Principles of Managerial Finance, 15th Edition Solution Manual
Preview Extract
Chapter 2
The Financial-Market Environment
ย Instructorโs Resources
Chapter Overview
This chapter provides an overview of the institutional framework for channeling funds from net savers to net
borrowers. The discussion begins with three basic types of financial institutionsโcommercial banks,
investment banks, and the shadow-banking system. Financial markets more broadly are then introduced along
with the distinction between (i) money and capital markets and (ii) primary and secondary markets.
Considerable attention is also focused on the oft-misunderstood topic of โefficient markets.โ In the capitalmarkets discussion, the step-by-step process for Initial Public Offerings of common stock is described to
provide a real-world example of funds travelling from net savers to net borrowers and illustrate the role
investment bankers play in that journey. Next, key features of U.S. financial regulationโdeposit insurance,
the Securities Act of 1933, and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Dodd Frank areโare laid out. The
history of Glass-Steagallโenacted in the 1930s to prevent future banking crises by separating commercial
and investment banking and repealed in 1999โ is offered to illustrate the evolution of financial markets and
regulatory responses to those changes. The chapter concludes with an exploration of the role of housing
finance in the Financial Crisis and the Great Recession of 2007โ09.
ย
Suggested Answer to Opener-in-Review Question
In the chapter opener, students learned about Airbnbโs spectacular rise. In 2009, Sequoia Capital invested
$600,000 in this โunicornโ in return for a 10% ownership stake. These figures imply Airbnb was worth $6
billion at the time. If the company was worth $31 billion in 2017, students were then asked, how much did the
value of Airbnb grow in that eight-year period? The answer is 516,566.7% [($31 billion/$6 million โ 1) x
100]
ย Answers to Review Questions
2-1.
Financial institutions are intermediaries that facilitate the flow of individual, business, and government
savings into loans and investments. Broadly speaking, net savers (primarily individuals) prefer low risk
and easy access to their money while net borrowers (businesses and government) would like to take
risk with the funds and tie them up for a longer term. Financial institutions transform loans and
investments into forms savers prefer to hold (such as deposits) or help net borrowers issue debt and
equity instruments tailored to saver preferences.
2-2
Overall, the same entities that supply fundsโindividuals, businesses, and governmentsโalso demand
them, so these three groups are all financial-institution customers. That said, the key demanders of
funds (net borrowers) are businesses and governments while the key suppliers (net savers) are
individuals.
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2-3
Commercial banks, investment banks, and the shadow-banking system are all financial institutions. Broadly
speaking, commercial banks transform the deposits of net savers into loans to net borrowers. Investment
banks, in contrast, do not โtransformโ the liquidity and riskiness of financial assets. Instead, they help
โmatchโ demanders and issuers of debt and equity instruments. Specifically, investment banks instruct
companies on the best vehicles for raising capital, advise them on mergers/restructuring, and engage in
trading and market-making to support their consulting function. Finally, the shadow-banking system
performs services for net savers and borrowers similar to commercial banksโbut without issuing deposits.
By not relying on deposit funding, shadow banks can evade prudential regulation designed to constrain
risk-taking by ordinary banks.
2-4.
Financial markets facilitate direct interaction of suppliers and demanders of funds. In primary markets,
debt and equity instruments are sold the first timeโa direct exchange between the firm or government
issuing securities and the purchasers. An example is Microsoft Corporation selling new shares of
common stock to private investors. In secondary markets, previous issued securities are traded
subsequent times; the original issuers receive no new funds. An example is an investor buying a share
of outstanding Microsoft common stock from another investor through a broker. Put simply, primary
markets feature sales of โnewโ securities while โusedโ security transactions take place in secondary
markets. Primary and secondary markets have a symbiotic relationshipโthe easier the resale of a
financial asset in a secondary market, the easier the initial sale of that asset in a primary market.
Similarly, financial institutions and financial markets are far from independent. Commercial banks, for
example, hold large inventories of U.S. Treasury securities to improve the liquidity and risk of their
asset portfolio, and strong bank demand makes it easier for the Treasury to sell debt in the first place.
