Operating and Financial Leverage
(Chapter 5)
 Business and Financial Risk
 Employing Leverage
 Leverage and the Income Statement
 Operating Leverage and
Business Risk
 Breakeven Analysis
 Degree of Operating Leverage
 Degree of Financial Leverage
 Degree of Combined Leverage
 Illustration of Leverage Effects
Business and Financial Risk
 Business Risk - Uncertainty inherent in the
firm’s operations if it used no debt.
 Major Factors Affecting Business Risk:
– Total sales variability
– Total fixed operating expenses
 Financial Risk – Additional risk incurred
through the use of debt financing.
Employing Leverage
 Leverage:
– Use of “fixed cost” items in the process of
magnifying earnings.
 Operating Leverage:
– Use of “fixed operating costs” in the process of
magnifying operating income (EBIT)
 Financial Leverage:
– Use of “fixed financial costs” (e.g., debt and
preferred stock financing) in the process of
magnifying earnings per share EPS. Our
discussion focuses on the use of debt financing.
Leverage and the Income Statement
Sales
- Fixed costs
- Variable costs
EBIT
- Interest
EBT
- Taxes
EAT
Note: EPS = EAT/(# shares) [assuming no pfd. stock]
Operating Leverage
Financial Leverage
Total
Leverage
Leverage Analysis: An Example
Webb’s Incorporated Income Statement
(Year Ended December 31, 2002)
Sales (30,000 units @ $25) $ 750,000
- Variable costs ($7 per unit) (210,000)
- Fixed costs (270,000)
EBIT $ 270,000
- Interest expenses (170,000)
EBT $ 100,000
- Taxes ( 34,000)
EAT $ 66,000
Given 20,000 shares outstanding:
EPS = $66,000/20,000 = $3.30
Key to Symbols Used in
the Following Analyses
Note: The symbols used in the notes differ
somewhat from the symbols used in the text.
 P = price per unit
 Q = sales in units
 V = variable cost per unit
 F = fixed costs
 VC = total variable costs
 TC = F + VC = total costs
 S = PQ = sales dollars
 EBIT = S - TC
Operating Leverage and Business Risk
 Calculating Breakeven Point in Units:
– (1) S - TC = 0
– (2) S - F - VC = 0
– (3) PQ - F - VQ = 0
– (4) PQ - VQ = F
Webb’s Breakeven Point in Units:
Q
F
P V


( )
Q
F
P V





( )
$270,
$25 $7
,
000
15 000 units
 Calculating Breakeven Point in Dollars:
Q
F
P V
PQ
PF
P V
S
F
VQ
PQ
F
VC
S
S
F
VC
S













(multiply both sides by P)
(divide numerator & denominator by P)
S =
F
1-
V
P
(multiply V / P by Q / Q)
Result:
1 1
1
000
1
000
000
000
$270,
$210,
$750,
$375,
Breakeven Chart
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
0 15 30 45
Thousands of Dollars
Thousands of Units
S
TC
EBIT Chart
-400
-300
-200
-100
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
15 30 45
Thousands of Dollars
Thousands of
Units
EBIT
Degree of Operating Leverage
 Note: If F = 0, DOL = 1 (i.e., without any F, the %
change in EBIT would be equal to the % change in
sales). By employing F, the firm’s % change in EBIT
will be greater than the % change in sales.
DOL
Q P V
Q P V F
S VC
S VC F
S VC
EBIT


 


 

% in EBIT
in Sales
=
=


%
( )
( )
Webb’s DOL When Q = 30,000 Units
For every 1% change in sales, EBIT will change
2%.
 Operating Leverage is Risky: If sales
increase 5%, a DOL of 2.0 indicates that
EBIT would increase 10%. On the other hand,
if sales decline 7%, a DOL of 2.0 indicates
that EBIT would decline 14%.
DOL 

 

30 000
30 000 000
2 0
, ($25 $7)
, ($25 $7) $270,
.
Degree of Financial Leverage
 Note: If interest expense = 0, DFL = 1.0 (i.e.,
without any debt financing, the % change in
EPS would be equal to the % change in
EBIT). By incurring interest expense (debt
financing) the firm’s % change in EPS will be
greater than the % change in EBIT.
DFL 
%
%


in EPS
in EBIT
=
EBIT
EBIT -I
Webb’s DFL When Q = 30,000 Units
For every 1% change in EBIT, EPS will
change 2.7%
Financial Leverage is Risky: If EBIT increases
2%, a DFL of 2.7 indicates that EPS would
increase 5.4%. On the other hand, if EBIT
declines 4%, a DFL of 2.7 indicates that EPS
would decline 10.8%.
DFL 


