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Principles of Finance: Unit 4, Debt Drivers 4 Views
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Description:
What are debt drivers, and do they charge less than Uber? Uh, no. We're talking stuff like pre-tax cash profits and assets.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance Ah la shmoop det drivers All right
- 00:07
dad Well it's Never a good thing if you're still
- 00:09
talking about it on your credit card post black friday
- 00:12
But you know it happens to all of us when
- 00:15
it comes to business Debt is complicated So it takes
Full Transcript
- 00:18
some time to look at some of the most important
- 00:19
drivers of debt No Besides the release of the new
- 00:23
nintendo console that it's us personally every year All right
- 00:26
so our dead driver numero uno is pretax cash profits
- 00:32
So that's cash flow before tax it's just you know
- 00:36
our profits before it's pay the may and the team
- 00:38
and the government All right Well this number is a
- 00:40
proxy for ebitda or earnings before interest taxes depreciation amortization
- 00:45
called kind of cash flow Er adjusted cash flow here
- 00:48
So remember how interest is deductible from taxes Yeah very
- 00:53
important concept here because relates directly to the net cost
- 00:57
of renting money when we borrow it Okay That's a
- 01:00
big driver of dead and that's The reason we look
- 01:03
att pretax cash profits rather than earnings or really anything
- 01:08
else when we think about debt levels because if we
- 01:10
look at it pretax We get a better sense for
- 01:13
what our net cost is going to because that interest
- 01:15
our rent's gonna be deductible from our taxes Alright we're
- 01:18
also highly sensitive too cash earning since banks don't usually
- 01:22
take as interest payment a few percent depreciation of a
- 01:26
tractor smelting plant theyjust want cash right that rent new
- 01:29
money they just want cash Okay so when we think
- 01:32
about debt levels the first place we go to figure
- 01:34
things out is the cash flow statement Remember whose king
- 01:38
Yeah cash so cash profits then get used to pay
- 01:42
interest on a given loan Let's say we're hungry to
- 01:48
buy back one of our own stock because we're really
- 01:51
bullish on our prospects for the next four years of
- 01:54
business And we think the market is a bunch of
- 01:56
morons to be selling our stock at just ten times
- 01:59
earnings Right now we have no debt and no cash
- 02:01
at the moment In this theoretical example of a hundred
- 02:04
million dollars of pre tax cash earnings xing out depreciation
- 02:07
and amortization our banker has told us that if we
- 02:10
borrow less than a red line amount of debt meaning
- 02:13
an enormous amount so that it's risky well we'll pay
- 02:15
six percent of interest Redline is code for too much
- 02:19
borrow less basically that's what red line tells you so
- 02:22
one big ratio we have to worry about is times
- 02:25
interests covered and that's not from the magazine on the
- 02:28
multiple of interest being covered So let's say we borrow
- 02:32
three times ebitda or three hundred million dollars at six
- 02:35
percent interest Well that's eighteen million dollars a year in
- 02:39
interest costs payable in cash all happily deductible So since
- 02:44
we pay thirty percent corporate income tax well that six
- 02:48
percent feels on an after tax basis like it's four
- 02:52
point two percent You see there's all our math their
- 02:54
fancy All right you have a hundred million dollars in
- 02:56
pretax cash earnings this year at eighteen million dollars of
- 03:00
interest We have one hundred divided by eighteen equals five
- 03:04
point five Five x or five five times interest coverage
- 03:08
Probably awesome and very easy to cover with very little
- 03:11
risk that will go bankrupt with just three times dead
- 03:14
Teo even dot leverage But there are ways in which
- 03:17
this can get dicey What if we had tto have
- 03:20
ten billion dollars in revenue I earned that hundred million
- 03:23
dollars like we're a really low margin business Only one
- 03:27
percent margin like newspaper poll Well if this is good
- 03:31
times and our margins get cut to half a percent
- 03:34
in bad times or if revenues declined five percent margins
- 03:38
turned highly negative Well then we'd be sunk Yeah key
- 03:41