Because banks have taken deposits and made loans since the days of goldsmiths in Medieval Europe,
they enjoy a comparative advantage in originating and monitoring commercial loans. Aware of this
advantage, the capital markets watch bank lending for clues about borrower financial strength. When a
commercial bank announces a new loan to a publicly traded firm, that firmโs stock price typically rises.
2-5
A private placement is the sale of a new security directly to an investor or a small group of
sophisticated investors (such as insurance companies and pension funds). A public offering, in contrast,
is the sale of newly issued stock or bonds to the public at large. Firms typically rely on public offerings
when they need large sums.
2-6.
The money market features trading in short-term, highly marketable debt instruments; โshort termโ
here means an original maturity of one year or less. Money-market instruments typically carry low risk
of capital losses. Examples of money-market instruments include U.S. Treasury bills, commercial
paper, and negotiable certificates of deposit (issued by large commercial banks). The Eurocurrency
market is the international analogue of the U.S. money market. This market features loans of currency
held in banks outside the country where it is legal tender. Participants typically use the Eurocurrency
market to evade domestic regulations and tax laws. The term stems from the European origin of this
market; โEurocurrencyโ has nothing to do with the euro per se and is no longer specific to Europe.
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Chapter 2
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2-7.
The capital market features trading in instruments with original maturities exceeding one year such as
bonds and stock (common and preferred). Capital-market instruments are exchanged in broker and
dealer markets. In broker markets, a broker coordinates buy and sell orders, executing trades at the
midpoint of the bid/ask spread (the highest price a buyer is willing to pay minus the lowest price a
seller is willing to accept). The best known broker market is the NYSE, which accounts for more than
25% of stock-market trades. In dealer markets, a market maker executes buy and sell orders using her
personal inventory and two distinct trades. For example, an investor might sell the dealer Microsoft
stock at the bid price and then, in an independent transaction, another investor would buy Microsoft
stock from the dealer at the ask price. โAskโ exceeds โbid,โ so the dealerโs reward for maintaining an
inventory of Microsoft stock is the opportunity to โbuy low, sell high.โ The difference, in short,
between broker and dealer markets turns on whether traders or dealers provide the liquidity.
2-8
Firms see the capital market as a source of external finance for long-term projects. Put another way,
they sell new bonds and stock to raise funds to build factories, launch marketing campaigns, and
expand into new markets. Accordingly, they want a liquid marketโone โdeepโ enough to accept newly
issued securities at favorable prices. Investors, in contrast, see the capital market as a savings vehicle
for long-term needs like retirement. As citizens of the macroeconomy, investors would also like the
capital market to steer scarce funds to the most productive uses. To these ends, investors want an
efficient capital marketโone where securities prices reflect all available information and react swiftly
to new information. Capital-market efficiency means investors need not waste time trying to identify
over or undervalued securities or exploitable patterns in securities prices. Instead, they can maximize
long-term returns by putting their savings in diversified mutual funds (i.e., avoiding countless hours
studying individual stocks and bonds). Investors will also enjoy higher aggregate growth of output and
employment from the spotlight securities prices shine on firms most able to profitably use their savings.
2-9
The first years of Great Depression featured the worst contraction in American history. Between
August 1929 and March 1933, industrial production fell 52%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
tumbled 89%, unemployment soared to nearly 25%, and roughly 9,000 banks failed (37% of those
operating in December 1929). Franklin Roosevelt won the 1932 election with a mandate to restore
prosperity and prevent future depressions. Much of the U.S. framework for financial and financialinstitution regulation stems from the First New Deal (1933โ34). This framework addressed specific
factors thought to have caused the slump. To protect depositors from losses in bank failures, the
Banking Act of 1933 created federal deposit insurance. To prevent failures in the first place, the Act
also barred commercial banks from security underwriting, which was thought to pose dangerous
additional risks. To head off fraudulent investment schemes like those preceding the stock-market crash
of 1929, the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934 forced companies wishing to
issue public securities to disclose information about their financial condition.
