Questions
FA25-BL-BUS-F305-1130 Final Exam
Single choice
Bright Horizons Co. expects an EBIT of $12,500 every year in perpetuity. The firm currently has no debt, and its cost of equity is 12 percent. The company can borrow at an interest rate of 7 percent, and the corporate tax rate is 30 percent. What will the value of the firm be if it changes to a capital structure with 50 percent debt?
Options
A.$83,854
B.$81,667
C.$76,885
D.$93,453
View Explanation
Verified Answer
Please login to view
Step-by-Step Analysis
Question restatement and options:
- The Bright Horizons Co. expects an EBIT of $12,500 every year in perpetuity.
- The firm currently has no debt, and its cost of equity is 12%.
- The company can borrow at an interest rate of 7%, and the corporate tax rate is 30%.
- What will the value of the firm be if it changes to a capital structure with 50% debt?
- Answer options: $83,854; $81,667; $76,885; $93,453
Step-by-step analysis of the underlying concepts and calculations:
- First, determine the value of the unlevered firm (no debt). When there is no debt, the firm’s cash flows are the EBIT after tax, i.e., EBIT*(1 - T). Here, EBIT = 12,500 and tax rate T = 30%, so after-tax operating cash flow is 12,500*(1 - 0.30) = 8,750 per year. For a perpetuity, the value of ......Login to view full explanationLog in for full answers
We've collected over 50,000 authentic exam questions and detailed explanations from around the globe. Log in now and get instant access to the answers!
Similar Questions
Which of the following statements best reflects the key insight of the M&M Proposition (without taxes)?
Choose the blank: Adding debt, the firm’s value will: 1. [ ] due to corporate taxes 2. [ ] due to bankruptcy costs 3. [ ] due to risk shifting and debt overhang that occur due to the agency problems between shareholders and debtholders 4. [ ] due to debt monitoring, reduction in agency problem between managers and shareholders
In a world with perfect capital markets, a firm that issues a large amount debt to finance a share repurchase will ultimately boost its EPS and reduce its post-transaction market capitalization, but will not affect its stock price.
Omar Corp is currently at its target debt ratio, but next week its debt ratio will significantly increase after it is taken private in a LBO. Omar will then gradually repay its buyout debt and reach its target debt ratio again in 5 years. Corporate taxation is the only capital markets imperfection that is relevant to Omar's valuation. In this scenario, valuing Omar as of today using the WACC method with its current (pre-LBO) capital structure weights will definitely overstate its true value.
More Practical Tools for Students Powered by AI Study Helper
Making Your Study Simpler
Join us and instantly unlock extensive past papers & exclusive solutions to get a head start on your studies!