concept You can't look att any of these numbers in
- 03:44
a vacuum They always have to be placed in context
- 03:46
of the business being run and low margin businesses When
- 03:50
times get bad off lose a lot of money so
- 03:53
they are not appropriate usually For dead same deal with
- 03:56
highly volatile companies Okay so let's think about us stable
- 04:00
reliable company wealthy odds that people stopped next year drinking
- 04:04
coca cola or watching tv or downloading You know art
- 04:09
films from the internet are really low same deal with
- 04:13
people not gassing up their cars or needing health care
- 04:16
or electricity Very steady reliable high margin generally speaking industries
- 04:22
And not surprisingly those industries tend to carry a lot
- 04:25
of debt Well the opposite is true for the highly
- 04:28
cyclical industries like the manufacture of semiconductors automobiles washing machines
- 04:34
and vanity surgery If there was a publicly traded thing
- 04:37
well generally speaking debt teo even ratios of three or
- 04:40
less are relatively safe And carrie relatively low interest cost
- 04:45
to rent that money because investors feel pretty sure the
- 04:47
money will get paid back along with principal on time
- 04:50
as promised ratios over seven acts are generally kissing bankruptcy
- 04:55
unless there is some very special situation involved All right
- 04:58
moving on Our next major debt driver is assets that
- 05:02
his company assets the stuff the company owns like land
- 05:05
building patents that kind of stuff So in the first
- 05:08
example we focus on the ability of the company to
- 05:09
pay the interest on the loan in cash Paying down
- 05:12
principle is a good thing as well But many companies
- 05:15
with steady profits tended Just leave principle on the books
- 05:18
and used the quote excess unquote cash to buy back
- 05:21
stock or by competitors or do other smart financial things
- 05:24
with the dough But if things go really awry and
- 05:27
the company had toe liquidate itself or part of itself
- 05:31
i'ii selling off parts and then get those who loaned
- 05:34
it the money their principal back plus interest Well then
- 05:37
the amount of assets the company has is a big
- 05:40
deal right They can sell off a jet engine division
- 05:43
get a lot of cash for it and then pay
- 05:45
back debt holders So the rest of the companies well
- 05:48
balance sheet to do just fine It's also a big
- 05:51
deal Is that how those assets are pounded for when
- 05:54
they get sold off that fish tank the secretary bought
- 05:57
for twenty five grand in the lobby Was the company
- 05:59
carrying it at book value A twenty five thousand dollars
- 06:03
Did it depreciate the tank Five thousand dollars a year
- 06:06
each year So now the net book value is five
- 06:08
grand after four years Or does the company really think
- 06:11
that it would net twenty five thousand dollars in revenue
- 06:14
to the company for that fish tank If the secretary
- 06:17
put it on ebay and sold it you know even
- 06:20
if they clean off the algae and get rid of
- 06:21
that smell Yeah it's probably worth almost nothing anyway Should
- 06:25
an asset liquidation be needed the quote debt ratio or
- 06:29
total debt over total asset is a big ratio we
- 06:33
really care about Simply put these air both current and
- 06:37
long term debts and current and long term assets Okay
- 06:40
so in a liquidation event everything is on sale and
- 06:44
how easily or not Easily it is to sell off
- 06:47
a little asset here And there is a big deal
- 06:49
so it's worth looking at alright but an asset sell
- 06:52
off his only one half of the light that the
- 06:54
debt ratio shines on things The other half revolves around
- 06:58
how the company is capitalized Meaning Did the company rely
- 07:01
on debt or on equity Tofu fund its operations and
- 07:05
infrastructure build What does that mean Well in this case
- 07:08
you have to look at a few things but the
- 07:09
basic idea is this Does the company have a lot
- 07:12
of debt relative to shareholder equity In the subtext there
- 07:16
is the company's operations Were they profitable Did they generate
- 07:20
cash that the company rich chained and called equity Or
- 07:24
did they just kind of borrow their way to prosperity
- 07:27
So how does all that work Well this ratio is
- 07:30
a loose litmus test for whether or not the company's
- 07:32