2-10 Both Acts required companies wishing to participate in securities markets to disclose significant
information to the public. The Securities Act of 1933 focused on the primary market, compelling
sellers of new securities provide reasonably accurate portrayals of their firms to prospective investors.
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934, in contrast, regulated trading in secondary markets; forcing
publicly traded companies to keep investors informed about firm condition on an ongoing basis. The
latter Act also created the Securities Exchange Commission to enforce federal securities laws.
2-11 Angel investors and venture capitalists are both sources of private equity. โAngelsโ are usually wealthy
individuals who fund promising start-ups in return for a slice of firm equity. Venture capitalists, in
contrast, are businesses that pool contributions from individuals (often institutional investors like
university endowments and pension funds) and invest those funds in promising start-ups. In short,
angels pick โwinnersโ themselves whereas venture capitalists pick โwinnersโ for their clients.
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2-12 Venture capitalists (VCs) are organized as (i) limited partnerships (most common), (ii) small business
investment companies (SBICs), (iii) financial funds, and (iv) corporate funds. The principal difference
is how the VC was created. The federal government charters SBICs. Financial institutions (usually
commercial banks), in contrast, create financial funds as subsidiaries while nonfinancial firms launch
corporate funds, sometimes as subsidiaries. Unlike other VC types, limited partnerships are launched
by private individuals. All VCs use a legal agreement to specify deal structure and pricing. Deal
structure allocates responsibilities between the start-up and VC and may include constraints on the firm
to enhance its chance of success and mitigate VC risk. Pricing depends on the (i) value of the start-up,
(ii) perceived risk of its business operations, and (iii) amount of funding needed. In general, VCs
provide less funding and require a greater ownership stake when the firm is the early stages of
development.
2-13 Firms wishing to go public must (i) secure approval from current shareholders, (ii) obtain certification
of the accuracy of their financial documents from company auditors and lawyers, (iii) hire an
originating investment bank, (iv) file a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), (v) participate in roadshows with the investment bank to spark interest among
potential investors and learn about a suitable issuing price, (vi) obtain final SEC approval after the
investment bank has finalized issue terms and offer price, and (vii) sell the issue to the investment bank
at the guarantee price. The investment bank will then assume the risk of placing the issue with primarymarket investors.
2-14 Broadly speaking, an investment bank facilitates a firmโs issuance of new securities. In a commonstock issue, the bank helps the issuer file a registration statement with the SEC and market the offering
to potential investors in a roadshow. The bank also sets the offering price and other terms of the issue.
All along the way, the originating investment bank provides advice to help the issuer maximize the
volume of funds raised. Finally, the originating bank buys the new securities from the issuer at the
guarantee price and then resells the issue to primary-market investors. Sometimes the bank will form a
syndicate of other investment banks to share the financial risk of placing the issue.
2-15 Securitization is the process of creating highly liquid marketable securities out of illiquid assets. The
first assets securitized on a large scale were residential mortgagesโsecuritizers โpooledโ the mortgages
and then issued debt claims backed by cash flows from those pools. In other words, the interest and
principal on โmortgage-backedโ securities (MBSs) paid to investors came from mortgage payments by
residential homeowners. Securitization facilitated investment in mortgages by unbundling risk. Lenders
might need their funds before the mortgage is repaid or lose money if the homeowner defaults.
Securitization allows mortgage originators to earn fees from making the loans but then reduce liquidity
and credit risk by selling the mortgage to a securitizer (who, in turn, creates a security with cash flows
tailored to the preferences of market investors). Securitizing mortgages promotes efficient risk sharing,
which in turn, makes the real-estate sector a more attractive place to invest.
2-16 A mortgage-backed security (MBS) is a debt instrument backed by residential mortgages. โBackedโ
means principal and interest paid to MBS investors come from payments by residential homeowners
with mortgages in the underlying pool. The primary MBS risk is credit risk, the chance homeowners
will not make monthly principal and interest payments as stipulated in their mortgage contracts.
