑠 − 𝐷𝑒𝑝 𝑛) × 0.7 + 𝐷𝑒𝑝′𝑛
𝐹𝑟𝑒𝑒 𝐶𝑎𝑠ℎ 𝐹𝑙𝑜𝑤𝑠 = (𝑅𝑒𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑢𝑒 − 𝑂𝑝𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝐶𝑜𝑠𝑡𝑠) × 0.7 + 𝐷𝑒𝑝𝑟𝑒𝑐𝑖𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 × 0.3
Also consider:
- Initial and future investment outlays
- Changes in net working capital
- After tax salvage value
Considering INFLATION means we need to use the NOMINAL r rate and multiply each cash flow by the
INFLATION RATE 𝒊 = 𝟑%
𝐹𝑖𝑠ℎ𝑒𝑟 𝑟𝑒𝑙𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛𝑠ℎ𝑖𝑝: (1 + 𝒓) = (1.05)(1.03), 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒊𝒏𝒂𝒍 𝑹𝒂𝒕𝒆 = 8.15%
𝑥 × 𝟏. 𝟎𝟑 (𝑥 + 𝑦) × 𝟏. 𝟎𝟑𝟐
𝑁𝑃𝑉 = −𝑧 + +
𝟏. 𝟎𝟖𝟏𝟓 𝟏. 𝟎𝟖𝟏𝟓
Considering TAXES means we need to multiple each cash inflow by 0.7 to find the amount retained
𝑥 × 1.03 × 𝟎. 𝟕 (𝑥 + 𝑦) × 1.03 × 𝟎. 𝟕
𝑁𝑃𝑉 = −𝑧 + +
1.0815 1.0815
PERPETUITY METHOD
We assume both projects are invested in for an infinite amount of time.
1. Calculate the NPV at time period 0 assuming we invest just once 𝑁𝑃𝑉
( )
2. Calculate the infinite NPV using the following formula: 𝑵𝑷𝑽 = 𝑁𝑃𝑉 × ( )
YTM, not the coupon rate, because no default risk and we assume not trading at par (CR ≠ YTM)
ORDINARY SHARES: Market price = number of shares x market price. Required Rate of Return = rE
PREFERENCE SHARES: Market price = number of shares x market value. Required Rate of Return = rP
The WACC has to lie between the cost of debt (cheapest) and the cost of equity (most expensive)
FINANCIAL LEVERAGE
The two risks faced by companies are:
BUSINESS (OPERATIONAL RISK) – variability of cash flows associated with the nature of the
firm’s operations
- Risk faced by all companies that employ equity (ie. every single company)
FINANCIAL RISK – risk associated with using debt as a source of funding operations
- Risk faced only by companies that take on debt in addition to equity
- Measured as the variability of earnings per share or return on equity over time
𝑉 = 𝐸𝑞𝑢𝑖𝑡𝑦 + 𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡
The value of the firm is the PV of each of the cash flows (EBI and Interest) which is simple to find since both
are assumed to be perpetual cash flows
𝑬 𝑶 𝑶 𝑫
Proposition 1 states that the level of debt shouldn’t impact on market value yet shareholders would
receive higher returns under more debt?
Need to consider the link between systematic risk 𝜷 and the debt/equity ratio.
- As we increase leverage the beta of equity rises
- Shareholders are compensated for the higher risk through higher returns on equity
𝑫
𝜷𝑬 = 𝜷𝑶 + (𝜷𝑶 − 𝜷𝑫 ) ×
𝑬
Fin. distress, bankruptcy & agency costs = capital structure does impact on firm value:
Direct distress: accounting fees Indirect distress: lost customers/sales
Mgmt aligned with Shareholders, want to transfer bondholder wealth to them but can’t:
- Dilution of claims: debt covt. so mgmt can’t make new debt senior
- Dividend payout: debt covt. so mgmt can’t pay out dividends with borrowed funds
- Excessive risk: financial distress = take on risky/-ve NPV – bondholders receive no
reward for risky behaviour so they prevent or charge higher interest rates on debt
- Debt overhand/underinvestment: not take on low risk projects
NATCF Payout: Retain (new project/cash reserve) Pay Out (repurchase shares/dividends)
Dividend policy: trade-off between retaining profit and paying out dividends
Dividend policy doesn’t affect shareholder wealth if markets are perfect with no taxes
Dividend policy does affect shareholder wealth with taxes and other imperfections
Classical: dividends taxed twice (1 − 𝑡 )(1 − 𝑡 ) – optimal is no dividends
Imputation: div income taxed once (marginal rate) – shareholder clientele formed:
- High marginal tax rates = low/no dividends (taxed on diff), like share repurchases
- Low marginal tax rates = prefer high dividends, get tax break on div income
Optimal dividend policy is to pay dividends to exhaust all available franking credits
Factors affecting dividend policy:
- Taxes (with taxes the policy does affect shareholder wealth)
- Dividend signalling hypothesis, dividends raised w. long-term increase in earnings
- Dividends followed through will support agency relationship between
𝒕𝒄 = 𝒕𝒑𝒔 = 𝒕𝒑𝒅 = 𝟎
- 𝑉 =𝑉
- No benefits from issuing debt under 0 taxes (Principal 1)
- 𝑮𝑳 = 0
- 𝑉 =𝑉
- No benefits from issuing debt if we have all Australian investors and have fully franked dividends.