properly capitalized to do things it is supposed to dio
- 07:35
And generally speaking the more leveraged iii has more debt
- 07:39
that a company is the more volatile it is in
- 07:41
good times it does better in bad times It does
- 07:43
waris versus a company with lower levels of debt on
- 07:46
the balance sheet And the ratio you'll focus on in
- 07:48
this zone is the debt ratio Yeah Shockingly named which
- 07:52
is just total death divided by total assets And wow
- 07:56
things can go badly when they do go badly Let's
- 07:59
take a gander at what is life likely to be
- 08:01
one of the greater bankruptcies in private equity history in
- 08:04
clear channel communications Well this company used to be one
- 08:08
of the dominant premiere radio Broadcasters in the world for
- 08:12
the first thing of interest here is just the story
- 08:14
company used to borrow tons and tons and tons of
- 08:17
debt They bought competitive radio stations and raised rates and
- 08:21
everything was great when everyone was still listening to the
- 08:23
radio but well then they stop They started talking on
- 08:27
the cell phone and they started listening to premium x
- 08:30
m satellite and the value of all those terrestrial radio
- 08:33
station licenses Well pretty much went to nothing but the
- 08:36
radio Station's lost listeners and couldn't charge advertisers much money
- 08:40
for listening in Yeah so that's what happened So yeah
- 08:44
ratings went down and down and down and down and
- 08:46
all of a sudden a thirty second drive time spot
- 08:48
which used to sell for three hundred fifty dollars now
- 08:51
could barely be given away for two hundred dollars but
- 08:54
on its own Actually that wouldn't have been the end
- 08:56
of the world How well in its day radio was
- 08:58
a spectacularly good business Here's how it worked You'd get
- 09:02
a sales guy to put on a coat and tie
- 09:04
and meet with some nice little old ladies in your
- 09:06
city and tell them all about the country music you
- 09:09
loved and wanted to play along with the sunday morning
- 09:11
church service you wanted to broadcast from pastor pete all
- 09:15
free on your nickel you'd set up the recording thing
- 09:18
with pastor tape it and broadcast it for free The
- 09:21
old ladies with kibitz and they'd give you a green
- 09:23
light to go through the fcc process of receiving a
- 09:25
license to be one of the seven radio stations in
- 09:27
their market that served fifty thousand people You'd spend a
- 09:30
million box putting up an antenna or buying the already
- 09:33
existing one from the guy who died who's ninety seven
- 09:36
point three on the dial that you were taking you
- 09:38
get one form or another of a music player either
- 09:41
records or seedy ron back then or whatever and he'd
- 09:44
play music for forty eight minutes and have ads for
- 09:46
twelve A decent station would have two million dollars in
- 09:49
expenses and twelve million dollars in revenues in a given
- 09:52
year in a smaller market ten million dollars of gross
- 09:55
profit And this was when there were seven competitors in
- 09:57
a market in the laws change and everyone bought each
- 10:00
other using a whole lot Of a debt to do
- 10:01
so and the markets boiled down to well basically the
- 10:04
old cbs radio which was infinity and clear channel and
- 10:08
the duopoly raised prices like coke and pepsi The increased
- 10:11
ads from twelve minutes to twenty minutes and wow they
- 10:15
coined money for a few years that twelve million dollars
- 10:17
in revenues became twenty million while expenses like commissions just
- 10:21
doubled So what went from two to four So twenty
- 10:24
million moneys for sixteen million here in gross profits so
- 10:27
always great right Well when the company's bought each other
- 10:29
they took on tons of dead because they didn't want
- 10:32
dilution from their equity ownership and they paid prices on
- 10:35
each other that we're high So a typical station if
- 10:38
you unit ties the numbers or made him injust a
- 10:41
bollock art one station they were buying at twenty million
- 10:44
in revenues to four million really of expenses and a
- 10:47
hundred million dollars of dead at and percent interest And
- 10:49
yes debt was more expensive back then that said things
- 10:52
worked just fine for a while On eighteen million dollars
- 10:55
of pre tax free cash low the ten million dollars
- 10:59