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2-17 When a home buyer takes out a mortgage, initial equityโthe difference between purchase price and
mortgage-loan balanceโis simply the down payment. Over time, equity will rise as the borrower
reduces the mortgage balance with monthly principal and interest payments. Should housing prices
rise, the gap between house value and mortgage balance will widen furtherโthat is to say, home equity
rises even faster. If a borrower needs to skip a mortgage payment, the lender will typically allow her to
tap equity. Rising prices also imply a vibrant housing market, so a borrower permanently unable to
make the monthly payments can easily sell her home to pay off the mortgage.
2-18. A large decline in housing prices could push the value of a borrowerโs home below the mortgage
balance. With negative equity, the borrower could hold the loss at the original down payment by
allowing the lender to foreclose. The only cost would be the negative impact on the borrowerโs credit
score. But if the decline in housing prices has led many other homeowners to walk away from their
mortgages, this borrower may not be too concerned about the blot on her credit report, thinking future
lenders will understand the circumstances.
2-19 The Great Recession of 2007โ09 illustrates how a financial-sector crisis can metastasize. In the years
running up to the recession, securitizers increasingly pooled mortgage loans to borrowers with lessthan-stellar credit. At the time, โsubprimeโ loans seemed relatively low risk because of rapidly rising
housing prices. Then, when home prices began to level off (and even dip in some markets), mortgage
delinquencies and defaults started climbing. With payments on underlying mortgages falling, the value
of mortgage-back securities (MBSs) began to fall as well. Large investment banks (like Lehmann
Brothers) and commercial banks (like Citibank) held considerable inventories of now-problematic
MBSs. To offset rising MBS losses, commercial banks sharply curbed lending, which produced an
economy-wide decline in consumer and investment spending. Investment banks, meanwhile, were large
players in the money marketโLehmann, for example, routinely sold a large amount of commercial
paper (short-term unsecured corporate debt). When the firm collapsed almost overnight (rendering its
commercial paper worthless), the money market froze as investors became wary of all unsecured debt.
Now, nonfinancial companies that regularly tapped the money market for short-term funding found
themselves in squeeze. They responded by slashing costs and hoarding cash, which put even more
downward pressure on economy-wide consumer and investment spending.
ย Suggested Answer to Focus on Practice Box: Berkshire Hathaway: Can
Buffet Be Replaced?
Thinking about the principal-agent problem from Chapter 1, why might Buffett use different incentive
schemes in firms with different growth prospects?
In this Focus on Practice box, the principal is the funding providerโWarren Buffett and Berkshire
Hathawayโ while the agent is the firm owner/manager receiving the funds. Buffett wants the highest return
on his investment over a specific time horizon; the owner/manager may wish to pursue other short-term goals
with the money. For a firm in the early stages of development, growth is typically paramount, so Buffett
might insist on an incentive scheme rewarding rapid growth of sales rather than profits. [Amazonโs initial
business plan, for example, predicted no profit for at least for four to five years.] As the firm matured, Buffett
would likely reward earnings growth rather than sales growth.
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ย Suggested Answer to Focus on Ethics Box: Should Insider Trading Be
Legal?
Suppose insider trading were legal. Would it still present an ethical issue for insiders wishing to trade on nonpublic information?
Yes, even if legal, insider trading could still raise ethical concerns because of potential conflict between an
executiveโs duty to shareholders and her concern for personal wealth. Suppose, for example, a senior
executive with considerable firm stock learned of safety issues with a popular product so serious a massive
recall might be necessary. The executive has a fiduciary duty to work with the senior management team on a
plan to contain damage to firm stock. Were insider trading legal, she might be tempted to hedge the
possibility the plan might fail by dumping her stock quietly before the market became aware of the problem.
ย Answers to Warm-Up Exercises
E2-1
Suppliers and demanders of funds (LG 1)
Answer: Individuals as a whole (i.e., the household sector) spend less than they earn and invest the surplus
in firms directly (by purchasing their stocks and bonds) or indirectly (through financial institutions
โas in making deposits a commercial bank who then lends the funds to firms). If individuals
consume more/save less, fewer dollars will be available for investment, thereby driving up the cost
of those funds to net borrowers in the form of higher required returns/interest rates. Over time, the
rise in returns/rates will reduce investment and economic growth, which means lower growth in
incomes and employment.
