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Optimal capital structure

Optimal capital structure is the debt-to-equity mix that maximises a firm's value, balancing the tax savings from debt against rising expected bankruptcy and agency costs, per trade-off theory.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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An unlevered firm worth €50,000,000 gains a €5,000,000 tax shield from €20,000,000 of debt, less €1,500,000 of expected distress costs, reaching €53,500,000. That is the peak: €10m of debt gives only €52.0m, and €30m of debt falls to €51.5m as distress costs outpace the tax shield.

Where it fits
SubjectCorporate FinanceCoreTopicCapital Structure & LeverageCore

The formula

LaTeX
VL=VU+PV(TS)PV(BC)V_L = V_U + PV(TS) - PV(BC)

Variables

Value of the levered firm ()
Value of the unlevered firm ()
Present value of the interest tax shield ()
Present value of expected financial distress (bankruptcy) costs ()

The debt level that maximises this expression is the firm's optimal capital structure under trade-off theory.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A firm's assets have an unlevered value of €40,000,000. Its finance team has estimated the present value of the interest tax shield and the present value of expected financial distress costs for three financing plans: Plan A carries €10,000,000 of debt with a €2,000,000 tax shield and €400,000 of expected distress costs. Plan B carries €25,000,000 of debt with a €5,000,000 tax shield and €1,200,000 of expected distress costs. Plan C carries €40,000,000 of debt with an €8,000,000 tax shield and €6,500,000 of expected distress costs. Which plan gives the firm's optimal capital structure?

Select an answer to check your understanding.
Optimal capital structure — Edlintics Glossary