Financial Management Leasing
Financial Management Leasing
Financial Management Leasing
MANAGEMENT
LEASING
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LEASE OR BUY DECISIONS
A lease contract is an agreement under which the
original owner of property permits someone else to
use it. The original owner is the ‘lessor’ and the user
of the property is the ‘lessee’. There are many kinds
of leases and subtleties to lease contracts, but the
major distinction to be aware of is the difference
between operating leases and capital leases.
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OPERATING LEASES
Operating leases sometimes called service leases,
provide for both financing and maintenance.
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SALE-AND-LEASEBACK
ARRANGEMENT
In a sale and leaseback arrangement the firm that
owns the asset sells it to another firm and
simultaneously executes an agreement to lease the
asset back for a stated period under specific terms.
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LEASE OR BUY DECISIONS
The lessor uses the same criteria for determining
whether the lease is a capital or operating lease and
accounts for it accordingly.
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LEASE OR BUY DECISIONS
From a tax standpoint, the lessor can claim the tax
benefits of the leased asset only if it is an operating
lease, though the revenue code uses slightly different
criteria for determining whether the lease is an
operating lease.
When a lease is classified as an operating lease, the
lease expenses are treated as operating expense and
the operating lease does not show up as part of the
capital of the firm. When a lease is classified as a
capital lease, the present value of the lease expenses
is treated as debt, and interest is imputed on this
amount and shown as part of the income statement. 17
LEASE OR BUY DECISIONS
In practical terms, however, reclassifying operating
leases as capital leases can increase the debt shown
on the balance sheet substantially especially for
firms in sectors which have significant operating
leases; airlines and retailing come to mind.
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ADVANTAGES OF LEASING
Risk of obsolescence.
Fewer restrictions.
Flexibility in duration.
Provides working capital.
Improvement in financial ratios.
Full Financing.
Lower price.
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RISK OF OBSOLESENCE
Obsolescence is a significant issue for many types
of equipment; leasing of computers is such a big
business that many large companies such as IBM
and Dell operate leasing subsidiaries. Therefore,
companies will often lease this type of equipment to
avoid the cost of repurchasing new equipment.
Under a lease arrangement it is sometimes much
easier to return your leased product for a new and
improved model, especially if you have been a
‘good’ lessee and you have paid all rents on time.
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FEWER RESTRICTIONS
Many loan arrangements have included restrictive
covenants that have requirements for an organization to
meet or maintain certain liquidity levels or restrict
dividend payouts. In other words, covenants attached to
either bank loans or bond issues can significantly reduce
financial flexibility by restricting capital expenditures
and dividend payments; when leases, in general,
obligations are restricted to making payments on time
and ensuring the underlying asset is insured; with
certain types of assets, e.g., aircraft, additional payments
may be required to ensure that the asset is being
appropriately maintained but on balance there are likely
fewer restrictions on the lease option. 22
FLEXIBILITY IN DURATION
There are many instances where a company may
require an asset for only a relatively short period,
e.g., acquisition of an aircraft to meet a temporary
increase in passenger traffic. Leases are ideal for
these situations as they are easier to arrange than
purchasing an asset and reselling it at a later date
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PROVIDES WORKING CAPITAL
If companies are in need of working capital they
will sometimes use ‘sale/leaseback’ arrangements.
This is an arrangement where an organization owns
an asset and sells it to a leasing company and then
leases that asset from the leasing company. These
arrangements are popular with land/buildings – tax
deductions are improved significantly since land
cannot be amortized under Canadian tax law but the
full lease payment can be expensed.
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IMPROVEMENT IN FINANCIAL RATIOS
Operating leases have the effect of improving financial
ratios for an organization as there is no visible increase in
liabilities on the balance sheet and the total assets do not
include leased assets. Therefore, leverage ratios and
profitability ratios will be higher than if debt was
incurred to purchase an asset. It is important to note that
analysts and bankers do take into account the impact of
both operating and capital leases when completing an
analysis of an organization, hence it is unlikely the
enterprise would get any real value from the fact the
operating lease is not disclosed in the same manner as
capital leases. From the analysts’ point of view both
leases involved financial commitments and risk. 25
FULL FINANCING & LOWER PRICE
Leasing allows you to finance an asset 100% where
traditional borrowing often limits the percentage of
the asset’s value you can borrow. Therefore, often
you can only borrow up to 90% of the value of asset
you purchase.
