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Samenvatting

Summary Complete - Corporate Finance (Grade: 8.6)

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*New* get it cheaper: . Need a complete overview of Corporate Finance (Finance and Investments) for the exam or resit? This summary has you covered. Deviating from my complete & concise series, this is a longer summary including more details and examples. Overall it is slightly less polished but more complete, meaning it can be used for revision or studying the entire course again (in case of a resit). Recommended study method is using the summary while practicing past papers. This summary is based on my tried and proven method developed over the last 4 years, and tailored to EUR courses. If you have any questions feel free to reach out.

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Geüpload op
31 december 2020
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Geschreven in
2020/2021
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Samenvatting

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Summary: Corporate Finance
By: Thomas Konings

Contents
Week 1 – Topic 1 – Corporate Claims ..................................................................................................... 3
Basic Building Blocks ........................................................................................................................... 3
Liabilities ............................................................................................................................................. 3
Equity .................................................................................................................................................. 4
Week 1 – Topic 2 – Perfect Market......................................................................................................... 5
Maximization of Equity or Firm Value?............................................................................................... 5
Modigliani and Miller (MM) ................................................................................................................ 5
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) ......................................................................................... 6
WACC Formula (without taxes)........................................................................................................... 7
Leverage, EPS and P/E ratios............................................................................................................... 7
State Prices and Credit Derivatives ..................................................................................................... 7
Cost of Capital Nuances and Non-Financial Liabilities ........................................................................ 7
Week 1 – Topic 3 – Taxes ........................................................................................................................ 8
Relative Taxation of Debt and Equity.................................................................................................. 8
Firm value under different capital structures ..................................................................................... 8
Formulaic Valuation Methods: APV and WACC .................................................................................. 8
Sample application of Tax-adjusted valuation .................................................................................... 9
Contemplating Corporate Taxes and Leverage................................................................................... 9
Personal Income Taxes and Clientele Effects ................................................................................... 10
Workshop 2 ........................................................................................................................................... 10
Week 2 – Topic 4 – Imperfect Capital Markets..................................................................................... 11
Financial distress ............................................................................................................................... 11
What are direct costs/indirect costs? ........................................................................................... 11
Size of financial distress, expected costs of financial distress ...................................................... 11
Underinvestment .............................................................................................................................. 12
Risk-shifting ....................................................................................................................................... 13
How to address conflict between investors in practice? .................................................................. 13
Private information (overvaluation) ................................................................................................. 13
Implications for valuation ................................................................................................................. 13
Lecture Q&A:..................................................................................................................................... 13
Summary - Week 3 Topic 6 ................................................................................................................... 14

, Additional slides ................................................................................................................................ 15
Workshop 3: Risk Management ............................................................................................................ 16
Summary – Week 4 Topic 7 .................................................................................................................. 19
Dividend mechanics .......................................................................................................................... 19
Share repurchase mechanics ............................................................................................................ 19
Perfect market irrelevance ............................................................................................................... 19
Dividends and Share Repurchases .................................................................................................... 20
Personal Income Tax Differences and Investor Clienteles ............................................................ 20
Non-tax related differences .......................................................................................................... 20
Empirical evidence ............................................................................................................................ 20
Market reactions (event studies) .................................................................................................. 21
Survey evidence ................................................................................................................................ 21
Workshop 4: Payouts ............................................................................................................................ 22

, Week 1 – Topic 1 – Corporate Claims
Capital structure: sum total of all claims on the assets of the firms, “right to ownership”

Cashflow rights: how much money claim holders should receive, i.e. allocation of generated cash
Control rights: what remedies claim holders have, especially when they do not receive promised CFs
→ Example: bankruptcy for debtholders and appointment of corporate board for shareholders

Basic Building Blocks
Corporate Charter: basics of the firm, who holds decision power,
how to amend the charter, etc.

Basic building blocks: liabilities & equity (or leverage & stock)

Basic types of claims: (1) Financial claims [debt & equity, i.e.
securities] (2) Nonfinancial [corporate income taxes due, pension
obligations, accounts payable]
→ To truly have ownership you have to own all claims

Payoff diagram (right) → value of equity & debt depend on firm
value ➔ they are state-contingent claims

Note: only reflect value-varying aspects, not time-varying aspects

Liabilities
Cashflow rights: returned cash = interest payment (usually tax deductible for issuer), in event of
liquidation: absolute priority rule (APR) → Bond = senior security, paid before more-junior

Control rights: unless covenant violated or near financial distress, bondholders do not participate in
firm decisions (typically). If firm misses a payment or violates covenant: right to force bankruptcy

Note: covenants can contain more provisions, such as liquidity level requirements, breaking it can
cause bankruptcy.

Over time: hybrids → covenants that allow a bond to be converted into something else
→ Not always valuable (e.g. CEO example) but valuable ones have survived and are included here

Convertible bonds: bondholders right to convert debt to equity for predetermined price at
predetermined dates. On conversion: shareholders dilute but do not have to pay the debt anymore
→ Not always beneficial to convert: if debt would mean higher % of firm value, then keep debt
BEP @ firm value = value of bond / % of firm that bondholder controls by converting, i.e. 20/0.6=33

Note: convertible bonds have purpose, they align shareholder &
bondholder interest to a degree, if shareholders undertake project that
hurts plain bondholders they can profit if convertible.

Payoff (right): note equity slope is resulting share (40%)

Other corporate bond features:
→ More rights = lower interest rate
- Covenant: promises firm must keep or forced to redeem
→ D/E ratios, cannot sell asset, how much dividend, auditor,
what happens when it defaults on other bonds, repurchases, etc.
- Bond seniority: senior first dibs, satisfied in full before a subordinate (junior) bond

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Super Concise Summaries for IBEB and MSc F&I || GPA: 8.3

During my years at Erasmus University, I have made many summaries that helped me succeed in even the most difficult courses. I know how to extract key elements from the material (books, lectures, and past exams) and present them in a concise and complete way. This is optimized for your study time and efficiency. Summaries are made to support exam questions so they are easy to solve by finding the appropriate theory/formulas in the summary.

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