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Risk and Leverage Theories, Quizzes of Financial Management

Various theories and concepts related to risk and leverage in business and finance. It discusses different types of risk, such as business risk, financial risk, and market risk. It also explores the concept of operating leverage and its impact on a firm's risk and return. The document delves into the weighted average cost of capital, optimal capital structure, and the impact of debt financing on a firm's financial risk and return. Additionally, it covers topics like dividend per share, required cash flow, and the degree of financial leverage. A comprehensive overview of the key theories and principles governing risk and leverage in the corporate finance domain.

Typology: Quizzes

2019/2020

Uploaded on 03/24/2024

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D. RISK AND LEVERAGE
THEORIES:
Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
12. Financial risk refers to the:
A. risk of owning equity securities
B. risk faced by equity holders when debt is used
C. general business risk of the firm
D. possibility that interest rates will increase
Market risk
Comprehensive
5. A decrease in the debt ratio will least likely affect:
A. Financial risk C. Systematic or market risk
B. Business risk D. Total risk
14. Which of the following situations is likely to have the highest combined business and financial risk impact
upon a business?
A. A new labor-intensive operation is funded with operating cash flows
B. A fully automated plant is completed, funded with retained earnings
C. A fully automated plant is completed, funded with the issuance of 10-year bonds
D. An automated, but dated plant in the southern region is closed and operations are resumed in a
labor-intensive plant in Central Luzon
Operating Leverage
2. Which of the following is a key determinant of operating leverage?
A. Level of debt C. Technology
B. Cost of debt D. Capital structure
3. The degree of operating leverage for Alabang Company is 3.5, and the degree of operating leverage for
Paranaque Corporation is 7.0. According to this information, which firm is considered to have greater
business risk?
A. Alabang Company.
B. Paranaque Corporation.
C. The degree of operating leverage is not a measure of business risk, so it is not possible to tell which
firm has the greater business risk given the above information.
D. To determine which firm has the greater business risk, we need to know the operating income (NOI
or EBIT) of each firm. Paranaque Corporation would have less business risk if its operating income is
at least twice that of Alabang Company.
9. Which of the following is incorrect regarding operating leverage?
A. Operating leverage is the degree to which costs are fixed.
B. A project's break-even point will be affected by the extent to which costs can be reduced as sales
decline.
C. If the project has mostly variable costs, it is said to have high operating leverage.
D. High operating leverage implies that profits are more sensitive to changes in sales.
11. The extent to which fixed costs are used in a firm’s operations is called its:
A. financial leverage. C. financial leverage.
B. operating leverage. D. foreign risk exposure.
Financial Leverage
4. It refers to management strategy of financing assets with borrowed capital; such an extensive use raise the
entity risk thereby impacting on the return on common stockholders’ equity to be above or below the rate of
return on total assets.
A. Factoring C. Mortgage.
B. Leverage. D. Restructuring
1. The use of financial leverage by the firm has a potential impact on which of the following?
(1) The risk associated with the firm
(2) The return experienced by the shareholder
(3) The variability of net income
(4) The degree of operating leverage
(5) The degree of financial leverage
A. 1, 3, 5 C. 1, 2, 3, 5
B. 2, 3, 4, 5 D. 1, 2, 5
16. The degree of financial leverage for April Company is 3.0, and the degree of financial leverage for August
Corporation is 6.2. According to this information, which firm is considered to have greater overall (total)
risk?
A. April Company.
B. August Corporation.
C. The degree of financial leverage is a measure of financial risk, so the only conclusion that can be
made with the information given is that August Corporation has greater financial risk than April
Company -- we cannot tell which firm has greater total risk.
D. To determine which firm has the greater total risk, we need to know the financial breakeven point of
each firm.
Weighted average Cost of capital
6. Which of the following changes would tend to decrease the company cost of capital for a traditional firm?
A. Decrease the proportion of equity financing.
B. Increase the market value of the d ebt.
C. Decrease the pro portion of debt financing.
D. Decrease the market value of the equity.
15. The most commonly held view of capital structure is that the weighted average cost of capital:
A. falls first with moderate levels of leverage and then increases.
B. does not change with leverage.
C. increases proportionately with increases in leverage.
D. increases with moderate amounts of leverage and then falls.
Target capital structure
10. The mix of debt, preferred stock, and common equity with which the firm plans to raise capital is called the:
A. financial risk C. business risk
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D. RISK AND LEVERAGE

