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Principles of Finance: Unit 4, Capital Efficiency Tradeoffs: Where Do I Spend My Cash? 4 Views
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Description:
You've got a tractor-stamping factory. Where and how do you spend your cash? We'll cover capital efficiency, and how you shouldn't blow it all at the track.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance, a la shmoop. Capital efficiency trade-offs: where and
- 00:06
how do I spend my cash? All right well let's take a look at a gnarly tractor
- 00:12
smelting example case study today you stamp out about ten tractors a week in [Man presenting]
- 00:16
Bessie your 38 year old factory and plant
- 00:20
she's stalwart wide hip and sturdy she did you proud and well now she's falling
Full Transcript
- 00:26
apart it's a miracle she lasted this long
- 00:28
she was only warrantied for 20 years so 38 is like 2x and you've already
- 00:33
depreciated away all of her costs so your tractor company appears to be very
- 00:38
profitable from an earnings basis in fact it looks like this contribution
- 00:43
margin is how much profit the unit generates for its n plus 1 unit in this [Contribution margin definition appears]
- 00:49
case that $50,000 tractor sells that retail to dealers for 80 grand
- 00:54
and yes the factory then you'd say whole sales it to those dealers for 50 grand
- 00:58
alright well the cost of the metal assembly electronics treads engine and
- 01:01
so on is 40 grand so the extra n plus oneth tractor generates $10,000 in
- 01:07
contributed profits well the company's summary income statement for last year [Income statement appears]
- 01:12
looks like this so this is a nice little company great tractors independent
- 01:16
Heartland America but weirdly there's nothing in the DNA line like if the
- 01:21
company had bought a plant some years ago shouldn't there be a plug to
- 01:24
depreciate it well yes but their CFO didn't take this
- 01:28
course had she she would have put in a line
- 01:31
called sinking fund or something similar so it was budgeted on the line such that [Wood burning in the fire]
- 01:36
when old Bessie finally died and was resting comfortably stuffed by the
- 01:41
tractor dermist sitting by the fireplace she'd have a replacement the
- 01:45
company shows kind of "false" profits here right if a new
- 01:49
basic plan cost twenty million dollars and Bessie is fully depreciated 20 years
- 01:53
ago well for the last 18 years we probably should have been socking away a [People working in a factory]
- 01:57
few nuts to fund the build of a new plant and we should have deducted a bit
- 02:01
more than a million bucks a year to fund that it would have come right off our
- 02:05
taxes but we didn't do that we took the excess free cash and stupidly
- 02:10
distributed as dividends to the laborer owners why did we do that well they wanted to [Man carrying sacks of cash]
- 02:16
get paid understandably unfortunately in the process they robbed the company of
- 02:20
cash resources to build a new plant now that this one was well pretty much done [Explosion occurs]
- 02:25
how could this have happened well the people in charge of dividend
- 02:28
distribution were the highly tenured laborers those who had been at the plant
- 02:33
over 25 years they were a year or two from retirement by the time Bessie was
- 02:38
going to die so why would they worry about long-term planning take the money
- 02:43
and run right well that's why you have diversified boards and it's a big issue
- 02:47
when it comes to capital expenditures if you don't have a range of voices [Men discussing matters in a meeting]
- 02:51
speaking up for those who will be at the company 20 years later while you end up
- 02:55
anemic at best luckily despite the short-sighted financial management of
- 02:59
capital tread on me has had a great reputation as a builder of high-end
- 03:03
tractors and banks are happy to have the conversation about giving them a loan
- 03:07
for a new factory well the basic new one will cost 20 mil but allow the company
- 03:11
to make the same 300 tractors now for 30 thousand bucks each instead of 40
- 03:16
thousand there that they've been making them for before and guess what the new
- 03:20
factory replaces one-third of the laborers with robots [Factory robot machine working]
- 03:24
surprise surprise maybe that's why the old guys took the money and ran instead
- 03:28
of spending the plant capital on robots and while the new plant is just
- 03:32
generally more efficient with inventory assembly tracking metrics and so on so
- 03:36
on this new plant factory will hold all of the other variables to be the same
- 03:40
and instead of making 10 grand a unit of 300 in a year 300 produced in a year
- 03:45
they'll make 20,000 in pre-tax profit or contribution per unit that's double so [Pre-tax profit highlighted]
- 03:50
pre-tax profit is going to be 6 million bucks give or take remember that times
- 03:54
interest covered ratio thing we covered before well shoot were 3x and change
- 04:00
here the factory is 20 million dollars divided operating income of 6 million
- 04:03
and you get to 20 over 6 about 3.3 X well it's pretty easy and easy to get to [Person holding Basic factory build folder]
- 04:08
a YES on the basic factory build in 3 years and change the factory is fully
- 04:13
paid off the conservative founder of tread on me would rest easy
- 04:17
but the young whippersnappers angry about how the old guys left them are
- 04:21
more greedy than fearful they haven't lived
- 04:24
through many bad economies and they seek risk they're ready to do the fancy [Robots working on tractors]
- 04:28
factory which will let them stamp out more tractors with more bells and
