Corporate Finance Berk 3rd Edition Solutions Manual

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  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0132992477
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0132992473
  • Author:  Jonathan Berk, Peter DeMarzo

Directed primarily toward MBA/graduate students, this text also provides practical content to current and aspiring industry professionals.

Using the unifying valuation framework based on the Law of One Price, top researchers Jonathan Berk and Peter DeMarzo set the new standard for corporate finance textbooks. Corporate Finance blends coverage of time-tested principles and the latest advancements with the practical perspective of the financial manager. With this ideal melding of the core with modern topics, innovation with proven pedagogy, Berk and DeMarzo establish the new canon in finance.

 

Table of Content:

Name: Corporate Finance

Author: Berk DeMarzo

Edition: 3rd

Type: Solutions Manual

 

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Corporate Finance Solution Manual

Corporate Finance 3rd Solution Manual

Corporate Finance 3rd Berk DeMarzo Solutions Manual

Corporate Finance Berk DeMarzo 3rd Edition Solutions Manual

 

PART I. INTRODUCTION

1. The Corporation

2. Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis

3. The Law of One Price and Financial Decision Making

 

PART II. TIME, MONEY, AND INTEREST RATES

4. The Time Value of Money

5. Interest Rates

6. Valuing Bonds

 

PART III. VALUING PROJECTS AND FIRMS

7. Investment Decision Rules

8. Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting

9. Valuing Stocks

 

PART IV. RISK AND RETURN

10. Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk

11. Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model

12. Estimating the Cost of Capital

13. Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency

 

PART V. CAPITAL STRUCTURE

14. Capital Structure in a Perfect Market

15. Debt and Taxes

16. Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information

17. Payout Policy

 

PART VI. ADVANCED VALUATION

18. Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage

19. Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study

 

PART VII. OPTIONS

20. Financial Operations

21. Option Valuation

22. Real Options

 

PART VIII. LONG-TERM FINANCING

23. Raising Equity Capital

24. Debt Financing

25. Leasing

 

PART IX. SHORT-TERM FINANCING

26. Working Capital Management

27. Short-Term Financial Planning

 

PART X. SPECIAL TOPICS

28. Mergers and Acquisitions

29. Corporate Governance

30. Risk Management

31. International Corporate Finance

 

Chapter 1
The Corporation
1-1. What is the most important difference between a corporation and all other organizational forms?
A corporation is a legal entity separate from its owners.

1-2. What does the phrase limited liability mean in a corporate context?
Owners’ liability is limited to the amount they invested in the firm. Stockholders are not responsible for any encumbrances of the firm; in particular, they cannot be required to pay back any debts incurred by the firm.

1-3. Which organizational forms give their owners limited liability?
Corporations and limited liability companies give owners limited liability. Limited partnerships provide limited liability for the limited partners, but not for the general partners.

1-4. What are the main advantages and disadvantages of organizing a firm as a corporation?
Advantages: Limited liability, liquidity, infinite life
Disadvantages: Double taxation, separation of ownership and control

1-5. Explain the difference between an S corporation and a C corporation.
C corporations must pay corporate income taxes; S corporations do not pay corporate taxes, but must pass through the income to shareholders to whom it is taxable. S corporations are also limited to 75 shareholders and cannot have corporate or foreign stockholders.

1-6. You are a shareholder in a C corporation. The corporation earns $2 per share before taxes. Once it has paid taxes it will distribute the rest of its earnings to you as a dividend. The corporate tax rate is 40% and the personal tax rate on (both dividend and non-dividend) income is 30%. How much is left for you after all taxes are paid?
First, the corporation pays the taxes. After taxes, is left to pay dividends. Once the dividend is paid, personal tax must be paid, which leaves . So, after all the taxes are paid, you are left with 84¢.

1-7. Repeat Problem 6 assuming the corporation is an S corporation.
An S corporation does not pay corporate income tax. So it distributes $2 to its stockholders. These stockholders must then pay personal income tax on the distribution. So they are left with .

1-8. You have decided to form a new start-up company developing applications for the iPhone. Give examples of the three distinct types of financial decisions you will need to make.
As the manager of an iPhone applications developer, you will make three types of financial decisions.
i. You will make investment decisions such as determining which type of iPhone application projects will offer your company a positive NPV and that your company, therefore, should develop.
ii. You will make the decision on how to fund your iPhone application investments and what mix of debt and equity your company will have.
iii. You will be responsible for the cash management of your company, ensuring that your company has the necessary funds to make investments, pay interest on loans, and pay your employees.

1-9. When a pharmaceutical company develops a new drug, it often receives patent protection for that medication, allowing it to charge a higher price. Explain how this public policy of providing patent protection might help align the corporation’s interests with society’s interests.
Without patent protection, the developer of the drug would be forced to lower prices to compete with generic manufacturers. Because this price competition would lower expected future profits, the developer would be willing to spend much less in R&D to develop the drug initially, and drug innovation would be curtailed.
Alternatively, by allowing the drug’s developer to earn higher profits that are commensurate with the value of the drug to society, drug developers will find it in their best interests to spend more on R&D, and drug innovation is enhanced. Thus, patent protection can align the corporation’s and society’s interests and provide for more efficient spending on drug R&D.

1-10. Corporate managers work for the owners of the corporation. Consequently, they should make decisions that are in the interests of the owners, rather than their own. What strategies are available to shareholders to help ensure that managers are motivated to act this way?
Shareholders can do the following.
i. Ensure that employees are paid with company stock and/or stock options.
ii. Ensure that underperforming managers are fired.
iii. Write contracts that ensure that the interests of the managers and shareholders are closely aligned.
iv. Mount hostile takeovers.

1-11. Suppose you are considering renting an apartment. You, the renter, can be viewed as an agent while the company that owns the apartment can be viewed as the principal. What principal-agent conflicts do you anticipate? Suppose instead that you work for the apartment company. What features would you put into the lease agreement that would give the renter incentives to take good care of the apartment?
The agent (renter) will not take the same care of the apartment as the principal (owner), because the renter does not share in the costs of repairing damage to the apartment. To mitigate this problem, having the renter pay a deposit should motivate the renter to keep damages to a minimum. The deposit forces the renter to share in the costs of repairing any problems that they cause.

1-12. You are the CEO of a company and you are considering entering into an agreement to have your company buy another company. You think the price might be too high, but you will be the CEO of the combined, much larger, company. You know that when the company gets bigger, your pay and prestige will increase. What is the nature of the agency conflict here and how is it related to ethical considerations?
There is an ethical dilemma when the CEO of a firm has the opposite incentives to those of the shareholders. In this case, you (as the CEO) have an incentive to potentially overpay for another company (which would be damaging to your shareholders) because your pay and prestige will improve.

1-13. Are hostile takeovers necessarily bad for firms or their investors? Explain.
No. They are a way to discipline managers who are not working in the interests of shareholders.

1-14. What is the difference between a public and private corporation?
The shares of a public corporation are traded on an exchange (or “over the counter” in an electronic trading system) while the shares of a private corporation are not traded on a public exchange.

1-15. Explain why the bid-ask spread is a transaction cost.
Investors always buy at the ask and sell at the bid. Since ask prices always exceed bid prices, investors “lose” this difference. It is one of the costs of transacting. Since the market makers take the other side of the trade, they make this difference.

1-16. The following quote on Yahoo! Stock appeared on July 9, 2012, on Yahoo! Finance:

If you wanted to buy Yahoo!, what price would you pay? How much would you receive if you wanted to sell Yahoo!?
You would buy at $15.78 and sell for $15.77.

 

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