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Investment. Chapter 14. Hong Kong Real Estate. According to the planning department rental yields on residential apartments are more than 5%. Rental yields are the annual rent divided by the price level. But interest rates on mortgage loans are 2.5%.
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Investment Chapter 14
Hong Kong Real Estate • According to the planning department rental yields on residential apartments are more than 5%. • Rental yields are the annual rent divided by the price level. • But interest rates on mortgage loans are 2.5%. • Why don’t people want to borrow at 2.5% to make 5.1% returns?
Objectives • Consider the theory of investment in real capital. • Evaluate the components of the cost of capital. • Calculate the optimal capital stock as a function of the cost of capital. • Apply Capital Theory to the real estate market • Calculate Tobin’s q to estimate the desirability of corporate investment. • Evaluate relationship between leverage and investment.
Terminology: Investment • We use the term investment to refer to real expenditure (public and/or private) on tangible assets. • We call the stock of tangible assets capital or physical capital. • The unit of measure of aggregate capital is dollars. • Gross Investment refers to purchases of new investment. • Net Investment is Gross Investment minus depreciation.
Components of Investment • Investment • Fixed Investment • Residential Investment • Business Investment • Structures • Machinery & Equipment • Changes in Stocks – Inventory Investment
Investment Facts • Investment expenditure is a substantial share of GDP, but not as large as consumption. • Fixed and inventory investment are closely correlated with the business cycle. • Investment is an especially volatile part of GDP.
Marginal Analysis • Economists use marginal analysis to determine an optimal level of an activity. • Most activities have diminishing marginal returns. • Marginal returns are the extra benefit received from doing a bit more of the activity. • Do more of the activity until that point when marginal returns from doing a bit more of the activity start to become more than the cost of the activity.
Optimal Capital • Benefit of owning capital is that it allows us to produce more goods. • Marginal product of capital is the extra revenue from the extra goods we could produce if we had just a bit more capital. • MPK can be measured in either nominal, current price (PMPK) or real, constant price (MPK) terms. • Capital has diminishing returns. MPK is a decreasing function of the capital stock.
Productivity of Capital • The productivity or average productivity of capital is the revenue generated per dollar of capital. • APK is value of output divided by the capital stock. • Value can be measured in constant or current price terms. • Marginal productivity of capital is often thought to be roughly proportional to average productivity capital.
MPK K
Cost of Capital • Economists define the (time) cost of capital as the cost of holding a unit of capital for a period of time. • A firm invests in capital equipment for a period. • The firm borrows money upfront to finance the purchase. • The firm produces goods and generates revenues. • The firm sells the capital at the end of the period, typically at less than the purchase price due to wear and tear. • The firm repays loan. • Cost of using capital includes interest payment plus loss on the resale of capital.
A firm borrows to buy 1 capital good at interest rate 1+i. The firm produces PMPKt+1 worth of goods and sells the capital good for . Optimal to buy capital good as long as pay-off is greater than the cost. Optimal Condition Definition of Capital Cost Optimal Capital Example.
Capital Cost • We can divide the capital cost into three parts. • Interest cost: Net interest rate. • Depreciation: Defined as change in value due to aging. • Capital gain: Defined as change in value due to change in price of new goods.
Real Capital Cost • We can convert the optimal capital equation into real terms by dividing both sides by the price level. • Define the real price of capital good as price of capital good relative to the firm’s output price.
Example • A taxi agency can produce a certain amount of revenue with larger numbers of taxis. • Assume earnings (revenues minus wages minus costs) per year is given by the schedule • Assume that the purchase price of a new taxi (with license) is $1,000,000. The borrowing interest cost is 4% and a taxi’s value depreciates by 8% per year. We assume that taxi’s prices increase by 2% per year.
The extra earnings generated by moving from 5 taxis to 6 taxis is less than cost of capital. Maximum profits occurs where marginal cost equals marginal earnings. Optimum Number of Taxis
Optimal Capital: Example • Solve for Optimal Level of Capital
ck K K*
Q: Why does MPK slope down. A: Diminishing returns to capital. Each additional unit of capital generates less additional revenue at a given workforce and technology level. Q: What shifts the MPK curve. A: Changes in productivity of capital. An increase in workforce or technology will make capital more productive and shift MPK curve out. MPK & Optimal Capital
ck K K* K**
ck’ ck K K** K*
Investment Volatility • The stock of capital may not be particularly volatile over the business cycle. • Capital stock is much larger than the flow of new investment in a given year, perhaps 10-15 times as large. • A 1% reduction in optimal capital stock will require a 10% reduction in investment.
