Degree of financial leverage
The degree of financial leverage measures the percentage change in earnings per share caused by a 1% change in operating income, driven by a firm's fixed interest payments.
See it move
Delacroix Fittings has EBIT of €500,000 and pays €200,000 of fixed interest, giving a degree of financial leverage of €500,000 ÷ €300,000 ≈ 1.67. A 10% rise in EBIT should lift EPS by about 16.7% — and it does, from €2.25 to €2.625, because interest stays fixed while EBIT grows.
The formula
Variables
- Degree of financial leverage (dimensionless)
- Percentage change in earnings per share (decimal)
- Percentage change in operating income (EBIT) (decimal)
Defines DFL as the amplification factor between a percentage change in operating income and the resulting percentage change in earnings per share.
Variables
- Earnings before interest and tax (€)
- Annual interest expense (€)
Gives DFL directly at a given level of EBIT, without needing to compute EPS at two different output levels.
Check yourself
Meridian Foods has EBIT of €900,000 and annual interest expense of €300,000. If EBIT is expected to rise by 8% next year, what is the expected percentage change in earnings per share?