Chapter 24: Capital Structure & Cost of Capital

📚 JAIIB 2026 • AFM • Module C • Chapter 6 of 10 • Unit 24

Capital Structure and Cost of Capital
(How Much to Borrow vs Own? And What Does Money COST?)

Should a company use 70% debt and 30% equity? Or 40-60? The right mix (capital structure) determines profitability AND survival. This chapter covers leverage, 3 theories of capital structuring, taxation impact, cost of debt/preference/equity, CAPM, WACC, marginal cost, and 7 common misconceptions.

⏱ 26 min read🎯 Core Finance Theory⚡ 14 Flash Cards

Banky Learns to Design the Perfect Mix! ⚖️💰

A company wants ₹500 lakh capital. Should it borrow ₹300L (debt) + invest ₹200L (equity)? Or more debt for “trading on equity”? Or less debt for safety? The answer depends on cost of capital, tax benefits, and risk appetite.

“Sir, this company has 80% debt! Is that too much?” 😰 — “YES! High leverage = high risk. But some debt is GOOD because interest is tax-deductible!” ⚖️
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Section 1 of 9

Capital Structure + Cost of Capital — Complete

📖 Part 1 — Capital Structure & Leverage

Capital Structure = Proportion of DEBT and EQUITY in total long-term funds. Debt = term loans, debentures, FDs. Equity = share capital, reserves, retained profits, preference shares.

Leverage/Gearing: High debt ratio = Highly Leveraged/Geared. Low debt = Low Leveraged. Trading on Equity: Using borrowed funds to earn MORE than the cost of borrowing → extra profit goes to equity holders. Works when ROI > Cost of debt. Dangerous when business declines!

5 Factors influencing capital structure: (1) Banking/industry norms (D/E norms), (2) Degree of control (don’t dilute voting), (3) Trading on Equity (leverage benefit), (4) Cost of Debt (double-edged sword!), (5) Size & business plans of the firm.

3 Theories: (1) Net Income (NI): More debt = lower WACC (because debt is cheaper). No limit on leverage benefit. (2) Net Operating Income (NOI): WACC stays CONSTANT regardless of leverage (market adjusts cost of equity upward). (3) Traditional: WACC decreases initially with debt, stays flat, then INCREASES beyond a point (most realistic!).

CAPM is NOT used for capital structure decisions — it’s used for cost of equity! Exam trap!

🧑‍💼 Banky: “NI = more debt = better (aggressive). NOI = doesn’t matter (neutral). Traditional = sweet spot exists (realistic). CAPM ≠ capital structure theory!” ⚖️

💰 Part 2 — Cost of Capital: Debt, Preference, Equity

Cost of Debt: For term loans = stated interest rate. For bonds/debentures in secondary market = YTM. Interest on debt = TAX DEDUCTIBLE (tax shield!). After-tax cost of debt = Rate × (1 − Tax rate). ALL forms of interest provide tax shield — bonds, FDs, inter-corporate deposits!

Approx YTM = {Interest + (M−P)/n} / (0.6×P + 0.4×M)

Cost of Preference: Same formula as YTM. But preference dividend is NOT tax-deductible (no tax shield like debt).

Cost of Equity (4 methods):

CAPM: Ra = Rrf + β(Rm − Rrf)

Risk-free rate + Beta × Market premium. Beta = sensitivity of stock vs market. Higher beta = more volatile = higher required return.

Bond Yield + Risk Premium: Cost = Yield on firm’s LT bonds + Equity risk premium.

Dividend Growth Model: Cost = (Dividend/Price) + Growth rate.

Earnings-Price Ratio: Cost = Expected EPS / Market Price.

Key insight: Cost of equity > Cost of preference > Cost of debt. Because equity holders take MAXIMUM risk!

WACC = (Weight of Equity × Cost) + (Weight of Pref × Cost) + (Weight of Debt × Cost)

Example: Equity 40% at 20%, Pref 10% at 15%, Debt 50% at 10% → WACC = 8 + 1.5 + 5 = 14.5%

Marginal Cost of Capital: Cost INCREASES as more capital is raised. Breaking point = level beyond which cost rises. Optimal Capital Budget: Where IRR of next project = Weighted Marginal Cost.

Floatation Cost: Issue expenses for raising capital. Revised WACC = WACC / (1 − floatation cost).

🧑‍💼 Banky: “Equity cost > Debt cost because equity holders take MORE risk! WACC = weighted average of all costs. Floatation cost makes it even higher!” 📊

⚠️ Part 3 — 7 Misconceptions About Cost of Capital

1. “Equity capital has NO cost” — WRONG! Equity holders expect return (opportunity cost). 2. “Retained earnings are FREE” — WRONG! They have opportunity cost too. 3. “Depreciation fund is cost-free” — WRONG! Opportunity cost applies. 4. “Include current liabilities in WACC” — WRONG! Only long-term capital. 5. “Use historical cost of debt” — WRONG! Use current market cost (YTM). 6. “Dividend % = cost of equity” — WRONG! Use CAPM or growth model. 7. “Use existing WACC for new project” — WRONG! Each project has its own risk profile.