$270,
$270, $170,
.
000
000 000
2 7
Degree of Combined Leverage
 Note: If F = 0, and I = 0, DCL = 1.0 (i.e., without
F or I the % change in EPS would be equal to the
% change in sales). By employing F or I (or both),
the firm’s % change in EPS will be greater than
the % change in sales.
(DOL)(DFL)
=
EBIT
in
%
EPS
in
%
Sales
in
%
EBIT
in
%
=
=
)
(
)
(
=
Sales
in
%
EPS
in
%





























EBT
VC
S
I
F
VC
S
VC
S
I
F
V
P
Q
V
P
Q
DCL
Webb’s DCL When Q = 30,000 Units
5.4
=
(2)(2.7)
=
(DOL)(DFL)
=
000
,
170
000
,
270
)
7
25
(
000
,
30
)
7
25
(
000
,
30





DCL
Illustration of Leverage Effects
(A 10% Increase in Sales for Webb’s Inc.)
Bef. Sales Inc.
Sales (33,000 units @ $25) $ 825,000 $ 750,000
- Variable costs ($7 per unit) (231,000) (210,000)
- Fixed costs (270,000) (270,000)
EBIT $ 324,000 $ 270,000
- Interest expense (170,000) (170,000)
EBT $ 154,000 $ 100,000
- Taxes ( 52,360) (34,000)
EAT $ 101,640 $ 66,000
EPS = $101,640/20,000 = $5.08 EPS = $3.30
54%
=
sales)
in
5.4(%
=
EPS
in
%
54%
=
EBIT)
in
2.7(%
=
.54
=
30
.
3
3.30
-
5.08
=
EPS
in
%
20%
=
sales)
in
2(%
=
2
.
000
,
270
000
,
270
000
,
324
=
EBIT
in
%








5.4
=
DCL
2.7
=
DFL
2.0
=
DOL

More Related Content

PPT
Operating Leverage - Finacial leverage & Break-Even
PPT
0273685988 Ch16
PPT
Operating and financial leverage
PDF
Lec. 2 & 3 Leverage & Capital Struture Notes.pdf
PPT
Leverage nikunj
PPT
Fm11 ch 14 financial planning and forecasting pro forma financial statements
PPTX
CFA_chapterDisocunt and Growth Model6.pptx
Operating Leverage - Finacial leverage & Break-Even
0273685988 Ch16
Operating and financial leverage
Lec. 2 & 3 Leverage & Capital Struture Notes.pdf
Leverage nikunj
Fm11 ch 14 financial planning and forecasting pro forma financial statements
CFA_chapterDisocunt and Growth Model6.pptx

Similar to 133chapter052002.ppt (20)

PPTX
Leverages 1
PPT
FINANCAL MANAGEMENT PPT BY FINMANLeverage and capital structure by bosogon an...
PPTX
(4) Leverages (teaching note) (1).pptx
PPT
Leverage n finance, gearing is borrowing money to supplement existing funds f...
PPTX
Capital structure
PPTX
Capital Structure.pptx
PDF
Leverage
PPT
Capital structure2
PPTX
Effects of operating and financial Leverages
PPT
Leverage
PPT
502331_leverage.ppt
PPT
OPERATING AND FINANCIAL LEVERAGE BY VAN HORNE
PPTX
Analysis of Financial Statements.(Ratio analysis, Du Pont system ,Effects of ...
PPT
Ross7e ch07
PPTX
Financial management
PPTX
Lecture 3 (chapter 6) accounting for finance
PPTX
Fanancial management II Chapt. 1 PPT (2).pptx
PPT
Financial management
PDF
Leverages
PPT
Financial and Operating Leverage
Leverages 1
FINANCAL MANAGEMENT PPT BY FINMANLeverage and capital structure by bosogon an...
(4) Leverages (teaching note) (1).pptx
Leverage n finance, gearing is borrowing money to supplement existing funds f...
Capital structure
Capital Structure.pptx
Leverage
Capital structure2
Effects of operating and financial Leverages
Leverage
502331_leverage.ppt
OPERATING AND FINANCIAL LEVERAGE BY VAN HORNE
Analysis of Financial Statements.(Ratio analysis, Du Pont system ,Effects of ...
Ross7e ch07
Financial management
Lecture 3 (chapter 6) accounting for finance
Fanancial management II Chapt. 1 PPT (2).pptx
Financial management
Leverages
Financial and Operating Leverage
Ad

More from JainishBhagat2 (7)

