Question: Please see attached file and show work! Thank you so much! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

 Please see attached file and show work!Thank you so much! 1

Please see attached file and show work!

Thank you so much!

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 A 9/1/2014 B C D E F G UNDERSTANDING HEALTHCARE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT H I Chapter 16 -- Business Combinations and Valuation Mini-Case Smitty Nursing Homes Ltd is cash rich because of several consecutive good years. One of the alternative uses for the excess funds is an acquisition. Linda Wade, Smitty's treasurer, has been asked to place a value on a potential target, Hill Long Term Care, a small chain in an adjacent state. The table below indicates Wade's estimates of Hill's earnings potential if it came under Smitty's management (in millions of dollars). The interest expense here includes the interest on Hill's existing debt and on new debt expected to be issued over time to help finance expansion within the new "H Division," the code name given to the target firm. The retentions represent earnings that will be reinvested within the H Division to help finance its growth. Security analysts estimate Hill's beta to be 1.3. The acquisition would not change Hill's capital structure or tax rate, and its optimal capital structure is 40 percent debt and 60 percent equity. Wade estimates the risk-free rate to be 9 percent and the market risk premium to be 4 percent. She also estimates that net cash flows after Year 4 will grow at a constant rate of 6 percent. Smitty's tax rate is 40 percent. Wade has assembled the following forecasted data: Net revenues Cash expenses Depreciation Earnings before interest and taxes Interest Earnings before taxes Taxes (40 percent) Net profit Estimated retentions Year 1 $60.0 $43.5 $4.5 $12.0 $3.0 $9.0 $3.6 $5.4 $0.0 Year 2 $90.0 $61.5 $6.0 $22.5 $4.5 $18.0 $7.2 $10.8 $15.0 Year 3 $112.5 $78.0 $7.5 $27.0 $4.5 $22.5 $9.0 $13.5 $12.0 Year 4 $127.5 $90.0 $9.0 $28.5 $6.0 $22.5 $9.0 $13.5 $9.0 a. What is the equity value of Hill using the free cash flow to equityholders (FCFE) method? b. Wade is quite confident of the estimated cash flows in the table above but is aware of the limitations of the constant growth model. How sensitive is the equity value of Hill to different values of the constant growth rate of the net cash flows after Year 4? (Hint: Graph the equity value at different values of g, from 2 to 12 percent.) c. Assume Hill has 10 million shares outstanding. These shares are traded relatively infrequently, but the last trade, made several weeks ago, was at a price of $9 per share. - Should Smitty make an offer for Hill? - If so, what is the range of how much Smitty should offer per share of Hill? - Construct a table that shows the gain/loss per share for Smitty and Hill over the range of offer per share (in one-dollar increments), and graph the results. J A 45 ANSWER 46 47 B C D E F G H I J

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