a year in interest was just fine to pay even
- 11:01
if it had only been sixteen and they'd have four
- 11:02
million of expensive whatever didn't matter they could pay down
- 11:05
a lot of the dead along the way All right
- 11:07
well we roll the clock forward Five years and radio
- 11:10
has begun its decline It's two thousand five or so
- 11:13
and the twenty million of revenues that was a layup
- 11:15
is now fourteen on its way to ten and management
- 11:18
knows that next year it'll be thirteen and then twelve
- 11:21
and eleven and ten Yeah that's how they're going to
- 11:23
go But even on fourteen million with a few million
- 11:25
in expenses the company makes enough to pay its bills
- 11:27
principles down to ninety million at this point in ten
- 11:30
percent all that's nine million and interest still plenty of
- 11:32
cushion And oh by the way with all this interest
- 11:35
none of these companies had to pay any taxes during
- 11:37
this era They weren't technically profitable but you get the
- 11:40
idea Roll a clock forward five more years and not
- 11:42
only is their cellphone ubiquity but except satellite has taken
- 11:46
over the world and other internet streaming things while they
- 11:49
take over management of the car in radio basically dies
- 11:53
well clear channel survives today it isn't yet bankrupt but
- 11:56
it's worth watching because vultures hawks and other scavengers are
- 11:58
hovering over the assets other than the quotes dick unquote
- 12:02
value or radio broadcast station itself there really no assets
- 12:05
in radio They don't own the music they just lease
- 12:08
it There is a notional brand value of k f
- 12:11
r c you're k f o g or ko emi
- 12:13
like radio stations popular in silicon valley but if incrementally
- 12:16
fewer people are listening to them well then what's that
- 12:18
really worth in an asset sale You know well the
- 12:22
spectrum on which the radio stations broadcast probably were something
- 12:25
that's probably an asset maybe something meaningful but it isn't
- 12:28
owned by the radio broadcaster It is leased to them
- 12:31
by the government for a small amount of money for
- 12:33
cycles three to five years long when it then gets
- 12:35
re evaluated by the government so the station can't sell
- 12:38
something it doesn't own And why wouldn't the government take
- 12:41
it back anyway of station isn't using it anyway Ugly
- 12:44
situation unclear asset sales super smart people loaned them a
- 12:48
ton of money and super smart people run the company
- 12:50
but yes caveat emptor bad things happen to good people
- 12:54
all the time Life as an investor or professional lender
- 12:57
is not for those with a mindset of wanting a
- 12:59
safe secure existence The other big debt ratio that gets
- 13:02
called upon by nervous nellie bond investors is the debt
- 13:05
to equity ratio which is simply total debt divided by
- 13:08
total equity iii that shareholders retained equity thing on the
- 13:12
balance sheet right They're the most pragmatic of the debt
- 13:15
coverage ratios is thie times interest covered ratio which is
- 13:19
operating profits divided by interest expense and it's a reflection
- 13:23
of how easily the company's cash can pay the interest
- 13:26
expense on its debt Why do you do it before
- 13:28
tax Well remember here in the beginning we talked about
- 13:31
this interest is tax deductible So if you had a
- 13:34
year where your company had a hundred million dollars in
- 13:36
operating profits and no debt well out of thirty percent
- 13:39
corporate rate you'd pay thirty million dollars in taxes Next
- 13:42
year you take out two billion in debt at five
- 13:44
percent and pay interest on ly while youto two billion
- 13:47
dollars times five percent or one hundred million bucks in
- 13:49
interest if you still had operating profits of a hundred
- 13:52
million dollars youto zero taxes Why we repeat because interest
- 13:56
costs are tax deductible fully The basic idea is that
- 14:00
if you have a large multiple of interest costs in
- 14:03
the form of operating profits you should be in good
- 14:06
shape to pay the interest on your debt and live
- 14:08
to fight another day But be careful The same deal
- 14:11
doesn't apply to your credit card so keep it cool
- 14:14
pal That mega ultra big screen will just have to 00:14:17.302 --> [endTime] wait for next christmas Oh
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