230 likes | 360 Views
Chapter 11 The Cost of Capital. Learning Outcomes Chapter 11. Compute the component cost of capital for (a) debt, ( b ) preferred stock, ( c ) retained earnings, and ( d ) new common equity.
E N D
Learning Outcomes Chapter 11 • Compute the component cost of capital for (a) debt, (b) preferred stock, (c) retained earnings, and (d) new common equity. • Describe the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) and discuss the logic of using WACC to make informed financial decisions. • Describe how the marginal cost of capital (MCC) is used to make capital budgeting decisions. • Discuss the relationship between the firm’s weighted average cost of capital (WACC) and investor’s’ required rates of return.
Cost of Capital • Firm’s average cost of funds, which is the average return required by firm’s investors • What must be paid to attract funds
Required Rate of Return(Opportunity Cost Rate) • The return that must be raised on invested funds to cover the cost of financing such investments
Basic Definitions • Capital Component • Types of capital used by firms to raise money • rd = before tax interest cost • rdT = rd(1-T) = after tax cost of debt • rps = cost of preferred stock • rs = cost of retained earnings • re = cost of external equity (new stock)
Basic Definitions • WACC Weighted Average Cost of Capital • Capital StructureA combination of different types of capital(debt and equity) used by a firm
After-Tax Cost of Debt • The relevant cost of new debt • Taking into account the tax deductibility of interest • Used to calculate the WACC
Cost of Preferred Stock • Rate of return investors require on the firm’s preferred stock • The preferred dividend divided by the net issuing price F = percentage flotation costs as a decimal NP0 = per share net proceeds firm receives from the issue
Cost of Retained Earnings • Rate of return investors require on the firm’s common stock rs = required rate of return RPs = risk premium for Stock S = expected rate of return g = constant growth rate rRF = risk-free rate of return P0 = current stock price = next period’s expected dividend
The CAPM Approach rs = cost of retained earnings rRF = risk-free rate of return rM = risk-free rate of return RPs = risk premium for Stock S βs = beta coefficient for Stock S
The Discounted Cash Flow Approach(Expected Rate of Return) • Price and expected rate of return on a share of common stock depends on the dividends expected on the stock. rs = cost of retained earnings P0 = current stock price = expected rate of return g = constant growth rate = next period’s expected dividend
The Bond-Yield-Plus-Premium Approach • Estimating a risk premium above the bond interest rate • Judgmental estimate for premium • “Ballpark” figure only
Cost of Newly Issued Common Stock • External equity, re • Based on the cost of retained earnings • Adjusted for flotation costs (the expenses of selling new issues) re = cost of new equity g = constant growth rate = next period’s expected dividend F = percentage flotation cost stated as a decimal P0 = current stock price
Target Capital Structure • Optimal Capital Structure • Percentage of debt, preferred stock, and common equity in the capital structure that will maximize the price of the firm’s stock
Weighted Average Cost of Capital, WACC • A weighted average of the component costs of debt, preferred stock, and common equity wd = proportion of debt in firm’s capital structure wps = proportion of preferred stock in firm’s capital structure ws = proportion of common stock in firm’s capital structure
The Logic of the Weighted Average Cost of Capital • The use of debt impacts the ability to use equity, and vice versa, so the weighted average cost must be used to evaluate projects, regardless of the specific financing used to fund a particular project.
Marginal Cost of Capital • Marginal Cost of Capital Schedule • A graph that relates the firm’s weighted average of each dollar of capital to the total amount of new capital raised • Reflects changing costs, depending on amounts of capital raised
Break Point (BP) • The dollar value of new capital that can be raised before an increase in the firm’s weighted average cost of capital occurs
MCC Schedule Using Retained Earnings, New Common Stock and Higher-Cost Debt
Combining the MCC and Investment Opportunity Schedules • Use the MCC schedule to find the cost of capital for determining projects’ net present values. • Investment Opportunity Schedule (IOS) • Graph of the firm’s investment opportunities ranked in order of the projects’ internal rate of return