Breakeven Analysis and Financial Leverage Effects, Summaries of Finance

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Breakeven Analysis: A company's fixed operating costs are $500,000, its variable costs
are $3.00 per unit, and the product's sales price is $4.00. What is the company's
breakeven point; that is, at what unit sales volume will its income equal its costs?
BEP = Fixed Costs / Unit Contribution Margin
= $500,000 / ($4-$3)
= 500,000 units
Financial Leverage effects. Firms HL and LL are identical except for their leverage ratios
and the interest rates they pay on debt. Each has $20 million in assests, has $4 million of
EBIT, and is in the 40% federal-plus-state-tax bracket. Firm HL, however, has a debt
ratio and pays only 10% interest on its debt.
A. Calculate the rate of return on equity(ROE) for each firm.
LL: D/TA = 30%.
EBIT $4,000,000
Interest ($6,000,000
F 0
B 4 0.10) 600,000
EBT $3,400,000
Tax (40%) 1,360,000
Net income $2,040,000
Return on equity = $2,040,000/$14,000,000 = 14.6%.
HL: D/TA = 50%.
EBIT $4,000,000
Interest ($10,000,000
F 0
B 4 0.12) 1,200,000
EBT $2,800,000
Tax (40%) 1,120,000
Net income $1,680,000
Return on equity = $1,680,000/$10,000,000 = 16.8%.
B. Observing that HL has a higher ROE, LL's treasurer is thinking of raising the debt
ratio from 30% to 60% even though that would increase LL's interest rate on all debt to
15% . Calcuate the new ROE for LL.
LL: D/TA = 60%.
EBIT $4,000,000
Interest ($12,000,000
F 0
B 4 0.15) 1,800,000
EBT $2,200,000
Tax (40%) 880,000
Net income $1,320,000
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Breakeven Analysis: A company's fixed operating costs are $500,000, its variable costs

are $3.00 per unit, and the product's sales price is $4.00. What is the company's breakeven point; that is, at what unit sales volume will its income equal its costs?

BEP = Fixed Costs / Unit Contribution Margin

= 500,000 units

Financial Leverage effects. Firms HL and LL are identical except for their leverage ratios and the interest rates they pay on debt. Each has $20 million in assests, has $4 million of EBIT, and is in the 40% federal-plus-state-tax bracket. Firm HL, however, has a debt ratio and pays only 10% interest on its debt.

A. Calculate the rate of return on equity(ROE) for each firm.

LL: D/TA = 30%.

EBIT $4,000, Interest ($6,000,000 F 0B 4 0.10)^ 600, EBT $3,400, Tax (40%) 1,360, Net income $2,040,

Return on equity = $2,040,000/$14,000,000 = 14.6%.

HL: D/TA = 50%.

EBIT $4,000,

Interest ($10,000,000 F 0B 4 0.12)^ 1,200, EBT $2,800, Tax (40%) 1,120, Net income $1,680,

Return on equity = $1,680,000/$10,000,000 = 16.8%.

B. Observing that HL has a higher ROE, LL's treasurer is thinking of raising the debt ratio from 30% to 60% even though that would increase LL's interest rate on all debt to 15%. Calcuate the new ROE for LL.

LL: D/TA = 60%.

EBIT $4,000,

Interest ($12,000,000 F 0B 4 0.15) 1,800, EBT $2,200, Tax (40%) 880, Net income $1,320,

Return on equity = $1,320,000/$8,000,000 = 16.5%.

Although LL’s return on equity is higher than it was at the 30% leverage ratio, it is lower than the 16.8% return of HL.

Initially, as leverage is increased, the return on equity also increases. But, the interest rate rises when leverage is increased. Therefore, the return on equity will reach a maximum and then decline.