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The document discusses several lease examples and calculations: 1) A 5-year lease for a $200,000 supercomputer with a residual value of $60,000 and interest rate of 5%. The monthly lease payment is $2,880 and monthly loan payment is $3,774. 2) A 5-year $400,000 bottling machine lease with 6% interest. Monthly payments are $5,555 for a fair market value lease, $7,695 for a $1 residual value lease, and $6,554 for an $80,000 final price lease. 3) Craxton Engineering considers a 7-year $756,000 fabricator lease vs purchase. Leasing
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
508 views

Statistics Solutions

The document discusses several lease examples and calculations: 1) A 5-year lease for a $200,000 supercomputer with a residual value of $60,000 and interest rate of 5%. The monthly lease payment is $2,880 and monthly loan payment is $3,774. 2) A 5-year $400,000 bottling machine lease with 6% interest. Monthly payments are $5,555 for a fair market value lease, $7,695 for a $1 residual value lease, and $6,554 for an $80,000 final price lease. 3) Craxton Engineering considers a 7-year $756,000 fabricator lease vs purchase. Leasing
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Thme 08 : Leasing Exercices 1, 3, 6 et 9 Essayer de faire ces exercices avant de passer la page suivante !!!

1.

Suppose an H1200 supercomputer has a cost of $200,000 and will have a residual market value of $60,000 in five years. The risk-free interest rate is 5% APR with monthly compounding. a. What is the risk-free monthly lease rate for a five-year lease in a perfect market? b. What would be the monthly payment for a five-year $200,000 risk-free loan to purchase the H1200? a. From Eq. 25.1, for a five-year (60 month) lease, PV(Lease payments) = 200,000 60,000/(1 + .05/12)60 = $153,248. Because the first lease payment is paid upfront, and the remaining 59 payments are paid as an annuity:

1 1 153, 248 = L 1 + 1 .05 / 12 (1 + .05 / 12)59


Therefore, L = $2,880. b. From Eq. 25.2, (see also Example 25.2) 200, 000 = M 1 1 1 .05 / 12 (1 + .05 / 12) 60

Therefore, M = $3,774. 3. Consider a five-year lease for a $400,000 bottling machine, with a residual market value of $150,000 at the end of the five years. If the risk-free interest rate is 6% APR with monthly compounding, compute the monthly lease payment in a perfect market for the following leases: a. c. a. A fair market value lease A fixed price lease with an $80,000 final price From Eq. 25.1, for a five-year (60 month) lease with a monthly interest rate of 6%/12 = 0.5%, PV(Lease payments) = 400,000 150,000/(1.005)60 = $288,794. Because the first lease payment is paid upfront, and the remaining 59 payments are paid as an annuity:
1 1 288, 794 = L 1 + . 1 59 .005 1.005

b. A $1.00 out lease

Therefore, L = $5555. b. In this case, the lessor will only receive $1 at the conclusion of the lease. Therefore, the present value of the lease payments should be $400,000:
1 1 400, 000 = L 1 + . 1 59 .005 1.005

Therefore, L = $7695. c. In this case the lessor will receive $80,000 at the conclusion of the lease. Thus, PV(Lease payments) = 400,000 80,000/(1.005)60 = $340,690. Because the first lease payment is paid upfront, and the remaining 59 payments are paid as an annuity:

1 1 340, 690 = L 1 + . 1 59 .005 1.005

Therefore, L = $6554. 6. Craxton Engineering will either purchase or lease a new $756,000 fabricator. If purchased, the fabricator will be depreciated on a straight-line basis over seven years. Craxton can lease the fabricator for $130,000 per year for seven years. Craxtons tax rate is 35%. (Assume the fabricator has no residual value at the end of the seven years.) a. What are the free cash flow consequences of buying the fabricator if the lease is a true tax lease?

b. What are the free cash flow consequences of leasing the fabricator if the lease is a true tax lease? c. a. b. c. What are the incremental free cash flows of leasing versus buying? FCF0 = Capital Expenditure = $756,000 FCF1-7 = Depreciation tax shield = 35% 756,000/7 = $37,800 FCF0-6 = After-tax lease payment = 130,000 (1 35%) = $84,500 FCF0 = 84,500 (756,000) = $671,500 FCF1-6 = 84,500 (37,800) = $122,300 FCF7 = 0 (37,800) = $37,800 9. Suppose Procter and Gamble (P&G) is considering purchasing $15 million in new manufacturing equipment. If it purchases the equipment, it will depreciate it on a straight-line basis over the five years, after which the equipment will be worthless. It will also be responsible for maintenance expenses of $1 million per year. Alternatively, it can lease the equipment for $4.2 million per year for the five years, in which case the lessor will provide necessary maintenance. Assume P&Gs tax rate is 35% and its borrowing cost is 7%. a. What is the NPV associated with leasing the equipment versus financing it with the lease equivalent loan?

b. What is the break-even lease ratethat is, what lease amount could P&G pay each year and be indifferent between leasing and financing a purchase? a. If P&G buys the equipment, it will pay $15 million upfront, and have depreciation expenses of 15 / 5 = $3 million per year, generating a depreciation tax shield of 35% 3 = $1.05 million per year for years 15. It will also have after tax maintenance expenses of $1 million (1 .35) = 0.65 million. Thus, the FCF from buying is 1.05 .65 = $0.4 million in years 15. If it leases, the after-tax lease payments are $4.2 million (1 .35) = $2.73 million. Thus, the FCF of leasing versus buying is 2.73 (15) = 12.27 million in year 0, 2.73 (0.4) = 3.13 million in years 14, and 0 (0.4) = 0.4 million in year 5. We can determine the gain from leasing by discounting the incremental cash flows at P&Gs after-tax borrowing rate of 7%(1 .35) = 4.55%: NPV(Lease-Buy) = 12.27 3.13 3.13 3.13 3.13 0.4 2 3 4 1.0455 1.0455 1.0455 1.0455 1.04555 = $733,955.

Under these assumptions, the lease is more attractive than financing a purchase of the computer. b. We can increase the after-tax lease payments by an amount with present value equal to the NPV in (a). Thus,

1 1 733, 955 = (Increase in L) (1 0.35) 1+ 1 4 .0455 1.0455

so that Increase in L = 246, 363 . Therefore, the break-even lease rate is 4.2 + 0.246363 = $4.446363 million per year, as verified in the following spreadsheet:

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