E2-2
Raising funds (LG 2)
Answer: Gaga can raise the needed $10 million by borrowing from a commercial bank or issuing stocks or
bonds in the primary market. To obtain $10 million from a commercial bank, Gaga will likely
need an ongoing deposit relationship with that bank. Such a relationship gives the bank low-cost
information about Gagaโs cash flows that reduce the cost of lending to the firm. Over time, as
Gaga repeatedly borrows and repays the loans, the bank will collect even more information,
further reducing the cost of lending. Should Gaga wish to sell bonds or stock to raise the $10
millionโ that is, tap the financial markets directly for the funding rather than a commercial bank
โ its first step will be to retain an investment bank for needed expertise, such as advice on what
securities to sell and terms to offer. Investment banks offer valuable expertise earned over time
through market-making/trading activities and advising many firms on securities sales
E2-3
Money market vs. capital market (LG 3)
Answer: Short-term, highly liquid, low-risk debt trades in the money market. Reputable firms needing cash
for one year or less to fund ongoing operations have traditionally tapped the money market.
Suppose a well-known, financially sound firm specializing in recreational-vehicle (RV) sales
needs inventory for the summer driving/camping season. The company might sell 90-day
commercial paper for money to buy RVs wholesale and then pay off the debt with proceeds from
summer sales. Firms sell new bonds and stock in the capital market (where debt and equity with
maturities exceeding one year trade) to fund long-term projects like construction of new factories.
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Chapter 2
E2-4
The Financial Market Environment
25
Biggest benefit of government regulation (LG 4)
Answer: The scale and scope of government involvement in the economy will always be subject to debate,
but most economists agree on the need for some financial-sector regulation. Well-designed
regulation promotes confidence in the financial system, and individuals and businesses who trust
financial institutions and markets are more likely to save and invest. More savings and investment,
in turn, confers economy-wide benefits through the resulting growth in output, incomes, and
employment.
E2-5
Determining net proceeds from stock sale (LG 5)
Answer: Net proceeds = (1,000,000 ร $20 x 0.95) + (250,000 ร $20 ร 0.90)
= $19,000,000 + $4,500,000 = $23,500,000
E2-6.
Mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) (LG 6)
Answer: Students should start by asking about the following:
a. The location of houses securing the underlying mortgages (As the old saying goes, the three
most important determinants of real-estate prices are โlocation, location, location.โ)
b. The percentage of underlying mortgages in foreclosure or โunder waterโ (i.e., with market
values below the remaining balance) in the region
c. The percentage of underlying mortgages currently delinquent
d. Any neighborhood restrictions on renting and about the strength of the regional rental market
e. The precedence of MBS investors in bankruptcy (i.e., would other lenders have a senior claim
on the houses securing the mortgages?)
f. The condition of homes securing the underlying mortgages (e.g., would repairs be needed to
sell or rent in the event of foreclosure?)
g. The creditworthiness of homeowners still current on their mortgages (i.e., how likely is it
borrowers will be unable to make timely payments in the future?)
h. The percentage of pool mortgages with adjustable interest rates resetting soon (particularly in
a rising rate environment because a reset means borrowers will face higher mortgage
payments)
ย Solutions to Problems
P2-1.
Transactions costs (LG3)
a. Bid/Ask Spread = Ask Price โ Bid Price = $263,770 โ $262,850 = $920
b. If Scottrade routes the buy order to the NYSE (a broker market), a market maker will execute the
trade at the midpoint of the bid/ask spread. In this transaction, the market maker serves as broker,
bringing your buy order together with someone elseโs sell order and forgoing the bid/ask spread,
so total transactions cost is only the brokerage commission paid to Scottrade โ $7.
c. If Scottrade routes the buy order to the NASDAQ (a dealer market), the market maker will
execute the order from her own inventory and charge half the bid/ask spread. So total transactions
costs will be (0.50 ร $920) plus the $7 commission or $467.
