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ConceptReviewed

Capital Structure

Name variants

English
Capital Structure
Kanji
資本構成

Quality / Updated / COI

Quality
Reviewed
Updated
COI
none

TL;DR

Capital Structure helps balancing leverage and resilience by clarifying debt-to-equity mix and the trade‑offs between risk and liquidity constraints. It keeps scope and assumptions aligned.

Definition

Capital structure is the long‑term mix of debt and equity used to finance a business and absorb risk. It specifies the unit of analysis and the assumptions behind debt-to-equity mix, including cash-flow timing and discount-rate assumptions. The concept separates what is in scope (cash flows, funding costs, and returns adjusted for risk) from what is out of scope (sunk costs or one-off accounting noise), so comparisons stay consistent. Applied well, it turns a vague debate into a measurable choice and makes the drivers of results explicit.

Decision impact

  • Use Capital Structure to decide balancing leverage and resilience, because it exposes debt-to-equity mix and the trade‑off with risk and liquidity constraints.
  • It changes budgeting and prioritization by making cash-flow timing and discount-rate assumptions explicit and reviewable.
  • It informs adjustments when interest rates or credit spreads change, so the decision stays grounded in current conditions.

Key takeaways

  • Define the unit and time horizon before comparing debt-to-equity mix across options.
  • Track the primary driver (cost of capital) separately from secondary noise.
  • Run sensitivity checks on discount rate and cash-flow timing to avoid false precision.
  • Document data sources and calculation steps so results are auditable.
  • Revisit the metric when the business model or market context changes.

Misconceptions

  • Capital Structure is not the same as short‑term funding choice; it focuses on long‑term funding composition.
  • A higher debt-to-equity mix is not always better if liquidity tightens or risk rises.
  • Short‑term changes can mislead when returns arrive after a long ramp-up.

Worked example

A team compares issue bonds for expansion versus issue new shares. Using debt-to-equity mix, they model targeting 45% debt with covenants and test cash-flow timing and discount-rate assumptions. The analysis shows that higher leverage boosts returns but increases risk, so they set a target range and trigger points. After implementation, they monitor cost of capital and update the model when earnings volatility increases.

Citations & Trust

  • Principles of Finance (OpenStax)