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You can lease the car for 2 days. You will pay the Lessor Rs.2000. BUT, the value of the car might be
Rs.1 million.
Lessor does NOT expect you to pay that entire amount for using the car for just 2 days. The car rental
company will service and maintain the car in good condition so it can rent it out to other people. This
way, they can recover the value of the car from 1000 days of lease rent (= value / daily rental = 1,000,000
/ 1000)!! This is the Payback Period (without taking their maintenance costs and profit margin). You can
Cancel the lease and return the car after 1 day. Now you just have to pay Rs.1000. Other Examples of
Operating Lease: IBM for Computer Hardware, Boeing for Airplanes By not fully amortizing operating
lease means the leasing company does not expect to recover the whole amount or value of asset from you.
3- Sale & Lease-Back
Sale & Lease-Back is the Most Interesting Leasing Scheme creative extension of Financial Lease where
the Seller of the asset is the User-lessee. User sells his asset to Leasing Company in return for lump-sum
cash and then repays the Leasing Company in form of Lease Rentals over a period of time to buy-back
the asset. It is considered to be a creative way of mobilizing your asset to raise debt.
Example of Sale & Lease-Back: You need Rs.300000 to start a business and all you own is a car. What
can you do? Go to Leasing Company. Ask them to buy your car for Rs.300000 and then lease it back to
you for 1 year!!! This way, the Leasing Company will take ownership of the car and give you Rs.300000
cash to start your business. Company has bought the car and you can start business from the cash you
received. Suppose you expect to earn Rs.50000 per month from your business. Then you can easily pay
Rs.30000 per month as lease rental and get your car back in 1 year. Remember company bought car from
you for Rs.300000 but you will pay suppose Rs.360000 back to company at the end of period to have
your car back. Rs.60000 is the profit or interest or mark-up Company is charging above the principal
amount of Rs.300000.
Lease Analyses & Calculations:
To Buy or To Lease? That is the Question. Here we are doing some numerical calculations that can help
us to decide whether it is better to lease?
Assume that the Decision to Acquire the Asset has already been made independently at the
Capital Budgeting Stage (which comes first).
First value is NPV (Similar to Capital Budgeting) modified to NAL for Leasing Analysis
NAL = Net Advantage of Leasing = PV (Cost of Owning Asset) PV (Cost of Leasing).
If NAL >0 then Leasing is Better than Buying.
Cost of Owning Asset: Cost of Owning includes following Cash Flows: Initial
investment Io, yearly maintenance and service costs, yearly depreciation tax
savings, replacement or the salvage value of the asset at the end of its life and
Final net residual value (after any tax).
Cost of Leasing includes following Cash Flows: Yearly Lease Rentals, Yearly
Tax Savings associated with Lease Rentals
Discount Rate "r": Generate Cash Flow forecasts for life of asset. Cash Flows
are quite FIXED AND CERTAIN so use a LOW DISCOUNT RATE = r =
mark-up rate on bank loan OR use Risk Free Rate of Return = r RF = T-bill
Interest rate. If Company is running in operation then use actual average cost of
Debt.
WACC = rDxD + rExE (where rD is AFTER-TAX Cost of Debt). Lease IRR % affects
the "rD" After Tax Cost of Debt. WACC can be used as the Discount Rate "r" in NPV
calculations in Capital Budgeting.
Practically speaking, corporate financing and capital structure have feedback effect on
capital budgeting decision. This means that capital budgeting ranking of projects may
have to be revised taking into account the cost of debt (or leasing). The effect is minor
because projects are selected based on strategic value and operational efficiency and not
just minor differences in NPV. Of course, feedback effect goes entirely against mm
theory which is for ideal, efficient markets.
Leasing (and financing decisions in general) can (very rarely) have a
FEEDBACK EFFECT on Capital Budgeting Decisions. Suppose that you had
to choose one of 3 possible projects and you picked Project A based at the
Capital Budgeting Stage (based on NPV). Many weeks later, you begin to
decide where to raise the money and HOW TO FINANCE Project A. You
need to take a bank loan at 15% pa interest. You realize now that another
Project B (which had been rejected at the Capital Budgeting Stage) uses
equipment that can be LEASED at a lower cost (say 13%). Now, you had done
the Capital Budgeting exercise using your company's WACC as the discount
rate in the NPV calculation. That WACC used the company's actual interest
cost on bank loans as the after-tax cost of debt. But, since Project C can use the
cheaper Lease Financing, you should RE-CALCULATE its NPV using the
Cost of Lease (i.e. IRR) as the discount rate. This case is rare and the difference
of a few percentage points in the cost of debt should not change a fundamental
decision based on cash-flows, operational effectiveness, and overall strategic
advantage of investing in a project which are considered at the Capital
Budgeting Stage
Types of Lease
Leases are classified into different types based on the variation in the elements of a lease. Very
popularly heard leases are financial and operating lease. Apart from these, there are sale and
lease back and direct lease, single investor lease and leveraged lease, and domestic and
international lease.
Lease is a very important financing option for an entrepreneur with no or inadequate money for
financing the initial investment required in plant and machinery. In lease, the lessor finances the
asset or equipment and the lessee uses it in exchange of fixed lease rentals. In other words, lease
financing is an arrangement where the lessee who requires the equipment or machinery gets the
finance from the lessor for the agreed rental payments. Such kind of lease is called finance lease.
There are many such arrangements and hence there are many types of lease. Let us have a look at
the different kinds of lease.
lease classifies lease into different types. Such elements are as follows
Here, risk means the chance of technological obsolescence and reward refers to the cash flow
generated from the use of equipment and the residual value of the equipment.
