Cost of Capital: Vivek College of Commerce
Cost of Capital: Vivek College of Commerce
Cost of Capital: Vivek College of Commerce
CHAPTER: 1
COST OF CAPITAL
1.1. DEFINITION:
The cost of capital is the return that must be provided for the use of an investors funds. If
the funds are borrowed, the cost is the interest that must be paid on the loan. If the funds
are equity, the cost is the return that investors expect, both from the stocks price
appreciation and dividends, considering the risk in providing the funds.
In financial economics, the cost of capital is the cost of a company's funds, or, from an
investor's point of view "the shareholder's required return on a portfolio company's
existing securities. It is used to evaluate new projects of a company. It is the minimum
return that investors expect for providing capital to the company, thus setting a
benchmark that a new project has to meet.
Following are some formal definitions of the term:
1. According to John Hampton Cost of capital is the rate of return of the firm required
from investments in order to increase the value of the firm in the market place.
2. According to Ezra Soloman Cost of capital is the minimum required rate of earnings
or the cut-off rate for capital expenditures.
3. According to Milton H. Spencer Cost of capital is the minimum rate of return which
a firm requires as a condition for undertaking an investment.
4. According to Van Horne Cost of capital is a cut off rate for the allocation of capital to
investments of projects. It is the rate of return on a project that will leave unchanged the
market price of the stock.
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CHAPTER: 2
COST OF DEBT
2.1 MEANING:
When companies borrow funds from outside or take debt from financial institutions or
other resources the interest paid on that amount is called cost of debt. The cost of debt is
computed by taking the rate on a risk-free bond whose duration matches the term
structure of the corporate debt, then adding a default premium. This default premium will
rise as the amount of debt increases (since, all other things being equal, the risk rises as
the amount of debt rises). Since in most cases debt expense is a deductible expense, the
cost of debt is computed as an after tax cost to make it comparable with the cost of equity
(earnings are after-tax as well). Thus, for profitable firms, debt is discounted by the tax
rate.
The cost of debt is relatively simple to calculate, as it is composed of the rate of interest
paid. In practice, the interest-rate paid by the company can be modeled as the risk-free
rate plus a risk component (risk premium), which itself incorporates a probable rate of
default (and amount of recovery given default). For companies with similar risk or credit
ratings, the interest rate is largely exogenous (not linked to the cost of debt), the cost of
equity is broadly defined as the risk-weighted projected return required by investors,
where the return is largely unknown. The cost of equity is therefore inferred by
comparing the investment to other investments (comparable) with similar risk profiles to
determine the "market" cost of equity. It is commonly equated using the capital asset
pricing model formula (below), although articles such as Stulz 1995 question the validity
of using a local CAPM versus an international CAPM- also considering whether markets
are fully integrated or segmented (if fully integrated, there would be no need for a local
CAPM).
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The amount of tax saved due to deduction of interest from taxable income (Interest x Tax
rate) is known as the Tax Shield.
ILLUSTRATION 1:
T Ltd. has Rs 300000, 10% Debentures. The tax rate is 50%. Calculate the cost of
debentures and the tax shield.
SOLUTION:
Cost of debentures, kd = (1-t) =10% (1-50%)= 5%
Tax shield = Interest x Tax rate= 300000 x 10% x 50% = Rs. 15000.
2.3 COST OF DEBENTURES ISSUED AT PREMIUM/DISCOUNT:
Cost of debentures issued at premium or discount:
Kd = I
x (1-t)
NP
Where, Kd = Cost of debt after tax
I
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= 8.17%
990000
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P= EC/ (1 + r) + M / (1 + r)
P= (C x PVIFAr.n) + (M x PVIFr.n)
Where, P= Value of the bond (in rupees)
n=Number of years to maturity
C= Annual coupon interest (in rupees)
R=Periodic required return
M= Maturity value
I= Time period when payment is received
PVIFA=Present Value Interest Factor of Annuity)
PVIF = Present Value Interest Factor
P = (C x PVIFAr.n) + (M x PVIFr.n)
= (120 x PVIFA13%.10 yrs) + (1000 x PVIF13%.10
yrs
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CHAPTER 3
COST OF PREFERNCE SHARES
3.1 INTRODUCTION:
Cost of preference share capital is apparently the dividend which is committed and paid
by the company. This cost is not relevant for project evaluation because this is not the
cost at which further capital can be obtained. To find out the cost of acquiring the
marginal cost, we will be finding the yield on the preference share based on the current
market value of the preference share.
