Calculate the 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, and 4-year spot rate. What is the shape of the term structure?

Section A:
Question 1

i. Consider the following four risk-free government bonds: A, B, C, and D. All four
bonds have a face value of £100 and pay annual coupons, but the coupon rates are
different. Bond A has a coupon rate of 6%, B 7%, C 8%, and D 9%. Both A and B
mature in two years while C and D mature in four years. Bonds A, B, C, and D are
currently trading at £102.78, £104.65, £112.62, and £116.22, respectively.

a. Calculate the 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, and 4-year spot rate. What is the shape of
the term structure? [10 marks]

b. Which theory of the term structure can explain the shape above? Explain the
intuition. [5 marks]

ii. Suppose the price of espresso machines is risky, with a CAPM beta of 0.8. The
monthly storage cost is $10, and the current spot price is $1,000. However, one can
also rent out the machine to earn $5 per month. Storage costs and rent are paid at the end of each month. The expected rate of return on the market is 1.5% per month, with
a risk-free rate of 0.5% per month. [Hint: for the purpose of this question, you may
assume that there is no depreciation on the espresso machine.]

a. What is the required monthly return on an asset with the espresso machine’s
beta? [2 marks]

b. Using your answer above, work out what price the espresso machine should
sell for in 3 months (excluding storage costs). [3 marks]

c. Suppose that you need an espresso machine in 3 months. You believe that the
price of the espresso machine in 3 months will be $1,050. Which of the
following would be cheaper overall: buying the espresso machine today or
buying it in 3 months? [5 marks]

Question 2

i. The following table lists prices of options on Apple’s stock.

a. Using the information above, derive the two missing prices. [5 marks]

b. How can you produce a bear call spread using the two calls above? What is
the price of this bear call spread? [5 marks]

ii. Read the following statements. For each statement, first state whether it is true or
false. Then explain your reasoning.

a. XYZ reported a profit of $270 million for 2020. At the same time, their share
price dropped by 10% in the same year. The fact that the stock market reacted

Stock
Time to
Exercise
(months)

Exercise
Price

Stock
Price

Put

Price

Monthly

Interest
rate

Call

Price

Apple
1 120 126 2 1% ?
Apple
1 122 126 ? 1% 6

negatively to positive earnings suggests that it is not informationally efficient.[3 marks]

b. Your friend Jonny made a total return of 100% in 2020 by investing in
GameStop, beating the market return by a big margin. In the same year, your
friend Sammy made a total return of 5% by investing in government bonds,
much lower than the market return in 2020. Given that Jonny outperformed
Sammy substantially, Jonny must be a better investor. [3 marks]

c. Managers make superior returns on their purchases of their company’s stock.
This violates the strong form of market efficiency. [3 marks]

iii. Both Firm A and Firm B earn £20 per share every year. Firm A’s equity has a beta
of 0.5 and Firm B’s equity has a beta of 1.5. The expected market return is 10%
per year and the risk-free rate is 2% per year. Firm A pays out all its earnings to
equityholders. Firm B retains half its earnings and pays out the other half to
equityholders.

a. What are the required rates of return for A and B’s equity? [2 marks]

b. Suppose that the ROE is 15% for Firm B. The first dividend will be paid one
year from today. Calculate the current share price for both Firm A and Firm B.
Why are the two prices different? [4 marks]

Section B:

Question 3 (25 marks)
CorVIR Inc. is a firm whose operations generate an expected EBIT (earnings before interest income, interest expenses and corporate taxes) of $80 per year in perpetuity. These are all the cash-flows that the firms’ operating assets are generating, and the company is currently all equity financed. Given the risk of CorVIR’s operations, the market requires a return of 15%,
i.e., the unlevered cost of capital is 15% for these cash-flows. In addition to its operating assets,
CorVIR holds $150 of excess cash on its balance sheet, which is invested in Treasury-bills
generating a risk-free return of 4% every year before corporate taxes. The corporate tax rate is
40%. CorVIR is listed on a stock exchange and has 1,000 shares outstanding.