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d. The midpoint of the bid/ask spread is the implied market value of the stock, and the market value
of the trade equals the product of the market value of the stock and the number of shares traded.
Midpoint of bid/ask spread = ($263,770 + $262,850) / 2 = $263,310
So, implied market value of the trade = $263,310 ร 1 share = $263,310
P2-2.
Transactions costs (LG 3)
a. Transactions costs = (Number of shares) ร [(0.50) x (Bid/ask spread)]
+ Brokerage commission
$59.95 = [(1,200) ร (0.50) ร (Bid/ask spread)] + $29.95
Bid/ask spread = ($59.95 โ $29.95) / 600 = $0.05
b. Twitter is listed on the NYSE, a broker market. So, had Charles Schwab routed the order to the
NYSE, it could have been executed against a buy order, and total transaction costs would have
been only the $29.95 brokerage commission. But transaction costs included half the bid/ask
spread per share traded, so either (i) the order went to the NYSE, no public buy order was
available, and the market maker bought the 1,200 shares for her inventory (at a cost of half the
bid/ask spread per share) or (ii) Charles Schwab routed the order to a dealer market like
NASDAQ, and a market maker added the shares to her inventory (at half the spread per share).
c. Transactions costs = (Number of shares) ร [(0.50) ร (Bid/ask spread)]
+ Brokerage commission
$47.95 = [(1,200) ร (0.50) ร (Bid/ask spread)] + $29.95
Bid/ask spread = ($47.95 โ $29.95) / 600 = $0.03
d. Total transactions costs = Transactions costs from sale + Transactions costs from purchase
Total transactions costs = $59.95 + $47.95 = $107. 90
Costs could have been reduced costs by placing both trades online with a request for routing to
the NYSE where the chance of crossing with other public orders is greatest. Had no market maker
been necessary, total costs would have been only the $4.95 Schwab commission per trade.
P2-3.
Initial public offerings (LG 5)
a. Total proceeds = (IPO offer price) ร (IPO shares issued) = $11 ร 10.5 million = $115,500,000
b. Percentage underwriting discount = (Underwriting discount) / Offer price = $0.77/$11 = 7%
c. Underwriting fee ($) = ($0.77) ร (10.5 million shares) = $8,085,000.
Or, (Percentage underwriting discount) ร (Total proceeds) = (7%) ร ($115,500,000) = $8,085,000
d. Net proceeds = Total proceeds โ Underwriting fee = $115,500,000 โ $8,085,000 = $107,415,000
e. IPO underpricing = [(Market price) โ (Offer price)] / Offer price = [$13.41 โ $11] / $11 = 21.9%
f.
Market capitalization = (Market price of stock) ร (Number of shares outstanding)
= ($13.41) ร (85,489,470) = $1,146,413,792.70
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Chapter 2
P2-4.
The Financial Market Environment
27
Initial public offerings (LG5)
a. Total proceeds = (IPO offer price) ร (Number of IPO shares issued) = ($18) ร (8.25 million)
= $148,500,000
b. Underwriting fee ($) = (6.5%) ร ($148,500,000) = $9,652,500
c. Net proceeds = Total proceeds โ Underwriting fee = $148,500,000 โ $9,652,500 = $138,847,500
d. Market capitalization = (Market price of stock) ร (Number of shares outstanding)
= ($16.10) ร (31,025,936) = $499,517,569.6
e. IPO underpricing = [(Market price) โ (Offer price)] / Offer price = [$16.10 โ $18] / $18 =
โ10.56%
f.
P2-5.
Negative underpricing indicates secondary-market investors are not willing to pay as much for
existing shares as primary-market investors were for new shares โ a rare case of primary-market
investors losing money on IPO shares.
Ethics problem (LG 4)
An ethical issue arises because of access to material nonpublic information and the potential conflict
between an insiderโs duty to shareholders and concern for personal wealth. For example, suppose an
insider knows about a planned acquisition and quietly buys shares of the target firmโ a move likely
to be lucrative because, on average, the stock price of targets jumps on news of an acquisition. In this
example, the insider puts personal gain ahead of shareholder welfare. Other market participants might
observe the insiderโs behavior and buy shares of the target firm as wellโ thereby boosting the
targetโs share price and raising the cost of the acquisition.
