Barnes Co. has a capital structure of 40 percent debt and 60 percent equity, a tax rate of 40 percent, and a levered beta (bL) of 1.4. What is the company's unlevered beta (bU)?

Correct answer: 1.0

Explanation

This question tests the student's ability to apply the Hamada equation to find a firm's unlevered beta, which is a measure of its basic business risk.

Other questions

Question 1

What is the term for the mix of debt, preferred stock, and common equity that a firm uses to finance its assets?

Question 2

According to the text, which risk is considered the single most important determinant of a firm's capital structure?

Question 3

What is the term for the additional risk placed on common stockholders as a result of a firm's decision to finance with debt?

Question 4

A firm has a relatively small amount of fixed costs amounting to $25,000, variable costs of $1.50 per unit, and sells its product for $2.00 per unit. What is the firm's operating break-even point in units?

Question 5

What is the primary effect of a firm increasing its financial leverage on its expected earnings per share (EPS) and its risk?

Question 6

The capital structure that maximizes a firm's stock price is also the one that:

Question 8

Under the Modigliani-Miller (MM) theory with corporate taxes, but no personal taxes or bankruptcy costs, what is the optimal capital structure for a firm?

Question 9

Which capital structure theory suggests that firms balance the tax benefits of debt against the problems caused by potential bankruptcy?

Question 10

According to the signaling theory of capital structure, what does the announcement of a new stock offering by a mature firm generally suggest to investors?

Question 11

What is the term for the ability to borrow money at a reasonable cost when good investment opportunities arise, which firms often maintain by using less debt in normal times?

Question 12

What does the pecking order hypothesis suggest is the last resort for a firm when raising capital?

Question 13

The 'windows of opportunity' concept in capital structure suggests that managers might issue new equity primarily when:

Question 14

Which of the following factors would likely encourage a firm to use a higher percentage of debt in its capital structure?

Question 15

What is a firm's operating break-even point?

Question 16

Which of the following is NOT a primary factor affecting a firm's business risk?

Question 17

If a firm increases its use of debt, what is the conceptual impact on the cost of equity (rs)?

Question 18

Hartman Motors has an unlevered beta (bU) of 1.3, a tax rate of 35 percent, and is considering a capital structure with a debt-to-equity ratio (D/E) of 0.5. Using the Hamada equation, what would be Hartman's new levered beta (bL)?

Question 19

What is the primary reason that the capital structure that maximizes expected EPS is generally not the optimal capital structure?

Question 20

What is the term used to describe the situation where managers have better information about a firm's prospects than outside investors?

Question 21

In the context of capital structure, which of the following is an example of an operating economy that can create synergy in a merger?

Question 22

What is the primary difference between a firm's business risk and its financial risk?

Question 23

If a firm has a high percentage of fixed costs in its operations, it is said to have a high degree of what?

Question 24

A firm has total invested capital of $200,000, which is financed with 50 percent debt and 50 percent equity. Its expected EBIT is $30,000, the interest rate on its debt is 7.2 percent, and its tax rate is 40 percent. What is the firm's expected Return on Equity (ROE)?

Question 25

Which statement best describes the relationship between the weights used in the WACC calculation and a firm's capital structure?

Question 26

Bigbee Electronics has an unlevered beta of 1.0, the risk-free rate is 3 percent, and the market risk premium is 6 percent. If the firm adopts a capital structure with a debt-to-capital ratio of 40 percent (D/E ratio of 0.6667) and a tax rate of 40 percent, what is its estimated cost of equity?

Question 27

In the trade-off theory of capital structure, what happens to the firm's stock price as it increases its debt ratio beyond the optimal point (D2 in Figure 14.8)?

Question 28

What is meant by the term 'net debt'?

Question 29

A firm has a choice between two production plans. Plan A has fixed costs of $25,000 and Plan B has fixed costs of $70,000. Which statement is correct regarding the operating leverage and business risk of these two plans?

Question 30

Terrell Trucking Company has projected the following stock prices at different debt-to-capital ratios: 20 percent debt gives a price of $34.25; 30 percent gives $36.00; 40 percent gives $35.50; and 50 percent gives $34.00. What is Terrell's optimal capital structure?

Question 31

Which of the following is NOT one of the six assumptions of the original Modigliani-Miller (MM) irrelevance theory?

Question 32

A firm's Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) is defined as:

Question 33

Why might a very profitable firm like Google choose to use relatively little debt in its financing?

Question 34

How can the use of debt financing help to discipline managers and reduce agency costs?

Question 35

For the Bigbee Electronics example with 50 percent debt, the expected ROE is 13.68 percent, but the ROE if demand is 'terrible' is -46.32 percent. What does this wide range of outcomes indicate?

Question 36

What is the primary reason that firms' actual capital structures can change over time due to 'market actions'?

Question 37

Which of the following industries would be expected to use a relatively high percentage of debt in their capital structure?

Question 38

What is meant by the term 'financial leverage'?

Question 39

In the Modigliani-Miller framework, what is the impact of introducing personal taxes on stock income and debt income on the optimal capital structure decision?

Question 40

Why do analysts and rating agencies look at the times-interest-earned (TIE) ratio when assessing a firm's financial leverage?

Question 41

A firm has an operating break-even point of 70,000 units. If it sells 100,000 units, will its EBIT be positive, negative, or zero?

Question 42

Which of the following is considered an 'investor-supplied' fund when defining a firm's capital?

Question 43

According to the text, a firm's choice of how much leverage to use is like putting a dagger in a car's steering wheel because:

Question 44

If a firm's actual debt ratio is significantly above its target range, what action is it most likely to take for new financing?

Question 45

What is the primary reason that changes in capital structure have no effect on a firm's Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)?

Question 46

Which of the following is a key determinant of a firm's operating leverage?

Question 47

In the context of the trade-off theory shown in Figure 14.8, what does the 'Value Added by Debt Tax Shelter Benefits' represent?

Question 48

Which theory of capital structure best explains why a firm with very favorable, secret prospects would prefer to finance a new project with debt rather than new equity?

Question 49

Firm HL has a debt-to-capital ratio of 50 percent and an interest rate of 12 percent. Firm LL has a debt-to-capital ratio of 30 percent and an interest rate of 10 percent. Both firms have $20 million in invested capital and $4 million of EBIT, and a 40 percent tax rate. What is Firm HL's Return on Equity (ROE)?

Question 50

What does it mean for a firm's capital structure to have 'target' weights?