1 CHAPTER 19 Lease Financing. 2 Parties to a lease transaction Lessee: uses the asset and makes the lease payments. Lessor: owns the asset and receives.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Leasing Chapter Twenty-Six.
Advertisements

Copyright © 2002 Harcourt, Inc.All rights reserved. Types of leases Tax treatment of leases Effects on financial statements Lessees analysis Lessors.
Introduction Leasing and hire purchase are financial facilities which allow a business to use an asset over a fixed period, in return for regular payments.
PowerPoint Presentation prepared by Traven Reed Canadore College.
Types of leases Tax treatment of leases Effects on financial statements Lessee’s analysis Lessor’s analysis Other issues in lease analysis CHAPTER.
3-1 CHAPTER 3 Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes Balance sheet Income statement Statement of cash flows Accounting income vs. cash flow EVA Federal.
1 Leases. What is a Lease? A lease is a contract where the lessor agrees to let the lessee use their asset in exchange for compensation  Lessee: Needs.
CAPITAL BUDGETING AND LEASING Chapter 4. Investment The addition of durable assets to a business Disinvestment is the withdrawal of durable assets from.
1 CHAPTER 18 Lease Financing. 2 Topics in Chapter Types of leases Tax treatment of leases Effects on financial statements Lessee’s analysis Lessor’s analysis.
On Leasing Adapted from Fundamentals of Corporate Finance RWJR, Fourth Canadian Edition.
ADAPTED FOR THE SECOND CANADIAN EDITION BY: THEORY & PRACTICE JIMMY WANG LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved CHAPTER15CHAPTER15 CHAPTER15CHAPTER15 Financing Corporate Real Estate.
Key Concepts and Skills
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 26 Leasing.
Copyright © 2003 McGraw Hill Ryerson Limited 22-1 prepared by: Carol Edwards BA, MBA, CFA Instructor, Finance British Columbia Institute of Technology.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Chapter Three Opportunity Cost of Capital and of Capital and Capital Budgeting.
Unless otherwise noted, the content of this course material is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.
Financial Reporting for Leases
Leasing.
Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Lease Analysis A contract between two parties called lessor and lessee, whereby lessee gets the right to use an asset provided by the lessor in return.
0 Buying versus Leasing BuyLease Firm U buys asset and uses asset; financed by debt and equity. Lessor buys asset, Firm U leases it. Manufacturer of asset.
MANAGEMENT DECISIONS AND FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING REPORTS Baginski & Hassell.
1 Lecture 12 - Lease Financing. The two parties to a lease transaction The lessee, who uses the asset and makes the lease, or rental, payments. The lessor,
 Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Vessel Financing Choices for Ferry Operators.
Leasing Chapter 27 McGraw-Hill/Irwin
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Leasing Chapter Twenty-Two Prepared by Anne Inglis, Ryerson University.
FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab.
Overview of Statement of Cash Flows
Long-Term Financing. Basics of Long-Term Financing.
Chapter 22: Accounting for Leases
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Leasing Chapter Twenty-Two Prepared by Anne Inglis, Ryerson University.
26-0 Lease Terminology Lease – contractual agreement for use of an asset in return for a series of payments Lessee – user of an asset; makes payments Lessor.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Corporate Finance, 7/e © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved CHAPTER 21 Introduction to Corporate Finance.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Corporate Finance Ross  Westerfield  Jaffe Sixth Edition.
®2002 Prentice Hall Publishing 1 Chapter 18 Lease Financing.
Lecture 5 Buy or Lease 課程重點 再看一個投資方案的評估 Buy or lease –The financing decision –A lease is a debt –with tax –using a risk-adjusted discount rate –Risk considerations.
Chapter 20 Hybrid financing: preferred stock, warrants, & convertibles
© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter  Operating Leases ◦ Need to compare the equivalent annual cost of buying the asset versus the annual lease.
Lecture 12 Lease Financing. It has emerged as a supplementary source of financing. Increase in off-balance sheet methods of financing. Increase in scope.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Acct Chapter 211 Accounting for Leases Leases are becoming a very important way for businesses to acquire productive assets. They allow for some.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting
Leasing A lease is a contractual agreement whereby one party grants the other party the right to use the asset in return for a periodic payment.
Chapter 21 – Lease Analysis -- Terms u Lessee u The person using the asset u Lessor. u The person who owns the asset.
Chapter 25 Leasing Principles of Corporate Finance Tenth Edition
Chapter  2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd, PPTs t/a Applications for Financial Accounting by David Willis, slides prepared by Kaye Watson 1 ACCOUNTING.
Copyright © 2002 South-Western Types of leases Tax treatment of leases Effects on financial statements Lessee’s analysis Lessor’s analysis Other.
Cash Purchase vs Loan vs Lease to obtain a capital asset Pertemuan Matakuliah: A0774/Information Technology Capital Budgeting Tahun: 2009.
20-1 CHAPTER 20 Hybrid Financing: Preferred Stock, Leasing, Warrants, and Convertibles Preferred stock Leasing Warrants Convertibles.
19 Lease Financing Short- and Intermediate- Term Funding Alternatives ©2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting Chapter Three Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Corporate Finance, 7/e © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved CHAPTER 21 Introduction to Corporate Finance.
LEASING Corporation lease both short term and long term rental agreement (more than five years) Every lease contract has two parties : Lessee is the user.
Leasing Chapter 26. Lease terms Lease Lessee Part taking the lease Lessor The owner that is giving the lease.
1 Leasing Chapter # 04.  Lease is a contract under which a lessor, the owner of the assets, gives right to use the asset to a lessee, the user of the.
LEASE  A LEASE REPRESENTS AN AGREEMENT THAT GIVES CONTROL OVER ASSETS OWNED BY THE LESSOR TO THE LESSEE FOR A SPECIFIC PERIOD OF TIME UPON THE PAYMENT.
Project On Lease Financing.  A lease is a rental agreement that extends for one year or longer.  The owner of the asset (the lessor) grants exclusive.
Capital Leases Vs. Operating Leases
Leasing Lease Financing Corporate Finance Shanghai 2013 Session 2 FINC 5880.
Chapter 24 - Term Loans and Leases  2005, Pearson Prentice Hall.
Accounting (Basics) - Lecture 5 Lease. Contents Classification of leases Finance leases - financial statements of lessees and lessors Operating leases.
Chapter Objectives Be able to: n Differentiate between the tax implications of debt capital financing and equity capital financing for issuers and investors.
Accounting (Basics) - Lecture 5 Lease
Chapter 25 Leasing.
Leasing and Lease Financing
19 Lease Financing.
FIN 422: Student Managed Investment Fund
CHAPTER 18 Lease Financing Types of leases Tax treatment of leases
Hybrid and Derivative Securities
Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 19 Lease Financing