PPT
Cyber Crime Reasons Unemployment Greed Improper IT structure FINAL.ppt
PPT
Small Business Management in India for better.ppt
PPTX
Presentation on NBFCs.pptx
PDF
feasibilityreport-131027121529-phpapp01 (1).pdf
PPT
chapter01.ppt
PPT
BusinessPlan.ppt
PDF
edlecture3unit2-201013151920.pdf
Cyber Crime Reasons Unemployment Greed Improper IT structure FINAL.ppt
Small Business Management in India for better.ppt
Presentation on NBFCs.pptx
feasibilityreport-131027121529-phpapp01 (1).pdf
chapter01.ppt
BusinessPlan.ppt
edlecture3unit2-201013151920.pdf
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
Handbook of Entrepreneurship- Chapter 5: Identifying business opportunity.docx
PDF
Stacey L Stevens - Canada's Most Influential Women Lawyers Revolutionizing Th...
PDF
Vinod Bhatt - Most Inspiring Supply Chain Leader in India 2025.pdf
PDF
533158074-Saudi-Arabia-Companies-List-Contact.pdf
PDF
Robin Fischer: A Visionary Leader Making a Difference in Healthcare, One Day ...
PPTX
chapter 2 entrepreneurship full lecture ppt
PDF
Value-based IP Management at Siemens: A Cross-Divisional Analysis
PPTX
Project Management_ SMART Projects Class.pptx
PDF
Comments on Clouds that Assimilate Parts I&II.pdf
PDF
Tortilla Mexican Grill 发射点犯得上发射点发生发射点犯得上发生
PPTX
33ABJFA6556B1ZP researhchzfrsdfasdfsadzd
PPTX
operations management : demand supply ch
PDF
income tax laws notes important pakistan
PDF
Kishore Vora - Best CFO in India to watch in 2025.pdf
DOCX
Handbook of entrepreneurship- Chapter 7- Types of business organisations
PPT
Retail Management and Retail Markets and Concepts
PPTX
interschool scomp.pptxzdkjhdjvdjvdjdhjhieij
PPTX
Portfolio Example- Market & Consumer Insights – Strategic Entry for BYD UK.pptx
PDF
Middle East's Most Impactful Business Leaders to Follow in 2025
PPTX
IMM marketing mix of four ps give fjcb jjb
Handbook of Entrepreneurship- Chapter 5: Identifying business opportunity.docx
Stacey L Stevens - Canada's Most Influential Women Lawyers Revolutionizing Th...
Vinod Bhatt - Most Inspiring Supply Chain Leader in India 2025.pdf
533158074-Saudi-Arabia-Companies-List-Contact.pdf
Robin Fischer: A Visionary Leader Making a Difference in Healthcare, One Day ...
chapter 2 entrepreneurship full lecture ppt
Value-based IP Management at Siemens: A Cross-Divisional Analysis
Project Management_ SMART Projects Class.pptx
Comments on Clouds that Assimilate Parts I&II.pdf
Tortilla Mexican Grill 发射点犯得上发射点发生发射点犯得上发生
33ABJFA6556B1ZP researhchzfrsdfasdfsadzd
operations management : demand supply ch
income tax laws notes important pakistan
Kishore Vora - Best CFO in India to watch in 2025.pdf
Handbook of entrepreneurship- Chapter 7- Types of business organisations
Retail Management and Retail Markets and Concepts
interschool scomp.pptxzdkjhdjvdjvdjdhjhieij
Portfolio Example- Market & Consumer Insights – Strategic Entry for BYD UK.pptx
Middle East's Most Impactful Business Leaders to Follow in 2025
IMM marketing mix of four ps give fjcb jjb