Net Income approach is NOT used for cost of equity — it’s a capital structure theory! (CAPM, Bond Yield, Dividend Growth, E/P ratio = cost of equity methods)

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Section 2 of 9

Exam-Ready Points

🎯 Must Remember!

  • Capital Structure = Debt vs Equity proportion. High leverage = high debt = high risk + potential reward.
  • 3 Theories: NI (more debt = lower WACC), NOI (WACC constant), Traditional (WACC has sweet spot — most realistic).
  • CAPM is NOT a capital structure approach. It’s for cost of equity!
  • NI approach is NOT for cost of equity. It’s a capital structure theory!
  • Cost hierarchy: Equity > Preference > Debt (because risk hierarchy is opposite).
  • Interest on ALL debt = tax deductible (bonds, FDs, inter-corporate deposits — ALL provide tax shield).
  • Preference dividend ≠ tax deductible. Only DEBT interest is tax-deductible.
  • CAPM: Ra = Rrf + β(Rm − Rrf). Higher beta = higher cost.
  • WACC: Sum of (weight × cost) for each component. Used as benchmark for project evaluation.
  • Retained earnings have cost! Opportunity cost. NOT free!
  • Cost of equity ≠ dividend percentage. Use CAPM, Dividend Growth, Bond Yield + Premium, or E/P.
  • Floatation cost: Revised WACC = WACC / (1 − floatation %). Makes WACC higher.
  • Capital structure decision affected by: Banking norms, Cost of debt, Taxation, Control, Trading on equity — ALL.
  • Normally, cost of equity > cost of debt = CORRECT statement.

📝 Past Exam Questions

Q: Capital structure decision affected by?
A: All — Banking norms, Cost of debt, Taxation.
Q: Which is NOT used for cost of equity?
A: Net Income approach (it’s a capital structure theory, not cost of equity method).
Q: Which is NOT a capital structure approach?
A: CAPM (it’s for cost of equity, not capital structure).
Q: Which provides tax shield?
A: All — Interest on bonds, FDs, inter-corporate deposits. ALL debt interest is tax-deductible.
Q: Which statement is correct?
A: Normally, cost of equity capital is HIGHER than cost of debt.
Section 3 of 9

Last-Minute Flash Cards

Capital Structure
= Proportion of Debt vs Equity
High debt = highly leveraged/geared. Low debt = low leveraged.
Trading on Equity
Borrow at 12%, earn 15% → 3% extra for equity!
Works when ROI > Cost of debt. Dangerous in downturn!
3 Theories
NI: debt=better | NOI: doesn’t matter | Traditional: sweet spot
CAPM is NOT a capital structure theory! It’s for cost of equity.
Tax Shield
Interest on ALL debt = tax-deductible
Bonds, FDs, inter-corporate — ALL provide tax shield. Dividends do NOT.
Cost Hierarchy
Equity > Preference > Debt
Equity = most risky for investor = highest required return.
CAPM Formula
Ra = Rrf + β(Rm − Rrf)
Risk-free + Beta × Market premium. Higher beta = higher cost.
WACC
= Σ (Weight × Cost) for each component
Benchmark for project evaluation. New project = new WACC (not old!).
Approx YTM
{I + (M−P)/n} / (0.6P + 0.4M)
Used for cost of debt and preference capital in secondary market.
Cost of Equity Methods
CAPM | Bond Yield+Premium | Dividend Growth | E/P
NI approach is NOT a method. Dividend % ≠ cost of equity.
Retained Earnings
Have COST (opportunity cost)! NOT free!
Shareholders could have invested elsewhere. Cost ≈ equity cost.
Marginal Cost
Cost rises as more capital is raised
Breaking point = level where cost increases. Optimal budget where IRR = marginal cost.
Floatation Cost
Revised WACC = WACC / (1 − floatation%)
Issue expenses make WACC higher. One-time cost, not recurring.
Current Liabilities
Do NOT include in WACC calculation!
Only long-term capital components. CL = short-term financing, not capital.
Historical Cost ≠ Current Cost
Use CURRENT market cost for new projects
Old coupon rate is irrelevant. Use YTM of existing bonds in market.

⚡ Module C • Chapter 6 (Unit 24) Done!

  • Capital Structure: Debt vs Equity. High leverage = risky but potentially profitable.
  • 3 Theories: NI (debt = better), NOI (irrelevant), Traditional (sweet spot — most realistic).
  • Tax shield: ALL debt interest is deductible. Equity dividends are NOT. More debt → less tax.
  • Cost: Equity > Preference > Debt. CAPM for equity: Ra = Rrf + β(Rm − Rrf).
  • WACC: Weighted average of all components. Marginal cost increases with more capital.
  • 7 Misconceptions: Equity/retained earnings are NOT free. Don’t use historical cost. Don’t include CL.

Banky says: “Equity cost > Debt cost! CAPM for equity, NOT capital structure! Tax shield on ALL debt! WACC = weighted average! Retained earnings = NOT free!” 🎉⚖️💰

Next: Chapter 25 — Capital Investment Decisions / Term Loans! 💪

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