Often major lease companies are able to acquire
equipment and vehicles at lower prices due to bulk
purchases than most organizations can negotiate. The
effect of this better pricing can allow an organization
to pay less for an asset under a lease due to the fact
that part of the lower price may be passed through to
the lessee as a better lease rate. 26
DISADVANTAGES OF LEASING
The rate unknown.
Value of ownership.
Approval for adjustment to assets
Obsolescence
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THE RATE UNKNOWN
The rate implicit in a lease is often not stated in
commercial leases – therefore the cost can be quite
high versus traditional borrowing costs, and the
financial officer needs to do some careful analysis.
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VALUE OF OWNERSHIP
In the case of a lease, the ownership rights are
limited to the value of the leasehold interest and this
is generally less than the outright ownership value.
The relative value of the leasehold interest and
outright ownership will depend upon the lease
payments and the value of the asset returned to the
lessor at the end of the lease term. There is no
ownership position in the asset. Therefore at the end
of the lease term the asset is returned to the lessor. If
there is any value left the lessor reaps the rewards of
this through the sale of the asset.
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APPROVAL FOR ADJUSTMENT
Most lease agreements have a provision that
improvements or changes to the leased property
cannot be made without the permission of the lessor.
If the equipment were owned by the organization,
they would not need to seek approval of an outside
party to make such improvements. Of course if the
improvement is seen to add value to the asset then
the lessor is not likely to withhold this approval.
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OBSOLESCENCE
If an asset leased becomes obsolete during the lease
term, the lessee must continue to make lease
payments to the end of the lease term regardless of
whether the asset is being used. However if the asset
is purchased using debt and becomes obsolete, the
owner is faced with a potentially similar problem of
owing money on the debt when the asset is obsolete.
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LEASE OR BUY DECISION
The lease vs. buy decision is often not a
straightforward number crunching exercise. There
are many qualitative factors that must be considered
in your analysis.
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ASSET REPLACEMENT
In replacement analysis, the defender is an existing
asset; the challenger is the best available
replacement candidate.
The current market value is the value to use in
preparing a defender’s economic analysis. Sunk
costs—past costs that cannot be changed by any
future investment decision— should not be
considered in an economic analysis.
Two basic approaches to analyzing replacement
problems are the cash-flow approach and the
opportunity-cost approach.
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ASSET REPLACEMENT
The cash flow approach explicitly considers the
actual cash-flow consequences for each replacement
alternative as it occurs. Typically, the net proceeds
from the sale of the defender are subtracted from the
purchase price of the challenger.
The opportunity-cost approach views the net
proceeds from the sale of the defender as an
opportunity cost of keeping the defender. That is,
instead of deducting the salvage value from the
purchase cost of the challenger, we consider the
salvage value an investment required in order to keep
the asset. 34
ASSET REPLACEMENT
Economic service life is the remaining useful life of
a defender (or a challenger) that results in the
minimum equivalent annual cost or maximum
annual equivalent revenue. We should use the
respective economic service lives of the defender
and the challenger when conducting a replacement
analysis.
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ASSET REPLACEMENT
The role of technological change in asset
improvement should be weighed in making long-
term replacement plans: If a particular item is
undergoing rapid, substantial technological
improvements, it may be prudent to shorten or delay
replacement (to the extent where the loss in
production does not exceed any savings from
improvements in future challengers) until a desired
future model is available.
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ASSET REPLACEMENT
Ultimately, in replacement analysis, the question is
not whether to replace the defender, but when to do
so. The AE (annual equivalence) method provides a
marginal basis on which to make the year-by-year
decision about the best time to replace the defender.
As a general decision criterion, the PW (present
worth) method provides a more direct solution to a
variety of replacement problems with either an
infinite or a finite planning horizon or a
technological change in a future challenger.
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CAPITAL RATIONING
Shareholder wealth is maximised if a company
undertakes all possible positive NPV projects. Capital
rationing is where there are insufficient funds to do so.
This implies that where investment capital is rationed,
shareholder wealth is not being maximised.
There are two types of capital rationing: Hard capital
rationing - An absolute limit on the amount of finance
available is imposed by the lending institutions. Soft
capital rationing - A company may impose its own
rationing on capital. This is contrary to the rational view
of shareholder wealth maximisation.
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