- Benefits for company (interest on debt is tax deductable) are wiped out by the benefits to
Shareholders (being paid fully franked dividends to all investors within Australia)
DILUTION OF CLAIMS
A debt covenant will be applied by current bondholders so that new debt a company issues can’t be made
senior to their existing debt
- This means that old debt taken out first has to be repaid before new debt
DIVIDEND PAYOUT
A firm can take out debt and use the funds to pay dividends to shareholders, which is a wealth transfer
from bondholders to shareholders.
A debt covenant can therefore be imposed to prevent firms from using debt to pay dividends.
FEATURES OF DIVIDENDS
Dividend declaration: the date a dividend is announced.
Ex-dividend date: 1-2 days before record date, shareholders who purchase shares after this date won’t
receive the announced dividend.
- The share price will drop by around the $ value of the dividend on this date
Record date: the date on which shareholders on the books will be certified to receive the dividend.
Payment Date: date dividend is paid
Because 𝑛𝐷 is paid out as dividends the firm sells m new shares at price P1 each
( )
𝑛𝐷 + (𝑛 + 𝑚)𝑃 − (𝑛𝐷 + 𝐼 − 𝑋)
𝑉 =
1+𝑟
(𝑛 + 𝑚)𝑃 − 𝐼 + 𝑋)
𝑉 =
1+𝑟
Dividends 𝑛𝐷 do not appear in the final equation, therefore we can deduce dividend policy is irrelevant
to firm value.
Companies shouldn’t be worried about their payout policy because they will attract shareholders who
prefer the policy that they use (like how Telstra attracts retirees with low marginal tax rates because of
their high dividend payouts)
In the money: it is profitable for the buyer to exercise the option at the current price
For buyers: profitable where the graph has a slope
For sellers: profitable where the graph has a flat slope
Speculative selling: we have expectations about the direction of the share price so we
purchase options rather than the underlying share
- Think price will rise: Purchase call options Buy shares for X (less) if $ rise
- Think prise will fall: Purchase put options Sell shares for X (more) if $ fall
Hedging: We already own/sold underlying shares, want to reduce exposure via options
Hedge will be the difference between the shares and the put/call option (sum of profits)
- Own shares, think $ fall: Purchase put options Sell shares for X (more) if $ fall
- Sold short, think $ rise: Purchase call options Buy shares for X (less) if $ rise
Synthetic positions: mirror the return of shares via buying/selling puts and calls
- Buy Call, Sell Put synthetic purchase of shares
- Buy Put, Sell Call synthetic selling short
Option premium = Intrinsic Value (𝐶𝑎𝑙𝑙[𝑆 − 𝑋] 𝑃𝑢𝑡[𝑋 − 𝑆 ])-Time Value
Time value: approach expiration date, time value -> 0
OPTIONS MARKET
An options contract gives the holder
- the right to buy/sell the underlying security (100 units per contract)
- at or before the expiration rate
- at a pre-specified exercise/strike price (the agreed price if the option is exercised)
EXERCISE PRICE X: we always exercise the option if the 𝑆 > 𝑋 (𝑐𝑎𝑙𝑙) or 𝑆 < 𝑋 (𝑝𝑢𝑡), therefore it tells us
at what share price we will exercise the option.
The holder has an option whether to exercise or not. However the seller has an obligation to sell/buy if
the holder decides to exercise the option.
A call option is an option to buy the underlying shares
A put option is an option to sell the underlying shares
American Options: can be exercised at any time up until the expiration date – more valuable and common
European Options: can be exercised only on the expiration date
SELLER PERSPECTIVE
They have to respond to what the buyer chooses to do with the option.
They will make profits if the buyer decides not to exercise.
The seller expects that the share price is going to fall (because then they will keep the premium)