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Samenvatting Advanced Corporate Financial Management

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Samenvatting en college aantekeningen Samenvatting Corporate Financial Management

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  • January 21, 2021
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  • 2016/2017
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Lecture 1,3 & 4:
Assumptions neo-classical finance theory:
 Company is regarded as a black box.
o One goal: no conflicts of interest
o Business cash flows are given
 Perfect market:
o Capital will flow to business opportunities with optimal risk-return
relationship
o No tax, transaction or information costs
o No distress
o Market efficiency
 Asymmetric Information: homogeneous perception and expectations (results in no
agency costs)
 Investors are risk-averse

MM1: In the neo-classic framework the company value is independent to the financing
decision. Only the asset value determines the value of the company.

MM2: In the neo-classic framework the total costs of capital are independent to the
financing decision.

Assumptions MM Propositions:
Strict separation between business (assets) and financing decisions (liabilities)
Always financing available, given the business cash flows

Insolvency costs show up in:
 Direct costs: settlement costs, loss of tax credit due to net operating losses.
o =p(bankruptcy) * (costs settlement + tax credit)
 Indirect costs:
o Suppliers or clients are less willing to do business (strict separation between
business and financing disappears)
o Conflicts of interest between shareholders (option value) and
bondholders/banks (timing bankruptcy)
o Bad reputation for investors, etc.
 Direct- and indirect costs results in lower (expected) cash flows
 An increase in business risk and financing risk, resulting in higher financing costs.
Mostly an extra credit risk premium (plus an extra equity risk premium)

Insolvency costs = Directs costs, indirect costs, and an increase in business risk and financing
risk in turn to a lower company value

Concept on leverage decision:
 Static Trade Off theory:
o Tradeoff between tax advantages ad bankruptcy costs
o Optimum is somewhere within an interval, given by the business risk
 Pecking Order theory:
o Complete different perspective on capital structure decisions.


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, o Information asymmetry between equity issuer and investor
o Does not seek for an optimal capital structure

Option theory for Equity and Debt: two concepts to describe the debt-equity holder conflict
(hold especially for distressed companies): Asset substitution and Debt overhang

Empirical studies:
 No difference in characteristics between the Static Trade Off and Pecking Order firms
 First order drivers of capital structure: Log (assets), EBIT, Tangibility, Market-to-book
(not significant)

Observations empirical studies (Zingales):
 Capital structures show distinct national patterns, and have pronounced industry
patterns
 Within industries, leverage inversely related to profitability
 Taxes clearly influence capital structure (not alone decisive)
 Leverage ratios appear inversely related to perceived costs of financial distress.
 Existing shareholders consider leverage increasing events as good news and leverage
decreasing events as bad news
 Differences in transaction costs of issuing new securities has little impact on observed
capital structures
 Ownership structure clearly influences capital structures (true relationship
ambiguous)
 Corporations that are force away from a preferred capital structure tend to return to
that capital structure over time

Asset risk vs. Financing risk:
 Asset risk and financing risk must be somewhat balanced in such a way that
insolvency costs are at a reasonable/acceptable level for most investors
 First order estimate of what a capital structure should be is determined by: life cycle,
size, and sector (first order indicators of asset risk)

Target capital structure strongly related to the sector (business characteristics)
Example proxies for business risk: salary costs/sales (fixed/variable costs) applicable to
service or profit (cash flow level) applicable to con. and industry
Example proxies for financing risk: collateral applicable to trade sector and industry

Views/concepts on capital structure decisions:
 Balance between business risk and financing risk (insolvency costs)
 Possible classification of views/concepts on capital structure decisions along the
prime objective in the leverage decision:
o Reduction of financing costs (lower financing cost)
o Reduction of financing risk (availability of financing sources)
o Governance perspective (impact governance issues on capital structure)
 Static Trade Off theory/ Target debt ratio
o Corporate tax/ personal tax vs. distress



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