Case Analysis Finance
FIN 418 A1 – INSTRUCTIONS FOR CASE REPORT
Due at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 26, 2014. Hand in the report at the
assignment drop-off box located outside the General Office on the third floor of the
School of Business building. Late submissions will not be accepted. Also, electronic
submissions will not be accepted.
Attach a covering page to the front of your report giving your name, course number, and
section number (A1).
Work on the case report may be done individually or in pairs. If you decide to work in
pairs, both names must appear on the final report. The instructor will assign the same
mark to both members of a pair.
Instructions:
1. Hand in paper copies of Excel worksheets showing your analysis. Put these in an appendix. Don’t shrink the worksheets to such a small size that they are difficult
to read. You could hide some of the data to reduce the bulk of your report.
2. The report should be at most five pages (that is, five typewritten pages double spaced), plus Excel worksheets. (The Excel worksheets are over and above the
five typewritten pages.)
3. State clearly any assumptions that you make. 4. Answer the questions in turn. Write down each question number followed by
your answer.
5. Strive for a professional looking submission.
On November 8, 2000, Corning, INC. (Corning) announced it would issue $2.7 billion in
zero-coupon convertible debentures priced at $741.923 per $1,000 principal amount.
Concurrent with the offering, Corning also conducted a separate public offering of 30
million shares of its common stock at $71.25 per share.
Julianna Coopers, an investment analyst at the Paradigm Group of mutual funds, has been
tasked with assessing the new issue of convertibles. She must recommend whether or not
Paradigm’s Convertible Securities Fund should invest in the issue. Her recommendation
would be guided by:
Her independent valuation analysis.
The volatility of Corning stock.
The sustainability of Corning’s current high stock market valuations and the outlook for the firm.
Questions:
1. [1] “The initial public offering (IPO) price yielded 2% per annum to maturity,
compounded semiannually.” Show the required calculation that demonstrates that the 2%
figure is correct.
2. [4] Observe the entries for Corning in Exhibit 5. Show the calculation of the
following:
Conversion price per share.
Conversion premium per share. (In the class note, we call this the market conversion premium ratio.)
Income spread per bond (This is equivalent to what is called (in the class note) the favourable income differential per share times the conversion ratio.)
Premium payback period.
3. [2] What do the conversion premium per share and premium payback period reported
in Exhibit 5 for Corning tell Ms. Coopers?
4. [2] In Exhibit 5, the conversion premium per share is close to zero for some of the
convertible bonds listed and larger for others. What is the reason for this?
5. [4] What is the straight value of the issue per $1,000 face value? To answer this
question, use Exhibits 6 – 8. Identify clearly your choice of discount rate and give a
reason for this choice. What is one important difference between the bonds listed in
Exhibit 8 and the Corning issue?
6. [1] Why does Ms. Coopers say that the strike price of the conversion option is $89.062
per share?
7. [2] What are the sources of potential dilution? Why is this important?
8. Value the Corning issue using the model given in the class note on Convertible Bonds.
Note: You may find it easiest to work with a binomial tree of the following shape. Then
formulas can easily be dragged across and down.
(a) [2] Note that the swap rate for a 15-year maturity is the average of the bid and offer
fixed rates that banks are willing to swap for six-month LIBOR in a 15-year interest-rate
swap agreement. Estimate the swap rate for a 15-year maturity as follows: linearly
interpolate between the 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields given in Exhibit 12 to
estimate the 15-year Treasury yield. To this add 50 basis points. Note that the rate
derived is expressed as an annual rate compounded semi-annually. Convert this rate to
an equivalent annual continuously compounded rate.
(b) [2] Calculate the dividend yield of Corning’s stock by dividing the annual dividend
(Exhibit 9) by the current stock price. Convert this effective annual rate to an equivalent
annual continuously compounded rate.
(c) [2] In a table, list the call price for all six-month intervals between November 8, 2005
(when the bond is first callable by Corning) and November 8, 2015. Exhibit 1 describes
the call (or redemption) price as the IPO price plus the accrued original issue discount
through the redemption date. Note: On each call date, calculate the call price as follows:
$741.93 ($1, 000 $741.93) 30
t
, where “t” denotes the number of half-years since
the bond was issued. This implies that the call price is $1,000 (per $1,000 face value)
when the bond matures in 15 years.
(d) [20] As a base case, assign the following parameter values:
Use a 30-step model with a time step of 0.5 years.
Let the risk-free rate in the model equal the swap rate calculated in (a).
Assign to volatility a value of 75%.
Assign to q the dividend yield calculated in (b).
Assign to , the default intensity, a value of zero.
Calculate the following:
The value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) assuming that none of the options (conversion, call, or put) are present.
The value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) with the embedded conversion option only. What is the implied value of the conversion option?
The value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) with the embedded call option only. What is the implied value of the call option?
The value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) with the embedded put options only. What is the implied value of the put options?
The value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) with all embedded options, conversion, call, and put. What is the implied value of all the options
available in combination?
Summarize your results in a table.
Is the value of the embedded conversion, call, and put options in combination equal to the
sum of their individual values on the assumption that that other options are not present?
Note:
The straight value of the bond (with no embedded options) according to this model will not agree with what you have calculated in question 5 since in this
model, under the base case, we are assuming a zero probability of default whereas
the discount rate we use in question 5 takes default risk into account. When
answering the above questions about the implied values of the options, compare
the value of the bond with the specified options given by the model to the straight
value given by the model.
The case does not give us the prices at which the bond can be put by the bondholder on November 8, 2005 and November 8, 2010. Assume that on each
of these dates, the put price equals the call price (calculated in 8(c)).
With all options present (conversion, call, and put), calculate the value of the
bond as follows: 4 1 2 3
max( , max(min( , ), ))Q Q Q Q , where 1
Q is the value of the
bond if not called, put, or converted; 2
Q is the call price; 3
Q is the conversion
value; and 4
Q is the put price.
(e) [2] Under the base case, is conversion forced at any node? Explain.
(f) [4] Refer to Exhibit 11 and the call option expiring in November with a strike price of
$70.00 and the put option expiring in May with a strike price of $70.00. For each option,
calculate the volatility implied by the Black-Scholes model, the premium listed, the New
York close stock price of $68.50, the dividend yield calculated in (b) expressed as an
annual continuously compounded rate, and a risk-free rate of 6.4% per annum
compounded continuously. Measure time to maturity by the reported number of days to
maturity divided by 252, the number of trading days in a year.
(g) [5] Recalculate the value of the bond (per $1,000 face value) with the embedded
conversion, call, and put options making alternative assumptions with respect to
volatility. Provide some justification for the range of values assumed for volatility.
Consider the validity of estimating expected volatility using historical volatilities.
Develop your own view with respect to whether Corning will perform like the past month
or will be less/more volatile. Refer to Exhibit 10. Summarize your results in a table.
(h) [2] What are two important limitations of the analysis that has been conducted?
9. [10] Should Ms. Coopers recommend that Paradigm’s Convertible Securities Fund
invest in the issue? Does your analysis imply that the bond issue is overvalued or
undervalued? Why? Discuss these issues in a few paragraphs, referring to your analysis
and what you judge to be important considerations with respect to the sustainability of
Corning’s current high stock market valuations, the outlook for the firm, and any other
factors you judge to be important.
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