Effects of financial Leverage: The use of leverage results
in two obvious effects:
- Increasing the shareholders earning under favorable economic
conditions, and
- Increasing the financial risk of the firm. Suppose there
are two companies each having a Rs. 1,00,000 capital structure.
One company has borrowed half of its investment while the
other company has only equity capital: Both earn Rs. 2,00,000
profit. The ratio of interest on the borrowed capital is
10%and the rate of corporate tax 50%. Let us calculate the
effect of financial leverage, both in the shareholders earnings
and the Company's financial risk in these two companies.
(a) Effect of Leverage on Shareholders
Earnings:
|
|
|
Company A
Rs. |
|
Company B
Rs. |
|
Profit before Interest and
Taxes |
2,00,000 |
2,00,000 |
|
Equity |
10,00,000 |
5,00,000 |
|
Debt |
---- |
5,00,000 |
|
Interest (10%) |
---- |
50,000 |
|
Profit after interest but
before Tax |
2,00,000 |
1,50,000 |
|
Taxes @ 50% |
1,00,000 |
75,000 |
Rate of return on Equity of Company A Rs. 1,00,000/Rs. 10,00,000
= 10%
Rate of return on Equity of Company B Rs. 75,000/Rs. 5,00,000
= 15%
The above illustration points to the favorable effect of
the leverage factor on earnings of shareholders. The concept
of leverage is 5 if one can earn more on the borrowed money
that it costs but detrimental to the man who fails to do so
far there is such a thing as a negative leverage i.e. borrowing
money at 10% to find that, it can earn 5%. The difference
comes out of the shareholders equity so leverage can be a
double-edged sword.
(b) Effect of Leverage on the financial risk of the company:
Financial risk broadly defined includes both the risk
of possible insolvency and the changes in the earnings available
to equity shareholders. How does the leverage factor leads
to the risk possible insolvency is self-explanatory. As defined
earlier the inclusion of more and more debt in capital structure
leads to increased fixed commitment charges on the part of
the firm as the firm continues to lever itself, the changes
of cash insolvency leading' to legal bankruptcy increase because
the financial 'charges incurred, by the firm exceed the expected
earnings. Obviously this leads to fluctuations in earnings'
available to the equity shareholders.
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