Question

Break-Even EBIT and Leverage Kolby Corp. is comparing two different capital structures. Plan I would result in 900 shares of stock and \$65,700 in debt. Plan II would result in 1,900 shares of stock and $\$ 29,200$ in debt. The interest rate on the debt is 10 percent. a. Ignoring taxes, compare both of these plans to an all-equity plan assuming that EBIT will be $\$ 8,500$. The all-equity plan would result in 2,700 shares of stock outstanding. Which of the three plans has the highest EPS? The lowest? b. In part (a) what are the break-even levels of EBIT for each plan as compared to that for an all-equity plan? Is one higher than the other? Why? c. Ignoring taxes, when will EPS be identical for Plans I and II? d. Repeat parts (a), (b), and (c) assuming that the corporate tax rate is 40 percent. Are the break-even levels of EBIT different from before? Why or why not?

   Break-Even EBIT and Leverage Kolby Corp. is comparing two different capital structures. Plan I would result in 900 shares of stock and \$65,700 in debt. Plan II would result in 1,900 shares of stock and $\$ 29,200$ in debt. The interest rate on the debt is 10 percent.
a. Ignoring taxes, compare both of these plans to an all-equity plan assuming that EBIT will be $\$ 8,500$. The all-equity plan would result in 2,700 shares of stock outstanding. Which of the three plans has the highest EPS? The lowest?
b. In part (a) what are the break-even levels of EBIT for each plan as compared to that for an all-equity plan? Is one higher than the other? Why?
c. Ignoring taxes, when will EPS be identical for Plans I and II?
d. Repeat parts (a), (b), and (c) assuming that the corporate tax rate is 40 percent. Are the break-even levels of EBIT different from before? Why or why not?
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Corporate Finance
Corporate Finance
Stephen Ross,… 10th Edition
Chapter 16, Problem 6 ↓

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Step 1

To compare the EPS for each plan, we need to calculate the earnings available to shareholders for each plan. For Plan I: EBIT = $8,500 Interest expense = $65,700 * 10% = $6,570 Earnings before taxes (EBT) = EBIT - Interest expense = $8,500 - $6,570 =  Show more…

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Break-Even EBIT and Leverage Kolby Corp. is comparing two different capital structures. Plan I would result in 900 shares of stock and \$65,700 in debt. Plan II would result in 1,900 shares of stock and $\$ 29,200$ in debt. The interest rate on the debt is 10 percent. a. Ignoring taxes, compare both of these plans to an all-equity plan assuming that EBIT will be $\$ 8,500$. The all-equity plan would result in 2,700 shares of stock outstanding. Which of the three plans has the highest EPS? The lowest? b. In part (a) what are the break-even levels of EBIT for each plan as compared to that for an all-equity plan? Is one higher than the other? Why? c. Ignoring taxes, when will EPS be identical for Plans I and II? d. Repeat parts (a), (b), and (c) assuming that the corporate tax rate is 40 percent. Are the break-even levels of EBIT different from before? Why or why not?
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