- 04:33
whistles albeit in an unproven marketplace which may or may not want
- 04:36
them fancy right all right well they can count on for now the same numbers is the
- 04:41
basic factory sales going forward right so the question then is how much could
- 04:45
we spend on a new factory and still sleep at night well the answer revolves
- 04:49
around the cost of money and the time required for them to pay back that loan
- 04:53
if they had to pay everything back in four years well they couldn't afford
- 04:58
much more than what they're spending in this 20 million dollar version of
- 05:01
capital for a basic factory in theory after year three if they had paid back
- 05:05
and say fifteen million dollars in owed just five million at that point well [Interest graphs appear]
- 05:10
they could refinance and extend the payback terms if they had to but let's
- 05:13
say the board is worried about a global economic meltdown or the new Google
- 05:18
driverless tractor so they want read my lips no debt in four years just like the
- 05:22
bank does well the money costs five percent and it is secured by the entire
- 05:26
business that is if the company doesn't pay back the loan the company is owned
- 05:30
by the bank who loaned them the money and the bank is betting that the entire [Man put down gambling chips on roulette table]
- 05:34
company will be worth more than what they're loaning them the money for so
- 05:37
let's say the super duper factory is forty million dollars to build well the
- 05:42
company has six million in operating profits they have to pay back loan in 20
- 05:45
years so they owe two million in principle each year and they'll pay in
- 05:50
year one five percent of forty million borrowed or two million in interest the
- 05:54
interest is deductible the principle is not so together these two elements
- 05:59
comprise four million dollars in cash costs to the company each year doable
- 06:02
yes they have six million in profits here plenty of cushion and you can do
- 06:07
the math that two million dollars goes against taxes so instead of paying a
- 06:11
third of their operating profits of six million dollars in taxes or two million
- 06:15
dollars in taxes if taxable income now of six million minus the two million of
- 06:20
interest costs or taxable income of four million bucks and then a third of that
- 06:24
is 1.3 million note that is the principle owed declines ie 40 million [Principle owed declining on a graph]
- 06:29
owed in year one and 38 million million in year two and so on the
- 06:33
interest cost on that money declines as well by year ten tread on me owes twenty
- 06:38
million dollars on SuperDuper at five percent or just a million bucks a year
- 06:43
in interest half of what they started with but as always here at shmoop [Man holding baseball bat]
- 06:47
central there's a curve ball the economy tanks Google cranks and the next year
- 06:51
instead of selling three hundred tractors like they had for decades they
- 06:55
only sell two hundred so the board is thinking woe is me why did we ever
- 06:59
upgrade Bessie? well for four million dollars we could have fixed her up and
- 07:04
gone producing three hundred tractors a year for another ten years
- 07:07
well that math is totally different of course with almost no needs for capital [Wheel of fortune wheel appears and lands on taxes]
- 07:11
expenditures company finds itself with tons of options and tons of taxes tread
- 07:15
on me left with bessie continues for a decade or more with $10,000 per tractor
- 07:20
in pre-tax profit or three million of pre-tax profit and cash builds up ensure
- 07:24
the company pay a big dividend well only equity holders get dividends and
- 07:27
only a relative handful of labor owners maybe 10% own equity shares in the
- 07:32
company the rest just get paid a salary a small bonus if quotas are met and a
- 07:36
free turkey for christmas well they feel unfairly treated if the company just
- 07:41
hoards its cash and oh by the way the company just got to tax 33 [Man points to taxes in presentation]
- 07:45
percent on its profits if it pays a dividend the employees get taxed a
- 07:48
second time on that dividend fair? doesn't matter it's how the laws are set
- 07:52
up what else can the company do beyond upping the dividend well it could just
- 07:56
keep the cash pouring but good rainy day fodder does the board trust that
- 08:00
management won't spend it stupidly maybe the company could also use the excess [Men sitting in board room]
- 08:04
cash to buy back its own stock fewer shareholders out there mean the same
- 08:08
volume of cherry pie is shared with fewer mouths so each eater gets more but
- 08:12
then the capital that probably should someday be used for a new factory has
- 08:17
been given over to equity owners who are basically leaving the business that is
- 08:21
when they sell out their equity stakes and move on they no longer financially [Woman running away from exploding building]
- 08:24
care whether the business is doing well or not it's likely that some were at
- 08:28
least partly responsible for the 300 tractors that got sold every year so
- 08:33
what happens now that those workers are gone? Does the Department of
- 08:36
Agriculture still buy five tractors a year or do those sales just go away to a
- 08:41
competitor now hopefully you get the idea here lots of moving [Man discussing companies]
- 08:44
parts lots of choices with what you do with your free cash as a company and
- 08:49
factories matter the spiffy new ones don't need humans though so you know
- 08:53
here's hoping you and the robots get along [Robot working in factory]
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