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1 Operating Leverage Financial Leverage. 2 Business Risk The variability or uncertainty of a firm’s operating income (EBIT). FIRM EBIT EPS Stock-holders.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Operating Leverage Financial Leverage. 2 Business Risk The variability or uncertainty of a firm’s operating income (EBIT). FIRM EBIT EPS Stock-holders."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Operating Leverage Financial Leverage

2 2 Business Risk The variability or uncertainty of a firm’s operating income (EBIT). FIRM EBIT EPS Stock-holders

3 3 Business Risk Affected by: Sales volume variability Competition Cost variability Product diversification Product demand Operating Leverage

4 4 The use of fixed operating costs as opposed to variable operating costs. A firm with relatively high fixed operating costs will experience more variable operating income if sales change.

5 5 Financial Risk The variability or uncertainty of a firm’s earnings per share (EPS) and the increased probability of insolvency that arises when a firm uses financial leverage. FIRM EBIT EPS Stock-holders

6 6 Financial Leverage The use of fixed-cost sources of financing (debt, preferred stock) rather than variable-cost sources (common stock). A firm with relatively high fixed financing costs will experience more net income if EBIT changes.

7 7 Costs Suppose the firm has both fixed operating costs (administrative salaries, insurance, rent, property tax) and variable operating costs (materials, labor, energy, packaging, sales commissions).

8 8 Operating Leverage What happens if the firm increases its fixed operating costs and reduces (or eliminates) its variable costs?

9 9 With high operating leverage, an increase in sales produces a relatively larger increase in operating income.

10 10 Trade-off: the firm has a higher breakeven point. If sales are not high enough, the firm will not meet its fixed expenses!

11 11 Breakeven point (units of output) Q B = breakeven level of Q. F = total anticipated fixed costs. P = sales price per unit. V = variable cost per unit. Breakeven Calculations Q B = F P - V

12 12 Breakeven point (sales dollars) S* = breakeven level of sales. F = total anticipated fixed costs. S = total sales. VC = total variable costs. Breakeven Calculations S* = F VC S 1 -

13 13 Degree of Operating Leverage (DOL) Operating leverage: by using fixed operating costs, a small change in sales revenue is magnified into a larger change in operating income. This “multiplier effect” is called the degree of operating leverage.

14 14 DOLs = % change in EBIT % change in sales = Degree of Operating Leverage from Sales Level (S) Sales - Variable Costs EBIT Q(P - V) Q(P - V) - F =

15 15 What does this tell us? If DOL = 2, then a 1% increase in sales will result in a 2% increase in operating income (EBIT). Stock- holders EBIT EPS Sales

16 16 Degree of Financial Leverage (DFL) Financial leverage: by using fixed cost financing, a small change in operating income is magnified into a larger change in earnings per share. This “multiplier effect” is called the degree of financial leverage.

17 17 DFL = % change in EPS % change in EBIT EBIT EBIT - I Degree of Financial Leverage =

18 18 What does this tell us? If DFL = 3, then a 1% increase in operating income will result in a 3% increase in earnings per share. Stock- holders EBIT EPS Sales

19 19 Degree of Combined Leverage (DCL) Combined leverage: by using operating leverage and financial leverage, a small change in sales is magnified into a larger change in earnings per share. This “multiplier effect” is called the degree of combined leverage.

20 20 DCL = DOL x DFL Degree of Combined Leverage = % change in EPS % change in Sales Sales - Variable Costs EBIT - I = = Q(P - V) Q(P - V) - F - I

21 21 What does this tell us? If DCL = 4, then a 1% increase in sales will result in a 4% increase in earnings per share. Stock- holders EBIT EPS Sales

22 22 In-class Project: Based on the following information on Levered Company, answer these questions: 1) If sales increase by 1%, what should happen to operating income? 2) If operating income increases by 1%, what should happen to EPS? 3) If sales increase by 1%, what should be the effect on EPS?

23 23 Levered Company Sales (100,000 units)$1,400,000 Variable Costs $800,000 Fixed Costs $250,000 Interest paid $125,000 Tax rate 34% Common shares outstanding 100,000

24 24 Sales EBIT EPS DOL DFL DCL Leverage

25 25 Degree of Operating Leverage from Sales Level (S) 1,400,000 - 800,000 350,000 = 1.714 = DOLs = Sales - Variable Costs EBIT

26 26 Levered Company Sales EBIT EPS DOL = 1.714 DFL = DCL

27 27 Degree of Financial Leverage DFL = EBIT EBIT - I = 350,000 225,000 = 1.556

28 28 Levered Company Sales EBIT EPS DOL = 1.714 DFL = 1.556 DCL

29 29 Degree of Combined Leverage DCL = Sales - Variable Costs EBIT - I 1,400,000 - 800,000 225,000 = 2.667 =

30 30 Levered Company Sales EBIT EPS DOL = 1.714 DFL = 1.556 DCL = 2.667

31 31 Sales (110,000 units)1,414,000 Variable Costs (808,000) Fixed Costs (250,000) EBIT 356,000 ( +1.714%) Interest (125,000) EBT 231,000 Taxes (34%) (78,540) Net Income 152,460 EPS $1.5246 ( +2.667%) Levered Company 1% increase in sales


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