2 Parties to a lease transaction Lessee: uses the asset and makes the lease payments. Lessor: owns the asset and receives the payments. The lease decision is a financing decision for the lessee and an investment decision for the lessor.

3 Types of leases Operating lease Short-term and normally cancellable Maintenance usually included Capital (financial) lease Long-term and normally noncancellable Maintenance usually not included Fully amortized Combination lease Sale and leaseback

4 Tax treatment of lease payments Leases are classified by the IRS as either guideline or nonguideline. For a guideline lease, the entire lease payment is deductible to the lessee. For a nonguideline lease, only the imputed interest payment is deductible.

Lease vs. buy analysis In evaluating a lease from the lessee’s perspective, typically the decision to acquire the asset has been made: the asset has NPV > 0 if purchased. Now, we determine if leasing is cheaper than buying. 5

Relevant cash flows In determining the after-tax cash flows (ATCFs) associated with each alternative, common CFs (including sales revenue) are disregarded. 6

7 Lease impact on firm’s capital structure Leasing is a substitute for debt: a dollar of lease obligations is equivalent to a dollar of debt obligations. As such, leasing uses up a firm’s debt capacity.

8 Lessee’s discount rate Leasing is similar to debt financing. If a firm has a 40% tax rate and could finance purchase of the asset with a 10% loan, the discount rate for evaluating the lease is the after-tax interest rate: 10%(1 - T) = 10%( ) = 6.0%.

9 Lessor’s analysis To the lessor, writing the lease is an investment. Therefore, the lessor must compare the return on the lease investment with the return available on alternative investments of similar risk.

10 Analysis indicates owning is often less costly than leasing. Why, then, is leasing so popular? Provision of maintenance services. Risk reduction for the lessee. Project life Residual value Operating risk The lessor might be better able to bear these risks.