Chapter 16

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According to the Static Theory of Capital Structure, an unprofitable firm with unstable cash flows across many states of the world, such as a startup, might have an optimal debt-to-equity ratio of three

False

According to the Static Theory of Capital Structure, firms lever up to minimize expected distress and bankruptcy costs

False

As the firm's debt-to-equity ratio decreases, its stock beta increases as well

False

If Alpha Company has more business risk than WSB Inc., then its rU will be smaller than WSB's.

False

In M&M Case III, the firm's cost of debt is fixed

False

In M&M case I, the firm's cost of debt is not fixed

False

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, leverage changes the business risk premium contained in rU

False

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, the size of the value pie available to the capital providers changes

False

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, there is a unique capital structure that maximizes value

False

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, this is the firm's cost of equity, rA = (E/V) * rE + (D/V) * rD

False

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, value does change because of the CFO's leverage choice because the DCF denominators change while the numerators remain constant

False

In a world with taxes and bankruptcy, changing leverage does not change the cash flows from assets, therefore the riskiness of those cash flows does not change either.

False

In a world with taxes and bankruptcy, changing the company's capital structure changes the size of the slices of the value pie going to stockholders and bondholders, but not the size of the pie available to both.

False

In a world with taxes and no bankruptcy, changing leverage does not change the riskiness of the cash flows from assets, therefore WACC remains constant

False

In a world with taxes and no bankruptcy, the denominators in the DCF equation do not change when leverage changes

False

In a world with taxes and no bankruptcy, there is not a unique capital structure that maximizes value

False

In a world with taxes and no bankruptcy, you lever up to maximize the slice of the value pie that goes to the stockholders

False

Levering down changes both the right and left hand sides of the balance sheet

False

Levering up means issuing stocks in the primary market then using the proceeds to buy bonds in the secondary market

False

The business risk premium is beta unlevered * riskless rate

False

The compensation for financial risk is (rE-rD) * (D/E) * (1-t) in a world with taxes and no bankruptcy

False

The compensation for financial risk is rU in a world with taxes and no bankruptcy

False

According to the Static Theory of Capital Structure, the expected costs of financial distress and bankruptcy varies across firms and industries, so the optimal leverage choice will vary too

True

An optimal capital structure is all debt when there are no taxes and no bankruptcy

True

As defined in this course, financial distress is when the firm is having difficulty fulfilling its obligations but has not yet entered bankruptcy

True

As the debt-to-equity ratio increases the probability of incurring financial distress costs increases.

True

Because there is volatility in a firm's EBIT across different systematic states of the world, the asset's have a beta that captures business risk

True

If Alpha Company has more business risk than WSB Inc., then its rU will be bigger than WSB's.

True

In a world with no taxes and no bankruptcy, leverage does not change the business risk premium contained in rU.

True

In a world with taxes and bankruptcy, changing the company's capital structure changes the size of the slices of the value pie going to stockholders and bondholder, as well as the size of the pie available to both

True

In a world with taxes and bankruptcy, there is a unique capital structure that minimizes WACC

True

In part, Case II Proposition II states that a firm's cost of debt is not affected by changes in the capital structure

True

Levering down changes the right hand side of the balance sheet but not the left

True

Levering up does not change the assets of the company

True

M&M Case III assumes a world with taxes and bankruptcy

True

M&M Case III assumes a world with taxes, financial distress, and bankruptcy

True

M&M proposition ones focus on value

True

The equity beta measures the business and financial risks

True

The financial risk premium is beta unlevered * market risk premium * D/E

True

The impact of leverage on the cost of equity shows up in M&M propositions twos

True

The unlevered beta captures the systematic risk of the cash flows from assets due to the nature of the firm's business

True

There is a unique optimal structure when there are taxes and bankruptcy

True

There is risk because the firm's EBIT varies across different states of the world that reflect the systematic risk of the assets. The risk is known as business risk

True


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