PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE
13th Edition
ISBN: 9781260013900
Author: BREALEY
Publisher: RENT MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 25, Problem 14PS
Valuing financial leases In Section 25-5, we showed that the lease offered to Grey mare Bus Lines had a positive
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Lessor Company has a machine with a cost and fair value of $100,000 that is leases for a 10-year period to Lessee Company. The machine has a 12-year expected economic life. Payments are received at the beginning of each year. The machine is expected to have a $10,000 residual value to the end of the lease term. (Lessee is not guaranteeing the residual value.) Both Lessor and Lessee account for leases under ASU 840.
Required:
What would the lease payment be if Lessor wants to earn a 10% return on its net investment?
What lease obligations would Lessee report when the lease is signed?
What would be the interest revenue reported by Lessor and the interest expense reported by Lessee in the first year, assuming they both use the 10% discounted rate?
How would the answer to requirement 2 and 3 change for Lessee if it guaranteed the residual rate?
Use the information for Escapee Company from BE21.20. Assume the same facts, except Escapee guarantees a residual value of $9,000 at the end of the lease term, which equals the expected residual value of the machinery. (a) Does this change your answer from BE21.20? (b) What if the expected residual value at the end of the lease term is $5,000 and Escapee guarantees a residual of $9,000?
Cullumber Company has a machine with a cost of $651000 which also is its fair value on the date the machine is leased to Park Company. The lease is for 6 years and the machine is estimated to have an unguaranteed residual value of $64000. If the lessor’s interest rate implicit in the lease is 12%, the 6 beginning-of-the-year lease payments would be
127,476
108,500
134,333
141,375
Chapter 25 Solutions
PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE
Ch. 25 - Types of lease The following terms are often used...Ch. 25 - Reasons for leasing Some of the following reasons...Ch. 25 - Lease treatment in bankruptcy What happens if a...Ch. 25 - Lease treatment in bankruptcy How does the...Ch. 25 - Lease characteristics True or false? a. Lease...Ch. 25 - Operating leases Explain why the following...Ch. 25 - Inflation and operating leases In Problem 7, we...Ch. 25 - Technological change and operating leases Look at...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases Look again at Problem 7....Ch. 25 - Valuing Financial Leases Look again at the...
Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases Look again at the bus...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases In Section 25-5, we...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases In Section 25-5, we...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases A lease with a varying...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases Nodhead College needs a...Ch. 25 - Valuing financial leases The Safety Razor Company...Ch. 25 - Nonrecourse debt Lenders to leveraged leases hold...Ch. 25 - Leveraged leases How would the lessee in Figure...Ch. 25 - Prob. 23PSCh. 25 - Valuing leases Suppose that the Greymare lease...
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- Owens Company leased equipment for 4 years at 50,000 a year with an option to renew the lease for 6 years at 2,000 per month or to purchase the equipment for 25,000 (a price considerably less than the expected fair value) after the initial lease term of 4 years. Why would this lease qualify as a finance lease?arrow_forwardUse the information in RE20-6. However, assume that there is no bargain purchase option and that Montevallo guarantees the 20,000 estimated residual value at the end of the 10-year lease. Montevallo estimates that it is probable that it will have to pay 15,000 cash due to the residual value guarantee. Calculate the present value of the lease payments. Round your answer to the nearest dollar.arrow_forwardLease versus Buy Consider the data in Problem 19-1. Assume that RCs tax rate is 40% and that the equipments depreciation would be 100 per year. If the company leased the asset on a 2-year lease, the payment would be 110 at the beginning of each year. If RC borrowed and bought, the bank would charge 10% interest on the loan. In either case, the equipment is worth nothing after 2 years and will be discarded. Should RC lease or buy the equipment?arrow_forward
