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Samenvatting - Corporate finance and governance 2025

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Publié le
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Full summary with added notes of the subject ‘Corporate finance and governance’ given by Prof. Deloof. Good luck!












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Publié le
8 décembre 2025
Nombre de pages
83
Écrit en
2025/2026
Type
Resume

Aperçu du contenu

CORPORATE FINANCE AND GOVERNANCE -
2025
Inhoud
1. Debt policies...........................................................................................................................................................................2
1.1 Financing a firm with debt and equity.............................................................................................................................2
1.2 The Interest Tax Deduction..............................................................................................................................................5
1.3 Default and Bankruptcy in Perfect Market....................................................................................................................10
1.4 Exploiting debt holders: agency costs of leverage.........................................................................................................13
2. Payout policies......................................................................................................................................................................18
2.1 Dividends versus share repurchases..............................................................................................................................18
2.2 Payout versus retention of cash.....................................................................................................................................24
2.3 Dividend signaling..........................................................................................................................................................26
2.4 Stock dividends and stock splits.....................................................................................................................................29
3. IPO’s......................................................................................................................................................................................30
3.1 Why do firms go public?.................................................................................................................................................31
3.2 Why do companies delist and why are there fewer IPOs?............................................................................................31
3.3 (Under)pricing of initial public offerings........................................................................................................................35
4. Valuation..............................................................................................................................................................................41
4.1 Discounted Free Cash Flow Model.................................................................................................................................41
4.2 Valuation Multiples........................................................................................................................................................52
5. Mergers and acquisitions.....................................................................................................................................................54
5.1 Do M&A create value?...................................................................................................................................................55
5.2 Reasons to acquire.........................................................................................................................................................56
5.3 Other reasons.................................................................................................................................................................59
6. Corporate Governance.........................................................................................................................................................68
6.1 Corporate governance: what and why?.........................................................................................................................68
6.2 Mechanisms to restrict expropriation by management................................................................................................72
6.2.1 Monitors..................................................................................................................................................................72
6.2.2 Executive compensation.........................................................................................................................................73
6.2.3 Legal protection.......................................................................................................................................................75
7. Corporate governance: Separation of ownership and control............................................................................................76
7.1 How?...............................................................................................................................................................................76
7.2 Agency costs...................................................................................................................................................................78
7.3 Private benefits from new acquisitions: Evidence from the Italian stock market.........................................................80




1

, 1. Debt policies
- Modigliani & Miller: debt policy does not matter
- But! Taxes
- But! Financial distress, managerial incentives, information asymmetric

1.1 FINANCING A FIRM WITH DEBT AND EQUITY

 Modigliani and Miller (M&M) argued that with “perfect” capital markets, the total value of firm should not depend on
how it is financed
- Investors and firms can trade same set of securities at competitive market prices equal to present value of their
future cash flows
- There are no taxes, transaction costs, or issuance costs associated with security trading
- Firm’s financing decisions do not change cash flows generated by its investments, nor do they reveal new
information about them

 Debt is cheaper than equity for firm BUT raises cost of capital for equity
 Levered equity has higher risk
levered (50%D, 50%E) higher return on equity
% stdev higher




- To compensate for this risk, more levered equity
holders must receive higher expected return
- Leverage increase risk of equity even when there is no risk that firm will default
o Thus, while debt may be cheaper, its use raises cost of capital for equity
- Leverage will not affect total value of firm!
o Instead, only changes allocation of cash flows between debt and equity, without changing total cash
flows of firm

 M&M proposition I: In a perfect capital market, the total value of a firm is equal to the market value of the total cash
flows generated by its assets and is not affected by its choice of capital structure.


Application: leveraged recapitalization
- When firm uses borrowed funds to pay large special dividend or repurchase significant amount outstanding
shares  In M&M world, this will not affect value of firm

- Harrison Industries is currently all-equity firm operating in perfect capital market, with 50 million shares
outstanding that trading for $4 per share.
- Harrison plans to increase its leverage by borrowing $80 million and using the funds to repurchase 20 million of
its outstanding shares. This transaction can be viewed in two stages.
o First, Harrison sells debt to raise $80 million in cash.
o Second, Harrison uses the cash to repurchase shares




Sell debt to raise $80 mio cash/issuing debt
 repurchase shares


2

, 80mio/4 = 20mio shares repurchased
50 – 20 = 30 OR 120/4 = 30




Change in capital structure (increase leverage) does not affect value for shareholders!

 M&M proposition II: total cost of capital is not influenced by capital structure & always equals unlevered cost of capital
(100% equity)
 Leverage and equity cost of capital: M&M proposition I states: E + D = U = A
- E: Market value of equity in a levered firm
- D: Market value of debt in a levered firm
- U: Market value of equity in an unlevered firm
- A: Market value of the firm’s assets

 The return on unlevered equity (RU) is related to the returns of levered equity (RE) and debt (RD):



solving for RE




Levered equity return equals unlevered return, plus premium due to leverage  amount of premium depends
amount of leverage, measured by firm’s market value debt-equity ratio, D/E
(more debt: premium bigger D/E, higher return on equity Re)

 M&M proposition II: The cost of capital of levered equity is equal to the cost of capital of unlevered equity plus a
premium that is proportional to the market value debt-equity ratio
 Cost of capital of levered equity:




Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
- If firm is levered, , rA is equal to the firm’s weighted average cost of capital (no taxes!!!)




Levered and Unlevered Betas




3

, - Effect of leverage on risk of firm’s securities can also be expressed in terms of beta:




- Unlevered beta = measure of risk of firm as if it did not have leverage, which equivalent to beta of firm’s assets
(CAPM: only systemic risk (=β) matters)




leverage amplifies the market risk of a firm’s assets , βU , raising the market risk of its equity
risk for shareholders depends on: firm activities (βU) & firm debt policy: debt rises, risk shareholders (β E) rises (D/E)



Be ↑ E/(E+D)↓
Bd ↑ D/(E+D) ↑




Cash and Net Debt
- Holding cash has opposite effect of leverage on risk and return and can be viewed as equivalent to negative debt


(debt: pay a fixed interest & cash: earn fixed interest)




- EV = E + (D – CASH) with (D-CASH) is net debt
βU > βE ➜ very unusual
risk of operations higher than risk of equity because of
negative net debt
(βE = 2,57 + (-16/110)*(2,57-0) = 2,20)



Equity issuances and Dilution
- Eg. Tesla issuing 2 billion of shares: announcement had negative impact on shares, later stock price increased
(Musk bought shares of own company: good signal to market)

Dilution = increase in total of shares that will divide a fixed amount of earnings
- It is sometimes (incorrectly!) argued that issuing equity dilutes existing shareholders’ ownership, so debt
financing should be used instead
(this will lower value per share, in M&M reasoning is wrong: total value will increase as well)
4
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