133chapter052002.ppt

  • 1. Operating and Financial Leverage (Chapter 5)  Business and Financial Risk  Employing Leverage  Leverage and the Income Statement  Operating Leverage and Business Risk  Breakeven Analysis  Degree of Operating Leverage  Degree of Financial Leverage  Degree of Combined Leverage  Illustration of Leverage Effects
  • 2. Business and Financial Risk  Business Risk - Uncertainty inherent in the firm’s operations if it used no debt.  Major Factors Affecting Business Risk: – Total sales variability – Total fixed operating expenses  Financial Risk – Additional risk incurred through the use of debt financing.
  • 3. Employing Leverage  Leverage: – Use of “fixed cost” items in the process of magnifying earnings.  Operating Leverage: – Use of “fixed operating costs” in the process of magnifying operating income (EBIT)  Financial Leverage: – Use of “fixed financial costs” (e.g., debt and preferred stock financing) in the process of magnifying earnings per share EPS. Our discussion focuses on the use of debt financing.
  • 4. Leverage and the Income Statement Sales - Fixed costs - Variable costs EBIT - Interest EBT - Taxes EAT Note: EPS = EAT/(# shares) [assuming no pfd. stock] Operating Leverage Financial Leverage Total Leverage
  • 5. Leverage Analysis: An Example Webb’s Incorporated Income Statement (Year Ended December 31, 2002) Sales (30,000 units @ $25) $ 750,000 - Variable costs ($7 per unit) (210,000) - Fixed costs (270,000) EBIT $ 270,000 - Interest expenses (170,000) EBT $ 100,000 - Taxes ( 34,000) EAT $ 66,000 Given 20,000 shares outstanding: EPS = $66,000/20,000 = $3.30
  • 6. Key to Symbols Used in the Following Analyses Note: The symbols used in the notes differ somewhat from the symbols used in the text.  P = price per unit  Q = sales in units  V = variable cost per unit  F = fixed costs  VC = total variable costs  TC = F + VC = total costs  S = PQ = sales dollars  EBIT = S - TC
  • 7. Operating Leverage and Business Risk  Calculating Breakeven Point in Units: – (1) S - TC = 0 – (2) S - F - VC = 0 – (3) PQ - F - VQ = 0 – (4) PQ - VQ = F Webb’s Breakeven Point in Units: Q F P V   ( ) Q F P V      ( ) $270, $25 $7 , 000 15 000 units
  • 8.  Calculating Breakeven Point in Dollars: Q F P V PQ PF P V S F VQ PQ F VC S S F VC S              (multiply both sides by P) (divide numerator & denominator by P) S = F 1- V P (multiply V / P by Q / Q) Result: 1 1 1 000 1 000 000 000 $270, $210, $750, $375,
  • 9. Breakeven Chart 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 0 15 30 45 Thousands of Dollars Thousands of Units S TC
  • 10. EBIT Chart -400 -300 -200 -100 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 15 30 45 Thousands of Dollars Thousands of Units EBIT
  • 11. Degree of Operating Leverage  Note: If F = 0, DOL = 1 (i.e., without any F, the % change in EBIT would be equal to the % change in sales). By employing F, the firm’s % change in EBIT will be greater than the % change in sales. DOL Q P V Q P V F S VC S VC F S VC EBIT          % in EBIT in Sales = =   % ( ) ( )
  • 12. Webb’s DOL When Q = 30,000 Units For every 1% change in sales, EBIT will change 2%.  Operating Leverage is Risky: If sales increase 5%, a DOL of 2.0 indicates that EBIT would increase 10%. On the other hand, if sales decline 7%, a DOL of 2.0 indicates that EBIT would decline 14%. DOL      30 000 30 000 000 2 0 , ($25 $7) , ($25 $7) $270, .
  • 13. Degree of Financial Leverage  Note: If interest expense = 0, DFL = 1.0 (i.e., without any debt financing, the % change in EPS would be equal to the % change in EBIT). By incurring interest expense (debt financing) the firm’s % change in EPS will be greater than the % change in EBIT. DFL  % %   in EPS in EBIT = EBIT EBIT -I
  • 14. Webb’s DFL When Q = 30,000 Units For every 1% change in EBIT, EPS will change 2.7% Financial Leverage is Risky: If EBIT increases 2%, a DFL of 2.7 indicates that EPS would increase 5.4%. On the other hand, if EBIT declines 4%, a DFL of 2.7 indicates that EPS would decline 10.8%. DFL    $270, $270, $170, . 000 000 000 2 7
  • 15. Degree of Combined Leverage  Note: If F = 0, and I = 0, DCL = 1.0 (i.e., without F or I the % change in EPS would be equal to the % change in sales). By employing F or I (or both), the firm’s % change in EPS will be greater than the % change in sales. (DOL)(DFL) = EBIT in % EPS in % Sales in % EBIT in % = = ) ( ) ( = Sales in % EPS in %                              EBT VC S I F VC S VC S I F V P Q V P Q DCL
  • 16. Webb’s DCL When Q = 30,000 Units 5.4 = (2)(2.7) = (DOL)(DFL) = 000 , 170 000 , 270 ) 7 25 ( 000 , 30 ) 7 25 ( 000 , 30      DCL
  • 17. Illustration of Leverage Effects (A 10% Increase in Sales for Webb’s Inc.) Bef. Sales Inc. Sales (33,000 units @ $25) $ 825,000 $ 750,000 - Variable costs ($7 per unit) (231,000) (210,000) - Fixed costs (270,000) (270,000) EBIT $ 324,000 $ 270,000 - Interest expense (170,000) (170,000) EBT $ 154,000 $ 100,000 - Taxes ( 52,360) (34,000) EAT $ 101,640 $ 66,000 EPS = $101,640/20,000 = $5.08 EPS = $3.30