THEORIES:

Risk Business risk Financial risk

  1. Financial risk refers to the: A. risk of owning equity securities B. risk faced by equity holders when debt is used C. general business risk of the firm D. possibility that interest rates will increase Market risk Comprehensive
  2. A decrease in the debt ratio will least likely affect: A. Financial risk C. Systematic or market risk B. Business risk D. Total risk
  3. Which of the following situations is likely to have the highest combined business and financial risk impact upon a business? A. A new labor-intensive operation is funded with operating cash flows B. A fully automated plant is completed, funded with retained earnings C. A fully automated plant is completed, funded with the issuance of 10-year bonds D. An automated, but dated plant in the southern region is closed and operations are resumed in a labor-intensive plant in Central Luzon Operating Leverage
  4. Which of the following is a key determinant of operating leverage? A. Level of debt C. Technology B. Cost of debt D. Capital structure
  5. The degree of operating leverage for Alabang Company is 3.5, and the degree of operating leverage for Paranaque Corporation is 7.0. According to this information, which firm is considered to have greater business risk? A. Alabang Company. B. Paranaque Corporation. C. The degree of operating leverage is not a measure of business risk, so it is not possible to tell which firm has the greater business risk given the above information. D. To determine which firm has the greater business risk, we need to know the operating income (NOI or EBIT) of each firm. Paranaque Corporation would have less business risk if its operating income is at least twice that of Alabang Company.
  6. Which of the following is incorrect regarding operating leverage? A. Operating leverage is the degree to which costs are fixed. B. A project's break-even point will be affected by the extent to which costs can be reduced as sales decline. C. If the project has mostly variable costs, it is said to have high operating leverage. D. High operating leverage implies that profits are more sensitive to changes in sales. 11. The extent to which fixed costs are used in a firm’s operations is called its: A. financial leverage. C. financial leverage. B. operating leverage. D. foreign risk exposure. Financial Leverage 4. It refers to management strategy of financing assets with borrowed capital; such an extensive use raise the entity risk thereby impacting on the return on common stockholders’ equity to be above or below the rate of return on total assets. A. Factoring C. Mortgage. B. Leverage. D. Restructuring 1. The use of financial leverage by the firm has a potential impact on which of the following? (1) The risk associated with the firm (2) The return experienced by the shareholder (3) The variability of net income (4) The degree of operating leverage (5) The degree of financial leverage A. 1, 3, 5 C. 1, 2, 3, 5 B. 2, 3, 4, 5 D. 1, 2, 5 16. The degree of financial leverage for April Company is 3.0, and the degree of financial leverage for August Corporation is 6.2. According to this information, which firm is considered to have greater overall (total) risk? A. April Company. B. August Corporation. C. The degree of financial leverage is a measure of financial risk, so the only conclusion that can be made with the information given is that August Corporation has greater financial risk than April Company -- we cannot tell which firm has greater total risk. D. To determine which firm has the greater total risk, we need to know the financial breakeven point of each firm. Weighted average Cost of capital 6. Which of the following changes would tend to decrease the company cost of capital for a traditional firm? A. Decrease the proportion of equity financing. B. Increase the market value of the debt. C. Decrease the proportion of debt financing. D. Decrease the market value of the equity. 15. The most commonly held view of capital structure is that the weighted average cost of capital: A. falls first with moderate levels of leverage and then increases. B. does not change with leverage. C. increases proportionately with increases in leverage. D. increases with moderate amounts of leverage and then falls. Target capital structure 10. The mix of debt, preferred stock, and common equity with which the firm plans to raise capital is called the: A. financial risk C. business risk