- Apply the generalized lease valuation model to the lease considered by Alberton Shop company, assuming the frm is currently in a nontaxpaying position but expect commencing tax payments in year 3 ( G = 3). All tax benefits are assumed to be carried forward and fully absorbed in year 3. from the table below start with Step 1: to compute the PV of the lease payments from year 0 to year 2 at 8%. since $13,000 is paid each year.arrow_forwardLease versus purchase JLB Corporation is attempting to determine whether to lease or purchase research equipment. The firm is in the 21% tax bracket, and its after-tax cost of debt is currently 8%. The terms of the lease and of the purchase are as follows: Lease Annual end-of-year lease payments of $25,200 are required over the 3-year life of the lease. All maintenance costs will be paid by the lessor; in-surance and other costs will be borne by the lessee. The lessee will exercise its option to purchase the asset for $5,000 at termination of the lease. Purchase The research equipment, costing $60,000, can be financed entirely with a 14% loan requiring annual end-of-year payments of $25,844 for 3 years. The firm in this case will depreciate the equipment under MACRS using a 3-year recovery period. (See Table 4.2 for the applicable depreciation percentages.) The firm will pay $1,800 per year for a service contract that covers all maintenance costs; insurance and other costs will be…arrow_forwardLease versus purchase JLB Corporation is attempting to determine whether to lease or purchase research equipment. The firm is in the 21% tax bracket, and its after-tax cost of debt is currently 8%. The terms of the lease and of the purchase are as follows: Lease Annual end-of-year lease payments of $25,200 are required over the 3-year life of the lease. All maintenance costs will be paid by the lessor; in-surance and other costs will be borne by the lessee. The lessee will exercise its option to purchase the asset for $5,000 at termination of the lease. Purchase The research equipment, costing $60,000, can be financed entirely with a 14% loan requiring annual end-of-year payments of $25,844 for 3 years. The firm in this case will depreciate the equipment under MACRS using a 3-year recovery period. (See Table 4.2 for the applicable depreciation percentages.) The firm will pay $1,800 per year for a service contract that covers all maintenance costs; insurance and other costs will be…arrow_forward
- Lease versus purchase JLB Corporation is attempting to determine whether to lease or purchase research equipment. The firm is in the 21% tax bracket, and its after-tax cost of debt is currently 8%. The terms of the lease and of the purchase are as follows: Lease Annual end-of-year lease payments of $25,200 are required over the 3-year life of the lease. All maintenance costs will be paid by the lessor; in-surance and other costs will be borne by the lessee. The lessee will exercise its option to purchase the asset for $5,000 at termination of the lease. Purchase The research equipment, costing $60,000, can be financed entirely with a 14% loan requiring annual end-of-year payments of $25,844 for 3 years. The firm in this case will depreciate the equipment under MACRS using a 3-year recovery period. (See Table 4.2 for the applicable depreciation percentages.) The firm will pay $1,800 per year for a service contract that covers all maintenance costs; insurance and other costs will be…arrow_forwardLease versus purchase JLB Corporation is attempting to determine whether to lease or purchase research equipment. The firm is in the 21% tax bracket, and its after-tax cost of debt is currently 8%. The terms of the lease and of the purchase are as follows: Lease Annual end-of-year lease payments of $25,200 are required over the 3-year life of the lease. All maintenance costs will be paid by the lessor; in-surance and other costs will be borne by the lessee. The lessee will exercise its option to purchase the asset for $5,000 at termination of the lease. Purchase The research equipment, costing $60,000, can be financed entirely with a 14% loan requiring annual end-of-year payments of $25,844 for 3 years. The firm in this case will depreciate the equipment under MACRS using a 3-year recovery period. (See Table 4.2 for the applicable depreciation percentages.) The firm will pay $1,800 per year for a service contract that covers all maintenance costs; insurance and other costs will be…arrow_forwardLease versus purchase JLB Corporation is attempting to determine whether to lease or purchase research equipment. The firm is in the 23% tax bracket, and its after-tax cost of debt is currently 9%. The terms of the lease and of the purchase are as follows: Lease Annual end-of-year lease payments of $30,000 are required over the three-year life of the lease. All maintenance costs will be paid by the lessor; insurance and other costs will be borne by the lessee. The lessee will exercise its option to purchase the asset for $6,500 at termination of the lease. Ignore any future tax benefit associated with the purchase of the equipment at the end of year 3 under the lease option. Purchase The equipment costs $70,000 and can be financed with a 15% loan requiring annual end-of-year payments of $30,658 for three years. JLB will depreciate the equipment under MACRS using a three-year recovery period. Rounded Depreciation Percentages by Recovery Year Using MACRS…arrow_forward
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