Factors Influencing Capital Structure
Factors Influencing Capital Structure
Meaning of Capital Structure refers to the combination or mix of debt and equity which a company uses
to finance its long-term operations.
Raising of capital from different sources and their use in different assets by a company is made on the
basis of certain principles that provide a system of capital so that the maximum rate of return can be
earned at a minimum cost. This sort of system of capital is known as capital structure.
INTERNAL FACTORS
EXTERNAL FACTORS
INTERNAL FACTORS
EXTERNAL FACTORS
The optimal or the best capital structure implies the most economical and safe ratio between various
types of securities. It is that mix of debt and equity which maximizes the value of the company and
minimizes the cost of capital.
Traditional Theory
This theory was propounded by Ezra Solomon. According to this theory, a firm can reduce the overall
cost of capital or increase the total value of the firm by increasing the debt proportion in its capital
structure to a certain limit. Because debt is a cheap source of raising funds as compared to equity
capital.
Where,
Vu: Value of Unlevered Firm
VL: Value of Levered Firm
D: Amount of Debt
t: tax rate
CAPITAL STRUCTURE (M-M THEORY)
The M&M Theorem, or the Modigliani-Miller Theorem, is one of the most important theorems in corporate finance.
The theorem was developed by economists Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller in 1958. The main idea of the M&M
theory is that the capital structure of a company does not affect its overall value.
The first version of the M&M theory was full of limitations as it was developed under the assumption of perfectly
efficient markets, in which the companies do not pay taxes, while there are no bankruptcy costs or asymmetric
information. Subsequently, Miller and Modigliani developed the second version of their theory by including taxes,
bankruptcy costs, and asymmetric information.
This is the first version of the M&M Theorem with the assumption of perfectly efficient markets. The assumption
implies that companies operating in the world of perfectly efficient markets do not pay any taxes, the trading of
securities is executed without any transaction costs, bankruptcy is possible but there are no bankruptcy costs, and
information is perfectly symmetrical.
V =V
L U
Where:
• VL = Value of the levered firm (financing through a mix of debt and equity)
The first proposition essentially claims that the company’s capital structure does not impact its value. Since the value
of a company is calculated as the present value of future cash flows, the capital structure cannot affect it. Also, in
perfectly efficient markets, companies do not pay any taxes. Therefore, the company with a 100% leveraged capital
structure does not obtain any benefits from tax-deductible interest payments.
r = r + D/E (r - r )
E a a D
Where:
The second proposition of the M&M Theorem states that the company’s cost of equity is directly proportional to the
company’s leverage level. An increase in leverage level induces higher default probability to a company. Therefore,
investors tend to demand a higher cost of equity (return) to be compensated for the additional risk.
Conversely, the second version of the M&M Theorem was developed to better suit real-world conditions. The
assumptions of the newer version imply that companies pay taxes; there are transaction, bankruptcy, and agency
costs; and information is not symmetrical.
V =V +t xD
L U C
Where:
• tc = Tax rate
• D = Debt
The first proposition states that tax shields that result from the tax-deductible interest payments make the value of a
levered company higher than the value of an unlevered company. The main rationale behind the theorem is that tax-
deductible interest payments positively affect a company’s cash flows. Since a company’s value is determined as the
present value of the future cash flows, the value of a levered company increases.
r = r + D/E X (1 – t ) X (r - r )
E a C a D
The second proposition for the real-world condition states that the cost of equity has a directly proportional
relationship with the leverage level.
Nonetheless, the presence of tax shields affects the relationship by making the cost of equity less sensitive to the
leverage level. Although the extra debt still increases the chance of a company’s default, investors are less prone to
negatively reacting to the company taking additional leverage, as it creates the tax shields that boost its value.
BY
MANI BHUSHAN