Directions: Answer the following questions on a separate document. Explain how you reached the answer
or show your work if a mathematical calculation is needed, or both. Submit your assignment using the
assignment link in the course shell. This homework assignment is worth 100 points.
Use the following information for Questions 1 through 3:
Boehm Corporation has had stable earnings growth of 8% a year for the past 10 years and in 2013
Boehm paid dividends of $2.6 million on net income of $9.8 million. However, in 2014 earnings are
expected to jump to $12.6 million, and Boehm plans to invest $7.3 million in a plant expansion. This onetime unusual earnings growth won’t be maintained, though, and af ter 2014 Boehm will return to its
previous 8% earnings growth rate. Its target debt ratio is 35%.
Calculate Boehm’s total dividends for 2014 under each of the following policies:
1.  Its 2014 dividend payment is set to force dividends to grow at the long -run growth rate in
earnings.
2.  It continues the 2013 dividend payout ratio.
3.  It uses a pure residual policy with all distributions in the form of dividends (35% of the $7.3 million
investment is financed with debt).
4.  It employs a regular-dividend-plus-extras policy, with the regular dividend being based on the
long-run growth rate and the extra dividend being set according to the residual policy.
Use the following information for Questions 5 and 6:
Schweser Satellites Inc. produces satellite earth stations that sell for $100,000 each. The firm’s fixed
costs, F, are $2 million, 50 earth stations are produced and sold each year, profits total $500,000, and the
firm’s assets (all equity financed) are $5 million. The firm estimates that it can change its production
process, adding $4 million to investment and $500,000 to fixed operating costs. This change will (1)
reduce variable costs per unit by $10,000 and (2) increase output by 20 units,  but (3) the sales price on
all units will have to be lowered to $95,000 to permit sales of the additional output. The firm has tax loss
carryforwards that render its tax rate zero, its cost of equity is 16%, and it uses no debt.
5.  What is the incremental profit? To get a rough idea of the project’s profitability, what is the
project’s expected rate of return for the next year (defined as the incremental profit divided by the
investment)? Should the firm make the investment? Why or why not?
6.  Would the firm’s break-even point increase or decrease if it made the change?
FIN 534 – Homework Set #5
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FIN 534 Homework Set #5  Page 2 of 2
Use the following information for Questions 7 and 8:
Suppose you are provided the following balance sheet information for two firms, Firm A and Firm B (in
thousands of dollars).
Firm A  Firm B
Current assets     $150,000   $120,000
Fixed assets (net)     150,000  180,000
Total assets     $300,000   $300,000
Current liabilities     $20,000   $80,000
Long-term debt     80,000  20,000
Common stock     100,000  100,000
Retained earnings     100,000  100,000
Total liabilities and equity     $300,000   $300,000
Earnings before interest and taxes for both firms are $30 million, and the effective federal
plus-state tax rate is 35%.
7.  What is the return on equity for each firm if the interest rate on current liabilities is12% and the
rate on long-term debt is 15%?
8.  Assume that the short-term rate rises to 20%, that the rate on new long-term debt rises to 16%,
and that the rate on existing long-term debt remains unchanged. What would be the return on
equity for Firm A and Firm B under these conditions?
9.  In 1983 the Japanese yen-U.S. dollar exchange rate was 250 yen per dollar, and the dollar cost
of a compact Japanese-manufactured car was $10,000. Suppose that now the exchange rate is
120 yen per dollar. Assume there has been no inflation in the yen cost of an automobile so that all
price changes are due to exchange rate changes. What would the dollar price of the car be now,
assuming the car’s price changes only with exchange rates?

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