Tax Rates • Corporations frequently must pay taxes on earnings. Define tax rate, . • Corporations also receive deductions for costs of capital Define deduction rates = (s1, s2, s3, ….) • Maximize after-tax profits implies that after-tax marginal product of capital = after-tax cost of capital.
Which cost of capital? • Which interest rates should we use to calculate the cost of capital. • This depends on several things including the risk of the investment project & flexibility and duration. • If capital project is risky, we might apply a risk premium (i.e. use the interest rate on a risky bond).
Duration & Flexibility • If we must own capital for many periods before resale, we might want to equalize average marginal product of capital during the period to a long term interest rate plus average depreciation less change in the price of capital.
Real Estate • Real Estate is an important type of physical capital investment and a special type of financial investment. • Uniqueness- Each location of property is unique, making it harder to value. • Illiquid – Harder to sell than paper financial assets, longer lead times for building real property. • Large share of the wealth of middle income households.
Payoff to owning property is rent, R. Define rental yield, y, as the ratio of rent to property prices, PPE. Capital cost of real estate includes Interest rate, i Depreciation/Maintenance Costs δ Property Taxes: τ Other Costs: c Capital Gains, Rental Yields & Cost of Capital
Cost of Capital Theory & Real Estate • Constructing New Buildings has long lead times. For a fixed stock of buildings we can use cost of capital theory (y = ckRE) to derive prices as a function of rents.
Real Estate Pricing 45% PRE P*
Expectations • A key determinant of the price of real estate is the expected capital gain. • Expected deflation explains why rental yields are so much higher in HK than mortgage rates. • Waves of optimism and pessimism may lead to persistent fluctuations in property prices.
q theory & Corporate Investment • A benchmark theory of corporate investment is that investment is a function of a quantity q. • The measure of q for a firm is • The market value of a publicly listed firm without debt is market capitalization (stock price * shares outstanding). • The market value of a publicly listed firm with debt is the market capitalization plus value of debt (i.e. the cost of owning the firm lock, stock and barrel).
q theory • If value of firm is greater than the cost of capital (q > 1) than the value of capital inside the firm is greater than the value of capital outside the firm. • If q > 1, firm should have positive net investment. • If q = 1, firm should have zero net investment. • If q < 1, firm should have negative net investment.
q as Cost of Capital Theory • We might think of q theory as similar to cost of capital theory for firms that get financing through the stock market. • Owners of equity have a claim to the profits of the firm. They might require a certain amount of profits relative to what they pay for the stock. • A firm generates a certain amount of profits per unit of capital
Q theory suggests that a rise in stock market theories could be thought of as a decline in the cost of raising funds through equity. Empirically, q theory seems to do a poor job of explaining connections between the stock market and investment. Why? Many firms change their capital stock infrequently. Short-term fluctuations in stock market may have little effect. Stock market bubbles may keep stock prices from reflecting a realistic assessment of value of corporate capital. Firms may be limited in ability to raise funds in stock market. Investment & the Stock Market
Corporate Finance • Two kinds of Finance • External Finance – Funds for investment raised through loans or issuing securities. • Internal Finance – Funds for investment raised through retaining profits instead of paying dividends. • Benchmark M-M Theory says investment decisions and firm value should not depend on sources of financing. Requirements: • No distortionary taxation • Perfect financial markets with perfect information.
Reality • Internal Funds are cheaper form of financing than external funds. • Much of corporate financing is through internal finance. • Investment is more strongly affected by cash flow than q. • Cost of capital depends on collateral value that firms can pay if they default on loans or bonds.
Credit Cycles: Real Estate • Much of corporate collateral is real estate. • Real estate is good collateral because it cannot be easily moved and its value is relatively easy for outsiders to derive. • Fluctuations in property price have effects on cost of capital and investment.