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Principles of Finance: Unit 3, Tax Deduction Math 4 Views
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Description:
How do corporate tax deductions work? Like... what sort of expenses can they deduct, and for how much? Paging Uncle Sam...
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop. tax deduction math. alright with this
- 00:07
light introduction to taxes let's work through a corporate leverage problem. [girl holds tax textbook in school hallway]
- 00:12
sounds fun you know to the guys in thick glasses in the front row. and here's our
- 00:16
lemonade stands our US company, a wildly successful decade later.
- 00:21
all right the company has in our very theoretical example here no cash and no
Full Transcript
- 00:26
debt. you the wily CEO wonder gee whiz what if we bought lemonade lovers for
- 00:33
fifteen billion we'd be really big we'd get cheaper prices for our cups and
- 00:38
sugar and rent and be the brand in lemonade. well because you took this
- 00:43
course on Finance from your fine loving people at shmoop here you can easily do
- 00:48
the math. pro forma doesn't mean you get paid making a living as a former. pro
- 00:53
forma means combined. so all this would be great if you could use a high [pro forma explained]
- 00:58
multiple stock of your own to buy them. but your stock trades at only ten times
- 01:02
earnings and to be bought they want 20 times their earnings .you would suffer
- 01:07
huge dilution if you used your own stock. if you pay cash well they'll take a
- 01:12
lower multiple. 15 ish times earnings well cash always has less risk obviously
- 01:17
than stock, so you try to figure out how you can raise fifteen billion dollars of
- 01:22
cash. we've been through the basics of Investment Banking 101, but here the
- 01:26
focus is on free cash flow and debt repayment. so let's dream a little dream
- 01:31
and say we borrow all fifteen billion dollars in cash. well some idiot or
- 01:36
visionary is willing to loan us all that money for the leveraged buyout of
- 01:41
lemonade lovers and charge us five percent interest on the loan. yes we are
- 01:46
massively simplifying here. Throeau has nothing on us. quick math tells us that [Henry David Thoreau pictured]
- 01:51
five percent interest on fifteen billion dollars is seven hundred fifty million
- 01:55
dollars a year of interest. but that interest will shrink as we pay down our
- 01:59
principal, right? and we know that if we can swing year one and start to really
- 02:04
pay down that principal, well this LBO for leveraged buyout should work great.
- 02:09
so let's look at year one right here well look how different things compare
- 02:12
here with the first iteration with no debt. in the no debt scenario we were
- 02:18
paying 420 million dollars in taxes. now we're paying just a hundred ninety five
- 02:24
million, because interest is deductible from taxes. the government essentially
- 02:29
split our interest costs with us. nice of them and in doing so it made the LBO [uncle sam asks for more taxes]
- 02:33
work mathematically. you can assume that most of the net income of four hundred
- 02:38
fifty five million there is free cash, and our lemonade business has very
- 02:42
little capital expenditures which would cloud the net income a versus free cash
- 02:46
flow story, so in year one we can take say four hundred million dollars of our
- 02:51
free cash and pay down our debt principle to just fourteen point six
- 02:56
billion. well in year two with less principle to pay down our interest
- 03:00
expenses go down, and by year five we're sitting pretty fat and happy even
- 03:04
assuming no growth or additional synergies from the merger that we just
- 03:08
did here it's an acquisition, and note that we only included a relatively small
- 03:13
expense savings of two hundred million dollars by way of being able to buy our [spreadsheet showing expenses before and after merger]
- 03:16
supplies a bit cheaper with huge wal-mart like scale and the lemonade biz.
- 03:21
it's likely that there are more savings we'll be able to find and more revenue
- 03:25
growth opportunities to be had as well. [fizzy lemonade next to regular lemonade pictured on a shelf]
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