Cost of Capital-Lecture Notes
Cost of Capital-Lecture Notes
1. Understand the key assumptions, the basic concept, and the specific
sources of capital associated with the cost of capital.
2. Determine the cost of long-term debt and the cost of preferred stock.
3. Calculate the cost of common stock equity and convert it into the cost
of retained earnings and the cost of new issues of commons stock.
25 =0.125 or 12.5%
200
Example 2
• ABC plc’s ordinary shares are valued at 247p
ex div. the market expects the company to
continue to pay a dividend of around 39p net
into the foreseeable future. What is the cost
of ABC plc’s equity capital?
Solution
• The dividend from projects for which the funds are required will be of the
same risk type or quality as dividends from existing operations currently in
progress.
• There would be no increase in the cost of capital, for any other reason
besides (a) above, from a new issue of shares.
• All shareholders have perfect information about the companies’ future,
there is no delay in obtaining this information and all shareholders
interpret it in the same way; i.e. shareholders have the same certain
knowledge about what future dividends will be.
• Taxation can be ignored.
• All shareholders have the same marginal cost of capital.
• There would be no issue expenses for new shares
The cost of ordinary share capital: the dividend growth model
r= +g
The Dividend Growth Model
Rearranging D1
RE = + g
P0
The Dividend Growth Model
• Where D is the dividend in year 1, so that
D = Do (1 + g)
Percentage
Year Dividend Dollar Change Change
1990 $4.00 - -
1991 4.40 $0.40 10.00%
1992 4.75 0.35 7.95
1993 5.25 0.50 10.53
1994 5.65 0.40 7.62
• Preferred stock:
– has a fixed dividend (similar to debt)
– has no maturity date
– dividends are not tax deductible and are expected
to be perpetual or infinite
• Cost of preferred stock = dividend
price - flotation cost
Cost of Preferred Stock (Kp)
• Preferred stock holders receive a fixed
dividend and usually cannot vote on the firm’s
affairs
Baker Corporation has preferred stock that sells for $100 per share and pays an annual
dividend of $10.50. If the flotation costs are $4 per share, what is the cost of new
preferred stock?
$10.50
KP .1094 10.94%
$100 - 4
Cost of Preferred stock: Example
$12
• = $100 (1-0.03) = 12.4 %
COST OF DEBT (Kd)
(ii) The availability of government assistance - for example, the special government
assistance (grants or reliefs) available in deprived areas
Kd = 1(1-t)
Po
Kd = Cost of debt capital
I = annual interest payment
Po = Current market price od debt capital
t = the rate of company applicable
Or 8(1-0.33) × 100 =
92
Cost of Fixed Rate Bank Loans
ws = weight of stock
• The firm’s balance sheet shows the book values of the common stock,
preferred stock, and long-term bonds. You can use the balance sheet
figures to calculate book value weights, though it is more practicable to
work with market weights.
• Basically, market value weights represent current conditions and take into
account the effects of changing market conditions and the current prices
of each security. Book value weights, however, are based on accounting
procedures that employ the par values of the securities to calculate
balance sheet values and represent past conditions
Breakpoints (BP) in the WACC:
= $420,000/0.60 = $700,000
• Thus, Cowboy Energy Services can raise a total of $700,000 in new financing, consisting of
0.6($700,000) = $420,000 of retained earnings and 0.40($700,000) = $280,000 of debt,
without altering its capital structure. The BPRE = $700,000 is defined as the retained
earnings break point, or the amount of total capital at which a break, or jump, occurs in
the marginal cost of capital.
• Can there be other breaks? Yes, there can – depending on if there is some point at which
the firm must raise additional capital at a higher cost.
WACC Illustration
ABC Corp has 1.4 million shares common valued at $20 per
share =$28 million. Debt has face value of $5 million and trades
at 93% of face ($4.65 million) in the market. Total market value
of both equity + debt thus =$32.65 million. Equity % = .8576
and Debt % = .1424
Risk free rate is 4%, risk premium=7% and ABC’s β=.74
Return on equity per SML : RE = 4% + (7% x .74)=9.18%
Tax rate is 40%
Current yield on market debt is 11%
WACC Illustration