Katherine Epler, a self-employed corporate finance consultant, is conducting a seminar for executive management teams regarding issues related to a company’s capital structure. In the morning session of the seminar, Epler makes the following two statements:
Statement 1: Management teams will have a target capital structure for their firm because of an awareness of how competing firms finance their operations and a desire to keep their financial ratios close to industry averages.
Statement 2: In order to reap the benefits that come with having a target capital structure, management must always raise capital in the exact proportions called for by the target.
With respect to Epler's statements:
Both of Epler’s statements are incorrect. Management teams will have a target capital structure because they are aware that their firm as an optimal capital structure that will maximize the value of the firm. It is the desire to keep the capital structure close to the optimal structure that leads to a target capital structure, not a desire to keep financial ratios close to industry averages. The second statement is also incorrect. The target capital structure is more of a floating range, and the firm may deviate slightly from the target when raising capital to exploit short-term opportunities in a particular financing source. |