B. operating leverage D. target capital structure Optimal capital structure

  1. The mix of debt and equity that minimizes the cost of capital is the: A. optimal operating leverage C. optimal degree of combined leverage B. target financial structure D. optimal capital structure
  2. When establishing their optimal capital structure, firms should strive to: A. minimize the weighted average cost of capital B. minimize the amount of debt financing used C. maximize the marginal cost of capital D. none of the above
  3. Although debt financing is usually the cheapest component of capital, it cannot be used to excess because A. the interest rates may change. B. the firm's stock price will increase and raise the cost of equity financing. C. the financial risk of the firm may increase and thus drive up the cost of all sources of financing. D. none of the above. PROBLEMS: Capital structure i. If the pro forma balance sheet shows that total assets must increase by P400,000 while retaining a debt- equity ratio of .75 then: A. debt must increase by P300,000. B. equity must increase by the full P400,000. C. debt must increase by P171,428. D. equity must increase by P100,000. Optimal capital budget ii. Absolute Corporation has a capital structure that consists of 65% equity and 35% debt. The company expects to report P100 million in net income this year, and 67.5% of the net income will be paid out as dividends. How large can the firm's capital budget be this year without it having to include the cost of new common stock in its cost of capital analysis? A. P100.0 million C. P 50.0 million B. P 67.5 million D. P 32.5 million Dividend per share iii. The Salvage Company projects the following for the upcoming year: Earnings before interest and taxes P40 million Interest expense P 5 million Preferred stock dividends P 4 million Common stock dividend payout ratio 20% Average number of common shares outstanding 2 million Effective corporate income tax rate 40% The expected dividend per share of common stock is A. P1.70 C. P2. B. P1.86 D. P1. Required cash flow before tax iv. How much will a firm need in cash flow before tax and interest to satisfy debt holders and equity holders if the tax rate is 40%, there is P10 million in common stock requiring a 12% return, and P million in bonds requiring an 8% return? A. P1,392,000 C. P2,480, B. P1,488,000 D. P2,800, Weighted average cost of capital v. The Dumaguete Co. has an equity cost of capital of 17%. The debt to equity ratio is 1.5 and a cost of debt is 11%. What is the weighted average cost of capital of the firm? (Assume a tax rate of 33%) A. 3.06% C. 16.97% B. 13.40% D. 15.52% Retained earnings breakpoint vi. During the past five years, Pena Company had consistently paid 50% of earnings available to common as dividends. Next year, the Pena Company projects its net income, before the P1.2 million preferred dividends, at P6 million. The capital structure for the company is maintained at: Debt 25.5% Preferred stock 15.0% Common equity 60.0% What is the retained earnings break-point next year? A. P5,760,000 C. P4,000, B. P4,800,000 D. P6,000, vii. Balon Company expects P30 million in earnings next year. Its dividend payout ratio is 40 percent, and its equity to asset ratio is 40 percent. Balon Company uses no preferred stock. At what amount of financing will there be a break point in Balon’s cost of capital? A. P45 million C. P30 million B. P20 million D. P18 million Degree of Financial Leverage viii. Calculate the DFL for a firm with EBIT of P6,000,000, fixed cost of P3,000,000, interest expense of P1,000,000, preferred stock dividends of 800,000, and a 40 percent tax rate. A. 6.0 C. 1. B. 9.0 D. 1. Sensitivity analysis ix. A firm is expected to generate P1.5 million in operating income and pay P250,000 in interest. Ignoring taxes, this will generate P12.50 earnings per share. What will happen to EPS if operating income increases to P2.0 million? A. EPS increase to P15.63. C. EPS increase to P17.50. B. EPS increase to P16.67. D. EPS increase to P20.00. x. The board of directors of Aggressive Company was unhappy with the current return on common equity. Though the return on sales (profit margin) was impressively good at 12.5 percent, the asset turnover v (^). Answer: B

