Sunbull,
If you plan on getting thru L1, there are some topics that you should be able to read up on and figure out yourself. This is one of the more straighforward topics (relatively) you'll see over the 3 levels.
I'll reference White, Sondhi 3rd edition bottom of p.368-369
You have an asset that you are paying $10,000 rent on for 4 years, total $40,000.
If this is an operating lease, your annual expense is $10,000.
If based on the requirements this is deemed to be a capital lease, assuming a 10% discount factor, the present value and amount you capitalize is $31,700. With straight line depreciation your annual depreciation expense is (31,700/4)= $7,925.
Since the $7,925 depreciation expense (capital lease) is LOWER than the $10K rental expense (operating), you end up with a higher EBIT.
Note that I didn't discuss the interest expense component of the capital lease - that is because EBIT, as the name implies is BEFORE interest expense. If you want to to know the different effect on the bottom line between the two, look at the table on the bottom of p.369
(Kili - your answer is a bit too simplified in that it implies that depreciation + interest= lease payment which is not the case. The annual payment reduces your offsettting liability, so you don't have a level total expense equal to the total payment each year under the capital lease approach)
Hope this helps.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Friday, September 8, 2006 at 12:14AM by Super I.