i. Assume the market believes that CorVIR will keep the $150 of cash on its balance sheet
forever and never take on any debt. What is the market value of CorVIR’s equity and
the price of CorVIR’s stock?
(Hint: Excess cash invested in treasury is similar to
carrying negative debt and therefore features tax disadvantage that is opposite to the
usual interest tax shield)
(6 marks)
Now assume that CorVIR announces that the firm will undertake a leveraged recapitalisation.
In this transaction, CorVIR will take on $250 of new permanent fixed debt and use the proceeds
from the debt issue, together with the $150 of cash it already holds, to pay a special dividend
to shareholders of $400 (40 cents per share). Assume that the risk of the tax shield of the debt
is the same as the risk of the debt. The interest rate on the debt will be 6%.

ii. What will happen to the price of CorVIR’s stock when this recapitalisation plan is
announced? (6 marks)

iii. Assume now that CorVIR goes ahead with this recapitalisation, i.e., raises $250 of debt
and pays a dividend of $400. What will be the market values of CorVIR’s equity and
debt after this transaction has been completed? What will be the stock price? What is
the change in total shareholder value from this transaction (vis-à-vis the case before the
transaction was announced)? (7 marks)

iv. Assume now that CorVIR, instead of paying a dividend, uses the $400 (the excess cash
plus the proceeds from the debt issue) to repurchase its own shares. How many shares
will CorVIR be able to acquire? What will be the stock price of CorVIR after the share
buyback? What is the change in shareholder value from this transaction (vis-à-vis the
case before the transaction was announced)? (6 marks)

Question 4 (25 marks)

Los Pollos Inc.’s shares trade at $30, and the company has 100 million shares outstanding. Hermanos Ltd.’s shares trade at $20, and the firm has 30 million shares outstanding. The two
companies are fully equity financed. The free cash-flows for Los Pollos Inc. are expected to be
$300 million next year, while Hermanos Ltd. predicts its free cash-flows to be $72 million next
year. Both companies think that the level of cash-flows will stay constant thereafter (forever).

Los Pollos Inc. plans to acquire Hermanos Ltd. Assume that there are no other informational
effects other than the ones described in the text. The market risk premium is 7% and the risk-
free rate is 3% in this economy.

i. Compute the unlevered (asset) Beta and the unlevered cost of capital of the combined
firm assuming no synergies are created in the deal. (3 marks)

The manager of Los Pollos Inc. is convinced that the acquisition will generate economies of
scope. These savings amount to an additional free cash-flow of $30 million starting next year,
which will subsequently occur annually and remain constant.

ii. Compute the present value of the synergies and the value of the combined firm. Use
the unlevered cost of capital calculated in (i) as the discount rate for the synergies. (3
marks)

iii. What is the maximum percentage premium that Los Pollos Inc. could pay in a cash
transaction without losing money on the acquisition? If, instead, the acquisition took
place via a stock-swap transaction, what is the highest exchange ratio Los Pollos could
offer? (4 marks)

You are a senior analyst at a hedge fund specialising in merger arbitrage. A version of the
investment strategy trades target shares after a merger announcement and closes the position
once the outcome of a merger is certain. Let’s implement this strategy. Assume that you can
both take long and short positions in stocks.

iv. Suppose that Los Pollos and Hermanos agree to a cash offer at $27 per share. Following
the announcement, Hermanos’ share price jumps to $26.3. What is the market-implied
probability of the merger failing (e.g., the regulator may not approve the deal)? (3
marks)

v. Your team of SSE interns independently estimated the probability of the merger failing.
You trust your interns to know better than the market. For which range of possible SSE-
intern-estimated failure probabilities would you buy Hermanos’ shares after observing
the share price jump to $26.3 after the announcement? What would be the maximum
profit per share traded? For which range of possible SSE-intern-estimated failure
probabilities would you (short) sell Hermanos’ shares after observing the share price
jump to $26.3 after the announcement? What would be the maximum profit per share
traded? (6 marks)

vi. Suppose instead that Los Pollos Inc. and Hermanos Ltd. agree to a stock-swap merger
with an exchange ratio of 0.9. Right after the announcement of the stock-swap merger
at these terms, the Hermanos Ltd. share price jumps to $26.5. What is the implied
probability of the merger not going through? (6 marks)