Accounts payable P 1,000, Notes payable 1,200, Total current liabilities 2,200, Long-term liabilities 2,380, Total liabilities P 4,580, Common stock (1,200,000 shares at P1 par) P 1,200, Capital in excess of par 2,800, Retained earnings 4,220, Total stockholders' equity 8,220, Total liabilities and stockholders' equity P12,800, The new public offering will be at 10 times the earnings per share. xiii. Assume that 500,000 new corporate shares will be issued to the general public. What will earnings per share immediately after the public offering be? A. P1.02 C. P1. B. P1.44 D. P1. xiv. Based on the price-earnings ratio of 10, what will the initial price of the stock be? A. P14.40 C. P10. B. P11.90 D. P15. xv. Assuming an underwriting spread of 7 percent and out-of-pocket costs of P150,000, what will net proceeds to the corporation be? A. P4,743,000 C. P4,950, B. P4,593,000 D. P5,307, xvi. What return must the corporation earn on the net proceeds to equal the earnings per share before the offering? A. 16.18% C. 15.68% B. 16.58% D. 15.98% xvii. Assume that, of the initial 500,000-share distribution, 250,000 shares belong to current stockholders and 250,000 are new corporate shares, and these will be added to the 1,200,000 corporate shares currently outstanding. What will the initial market price of the stock be? Assume a price-earnings ratio of 10 and use earnings per share after the distribution in the calculation. A. P10.90 C. P10. B. P11.90 D. P12. xi (^). Answer: A Net income 7,500, Financing required from equity 6M x 0.6 3,600, Residual earnings for dividends 3,900, Payout ratio: 3,900,000/7,500,000 52% xii (^). Answer: C xviii. Assuming an underwriter spread of 7 percent and out-of-pocket costs of P150,000, what return must the corporation earn on the net proceeds to equal earnings per share before the offering? A. 13.50% C. 15.68% B. 13.76% D. 14.57%

Capital structure: Debt: 1.5 ÷ (1 + 1.5) 60.0% Equity: 100% - 60% 40.0% WCCD (0.6 x 11%) 6.6% WCCE (0.4 x 17%) 6.8% Weighted average cost of capital 13.4% vi (^). Answer: C Available earnings to Common 6M – 1.2M 4.8 M Retained income 4.8M x .5 2.4 M Retained earnings Breakpoint 2.4 M ÷ 0.6 P4,000, Retained earnings breakpoint refers to the maximum amount of funds or financing required whereby there is no need to issue common shares. vii (^). Answer: A Expected earnings 30.0 million Deduct dividends (30M x 0.4) 12.0 million Increase in retained earnings 18.0 million Breakpoint: 18.0M ÷ 0.4 45.0 million viii (^). Answer: D Earnings before interest P6,000, Interest 1,000, Preferred Dividends (800,000/0.6) 1,333,333 2,333, Earnings after preferred dividends (before taxes) P3,666, DFL (6M ÷ 3,666,667) 1. For every 10 percent change in EBIT, EPS changes by 16.4 percent (10% x 1.64). Adding financial leverage to operating leverage increases the total risk of a company. ix (^). Answer: C Increase in Earnings after tax: (1,750,000 – 1,250,000) 500, Percentage increase: (500,000  1,250,000) 40 percent New EPS: 12.50 + (12.50 x 0.40) 17.50%

The Debt to Equity Ratio is 0.4 to 1 RE + 0.40RE = P12,000, RE = P12,000,000 ÷ 1. RE = P 8,571, Available Retained Earnings for Dividends: (P10,000,000 – P8,571,429) = P1,428, xiii (^). Answer: A EPS = Net income ÷ No. of common shares outstanding: 1,728,000 ÷ (1,200,000 + 500,000) = P1. xiv (^). Answer: C Initial market price = P/E ratio x EPS = (10 x 1.02) = P10. xv (^). Answer: B Gross proceeds (500,000 x 10.20) 5,100, Less: Spread (7%) 357, Out-of-pocket expenses 150,000 507, Net proceeds to the corporation 4,593, xvi (^). Answer: C EPS before initial offering: (1,728,000 ÷ 1,200,000) 1. Required earnings: (1,700,000 x 1.44) 2,448, Earnings prior to initial offering 1,728, Earnings required on additional funds 720, Required percentage returns on net proceeds of new offering (720,000 ÷ 4,593,000) 15.68% xvii (^). Answer: B EPS immediately after initial offering: (1,728,000 ÷ 1,450,000) P1. Market price: (10 x 1.19) P11. xviii (^). Answer: B Required earnings: (1,450,000 x 1.44) 2,088,

Less Prior earnings 1,728, Required earnings on new issues 360, Gross proceeds (250,000 x 11.90) 2,975, Less: Spread (7%) 208, Out-of-pocket costs 150,000 358, Net proceeds 2,616, Required percentage returns on net proceeds from new public offering (360,000 ÷ 2,616,750) 13.76%