Types of Lease:
On the basis of above dimensions, leases are classified into following:
Finance Lease and Operating Lease: Finance lease, also known as Full Payout Lease, is a type
of lease wherein the lessor transfers substantially all the risks and rewards related to the asset to
the lessee. Generally, the ownership is transferred to the lessee at the end of the economic life of
the asset. Lease term is spread over the major part of the asset life. Here, lessor is only a
financier. Example of a finance lease is big industrial equipment.
On the contrary, in operating lease, risk and rewards are not transferred completely to the lessee.
The term of lease is very small compared to finance lease. The lessor depends on many different
lessees for recovering his cost. Ownership along with its risks and rewards lies with the lessor.
Here, lessor is not only acting as a financier but he also provides additional services required in
the course of using the asset or equipment. Example of an operating lease is music system leased
on rent with the respective technicians.
Sale And Lease Back and Direct Lease: In the arrangement of sale and lease back, the lessee
sells his asset or equipment to the lessor (financier) with an advanced agreement of leasing back
to the lessee for a fixed lease rental per period. It is exercised by the entrepreneur when he wants
to free his money, invested in the equipment or asset, to utilize it at whatsoever place for any
reason.
On the other hand, direct lease is a simple lease where the asset is either owned by the
lessor or he acquires it. In the former case, the lessor and equipment supplier are one and the
same person and this case is called bipartite lease. In bipartite lease, there are two parties.
Whereas, in the latter case, there are three different parties viz. equipment supplier, lessor, and
lessee and it is called tripartite lease. Here, equipment supplier and lessor are two different
parties.
Single Investor Lease and Leveraged Lease: In single investor lease, there are two parties
lessor and lessee. The lessor arranges the money to finance the asset or equipment by way of
equity or debt. The lender is entitled to recover money from the lessor only and not from the
lessee in case of default by lessor. Lessee is entitled to pay the lease rentals only to the lessor.
Leveraged lease, on the other hand, has three parties lessor, lessee and the financier or lender.
Equity is arranged by the lessor and debt is financed by the lender or financier. Here, there is a
direct connection of the lender with the lessee and in case of default by the lessor; the lender is
also entitled to receive money from lessee. Such transactions are generally routed through a
trustee.
Domestic and International Lease: When all the parties of the lease agreement reside in the
same country, it is called domestic lease.
International lease are of two types Import Lease and Cross Border Lease. When lessor and
lessee reside in same country and equipment supplier stays in different country, the lease
arrangement is called import lease. When the lessor and lessee are residing in two different
countries and no matter where the equipment supplier stays, the lease is called cross border lease.
Lease financing is one of the important sources of medium- and long-term financing where the
owner of an asset gives another person, the right to use that asset against periodical payments.
The owner of the asset is known as lessor and the user is called lessee.
The periodical payment made by the lessee to the lessor is known as lease rental. Under lease
financing, lessee is given the right to use the asset but the ownership lies with the lessor and at
the end of the lease contract, the asset is returned to the lessor or an option is given to the lessee
either to purchase the asset or to renew the lease agreement.
Different Types of Lease:
Depending upon the transfer of risk and rewards to the lessee, the period of lease and the number
of parties to the transaction, lease financing can be classified into two categories. Finance lease
and operating lease.
i. Finance Lease:
It is the lease where the lessor transfers substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership of
assets to the lessee for lease rentals. In other words, it puts the lessee in the same condition as
he/she would have been if he/she had purchased the asset. Finance lease has two phases: The first
one is called primary period. This is non-cancellable period and in this period, the lessor recovers
his total investment through lease rental. The primary period may last for indefinite period of
time. The lease rental for the secondary period is much smaller than that of primary period.
ii. Features of Finance Lease:
From the above discussion, following features can be derived for finance lease:
1. A finance lease is a device that gives the lessee a right to use an asset.
2. The lease rental charged by the lessor during the primary period of lease is sufficient to
recover his/her investment.
3. The lease rental for the secondary period is much smaller. This is often known as peppercorn
rental.
4. Lessee is responsible for the maintenance of asset.
A company is able to enjoy the tax advantage on lease payments as lease payments can be
deducted as a business expense.
Cheaper:
Leasing is a source of financing which is cheaper than almost all other sources of financing.
Technical Assistance:
Lessee gets some sort of technical support from the lessor in respect of leased asset.
Inflation Friendly:
Leasing is inflation friendly, the lessee has to pay fixed amount of rentals each year even if the
cost of the asset goes up.
Ownership:
After the expiry of primary period, lessor offers the lessee to purchase the assets by paying a
very small sum of money.
ii. Disadvantages:
Lease financing suffers from the following disadvantages
a. To Lessor:
Lessor suffers from certain limitations which are discussed below:
Unprofitable in Case of Inflation:
Lessor gets fixed amount of lease rental every year and they cannot increase this even if the cost
of asset goes up.
Double Taxation:
Sales tax may be charged twice:
First at the time of purchase of asset and second at the time of leasing the asset.
Greater Chance of Damage of Asset:
As ownership is not transferred, the lessee uses the asset carelessly and there is a great chance
that asset cannot be useable after the expiry of primary period of lease.
b. To Lessee:
The disadvantages of lease financing from lessees point of view are given below:
Compulsion:
Finance lease is non-cancellable and even if a company does not want to use the asset, lessee is
required to pay the lease rentals.
Ownership:
The lessee will not become the owner of the asset at the end of lease agreement unless he decides
to purchase it.
Costly:
Lease financing is more costly than other sources of financing because lessee has to pay lease
rental as well as expenses incidental to the ownership of the asset.
Understatement of Asset:
As lessee is not the owner of the asset, such an asset cannot be shown in the balance sheet which
leads to understatement of lessees asset.