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Chapter 20 - Hybrid Financing - Prefernce Shares, Leasing, Options, Warrants, & Convertibles

This document provides solutions to questions about hybrid financing instruments including preference shares, leases, options, warrants, and convertibles. It discusses key characteristics of these instruments such as how preference shares have aspects of both debt and equity, and how cumulative preference shares require missed dividends to be paid before common shareholders receive dividends. The solutions also demonstrate calculations for weighted average cost of capital.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
671 views2 pages

Chapter 20 - Hybrid Financing - Prefernce Shares, Leasing, Options, Warrants, & Convertibles

This document provides solutions to questions about hybrid financing instruments including preference shares, leases, options, warrants, and convertibles. It discusses key characteristics of these instruments such as how preference shares have aspects of both debt and equity, and how cumulative preference shares require missed dividends to be paid before common shareholders receive dividends. The solutions also demonstrate calculations for weighted average cost of capital.

Uploaded by

lou-924
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MANAGEMENT CONSULTANCY - Solutions Manual

CHAPTER 20 HYBRID FINANCING: PREFERENCE SHARES, LEASING, OPTIONS, WARRANTS, AND CONVERTIBLES
I. Questions 1. Capitalizing lease payments means computing the present value of future lease payments and showing them as an asset and liability on the balance sheet. 2. The preemptive right provides current shareholders with a first option to buy new shares. In this fashion, their voting right and claim to earnings cannot be diluted without their consent. 3. The actual owners have the last claim to any and all funds that remain. If the firm is profitable, this could represent a substantial amount. Thus, the residual claim may represent a privilege as well as a potential drawback. Generally, other providers of capital may only receive a fixed amount. 4. Preference share is a hybrid or intermediate form of security possessing some of the characteristics of debt and ordinary shares. The fixed amount provision is similar to debt, but the noncontractual obligation is similar to ordinary shares. Though the preference shareholder does not have an ownership interest in the firm, the priority of claim is higher than that of the ordinary shareholder. 5. With the cumulative feature, if preference share dividends are not paid in any one year, they accumulate and must be paid in total before ordinary shareholders can receive dividends. Even though preference share dividends are not a contractual obligation as is true of interest on debt, the cumulative feature tends to make corporations very aware of obligations to preference shareholders. Preference shareholders may even receive new securities for forgiveness of missed dividend payments. II. Multiple Choice 1. B 11. C 20-1 21. B 31. C

Chapter 20 Hybrid Financing: Preference Shares, Leasing, Options, Warrants, and Convertibles

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

C D D A C D D D A

12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

D A C B D D B D A

22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30.

B C A B D C B A C

32. 33. 34. 35.

A C B A

Supporting computations: 8. Cost of retained earnings = = 17.6% + g = + 12%

D1 where D1 equals the expected dividends one period from today, which is P4.48 P4.48 (P4 x 1.12); g equals the expected growth rate in dividends and I 0 I0 P80 equals the value of the shares. 9. k p = = = 19.15%

10.

where D1 equals the expected dividend one period from today (P9), and I0 equals the market rate as in case of a new issue the net proceeds of P47 P9 (P50 P3). D1 I0 P47 Source LT debt PS CE Cost 10% 15% 20% Weight .30 .20 .50 WAC .03 .03 .10 .16

12. The weighted average cost of capital (WACCAT) is: k0t = Wiki (1 Tc) + Weke = 9% (1 .4) + 18% = 11.7%

20-2

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