ย Case
Case studies are available on www.pearson.com/mylab/finance.
Pros and Cons of Being Publicly Listed
a.
Going public will enable Robo-Tech to raise more external capital without additional bankruptcy risk.
[Unlike creditors, shareholders cannot take the firm to bankruptcy court if expected dividends are not
paid.] Going public will also allow the company to continue operating after Mr. Bradley (the
owner/CEO) retires or dies and, before then, insulate him from personal liability for Robo-Tech debts.
Finally, going public will give Mr. Bradley a chance to sell personal shares to cash in on his work
building the firm or diversify his wealth. [Currently, his human capital and financial wealth are both
largely tied up Robo-Tech. After the IPO, Mr. Bradley could sell some Robo-Tech shares and invest in
the stocks and bonds of companies in other industries.]
b.
The disadvantages of going public include (i) more burdensome SEC reporting requirements, (ii)
potential dilution of Mr. Bradleyโs managerial control (e.g., if the IPO left him with fewer than 50% of RoboTech shares, a takeover artist could purchase controlling interest and force his removal as CEO), and finally
(iii) double taxation of Mr. Bradleyโs income (i.e., Robo-Tech will pay corporate income tax on firm profits,
and Mr. Bradley will pay personal income tax on dividends/capital gains from company stock).
c.
Robo-Tech is probably too small to meet NYSE and NASDAQ listing requirements. The firm will
probably trade over-the-counter or on regional exchanges.
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d.
If the capital market is efficient, the price of Robo-Tech stock will provide an unbiased estimate of firm value.
Efficiency also implies movements in stock price following news about the company will also be unbiased.
Robo-Tech will, therefore, have an external real-time โreport cardโ on management actions. For example,
suppose extensive research led management to believe moving several U.S. plants to Latin America would
create value for shareholders. If firm stock dipped on the announcement, other things equal, management
would know the market did not share their enthusiasm.
ย Spreadsheet Exercise
Answers to Chapter 2โs MuleSoft spreadsheet problem are available on www.pearson.com/mylab/finance.
ย Group Exercise
There is no group exercise for Chapter 2.
ย Integrative Case 1: Merit Enterprise Corp.
a. Option 1 is borrowing $4 billion from JPMorgan Chase (or a syndicate of banks). The pros are the
benefits of not going public. Going public means costly SEC disclosure requirements and potentially less
scope for current owners to run the company over the long run. [Indeed, if current owners found
themselves with fewer than 50% of Merit shares after the IPO, an outsider could purchase controlling
interest and remove them from management.] Finally, going public means subjecting current owners to
higher taxesโ they would face corporate-income tax on Merit profits as well as personal-income tax on
dividends/capital gains from Merit stock. The cons of option 1 include the short-run loss of some control
to JPMorganChase (or the syndicate). For example, bank lenders of such a large sum would insist on
restrictive covenants to limit Meritโs discretion in using the funds. And, if a loan payment were missed,
bank lenders (unlike shareholders) could take the firm to bankruptcy court.
b. Option 2 is going public to raise the needed $4 billion. The pros are the benefits of going public:
(i) access to more external capital over time, (ii) insulation of Merit owners from personal liability for
firm debts, (iii) opportunities for Merit owners to sell some of their ownership stake to increase
consumption or diversify wealth, (iv) extension of Meritโs operating life beyond that of the current
owners, and (v) greater flexibility in compensation (e.g., an IPO means Merit could use stock options) to
attract more talented executives. The pros are the benefits of not ceding greater short-term control over
firm decisions to bank lenders (see previous answer).
c. Ms. Lehnโs should choose the option that maximizes the wealth of the current owners. The information
provided suggests, at this point in the companyโs life, the benefits of going public exceed the costs. So
Ms. Lehn should recommend an IPO to the board.
ยฉ 2019 Pearson Education, Inc.
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