Preference share is issued at a stated rate of dividend on the face value of the share.
Although the dividend is not mandatory and it does not create legal obligation like debt, it
has preference of payment over equity for dividend payment and distribution of assets at
the time of liquidation. Therefore, without paying dividend to preference shares, they
cannot pay anything to equity shares. In that scenario, management normally tries to pay
regular dividend to the preference shareholders.
Cost of preference share capital is that part of cost of capital in which we calculate the
amount which is payable to preference shareholders in the form of dividend with fixed
rate. Even, dividend to preference shareholder is on the desire of board of directors of
company and preference shareholder cannot pressurize for paying dividend but it doesnt
mean that calculation of cost of pref. share capital is not necessary because, if we dont
pay the dividend to pref. shareholders, it will affect on capability to receive funds from
this source.
The cost of preference share capital is the dividend payable to its holders plus amortized
premium/discount/floatation costs. Though payment of dividend is not mandatory, nonpayment may results in exercise of voting rights by them. The payment of preference
dividend is not adjusted for taxes as they are paid after taxes and is not deductible.
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CHAPTER 4
COST OF EQUITY
4.1 INTRODUCTION:
In finance, the cost of equity is the return (often expressed as a rate of return) a firm
theoretically pays to its equity investors, i.e., shareholders, to compensate for the risk
they undertake by investing their capital. Firms need to acquire capital from others to
operate and grow. Individuals and organizations who are willing to provide their funds to
others naturally desire to be rewarded. Just as landlords seek rents on their property,
capital providers seek returns on their funds, which must be commensurate with the risk
undertaken.
Firms obtain capital from two kinds of sources: lenders and equity investors. From the
perspective of capital providers, lenders seek to be rewarded with interest and equity
investors seek dividends and/or appreciation in the value of their investment (capital
gain). From a firm's perspective, they must pay for the capital it obtains from others,
which is called its cost of capital. Such costs are separated into a firm's cost of debt and
cost of equity and attributed to these two kinds of capital sources.
While a firm's present cost of debt is relatively easy to determine from observation of
interest rates in the capital markets, its current cost of equity is unobservable and must be
estimated. Finance theory and practice offers various models for estimating a particular
firm's cost of equity such as the Capital Asset Pricing Model, or CAPM. Another method
is derived from the Gordon Model, which is a discounted cash flow model based on
dividend returns and eventual capital return from the sale of the investment. Another
simple method is the Bond Yield Plus Risk Premium (BYPRP), where a subjective risk
premium is added to the firm's long-term debt interest rate. Moreover, a firm's overall
cost of capital, which consists of the two types of capital costs, can be estimated using
the weighted average cost of capital model.
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budgeting decisions
while
capital
providers
make
decisions
about lending and investment. Such decisions can be made after quantitative analysis that
typically uses a firm's cost of capital as a model input.
In financial theory, the return that stockholders require for a company. The
traditional formula for cost of equity (COE) is the dividend capitalization model:
A firm's cost of equity represents the compensation that the market demands in exchange
for owning the asset and bearing the risk of ownership.
4.2 DIVIDEND PRICE APPOROACH:
According to dividend price approach, we can calculate cost of capital just dividing
dividend per share with market value of per share. This cost shows direct relationship
between price of equity shares and price of dividend. Its % value shows what amount, we
are giving per $ 100 share.
Ke = D/P
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= 0.29 or 29%
10.29
(b) Cost of Existing Equity Capital
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= 0.2307 or 21.07%
13
4.3 EARNING/ PRICE APPROACH:
This approach tells that we should not co-relate dividend per share with market value per
share but we should use total earning and try to co-relate it with market value of shares.
We have to just write earning per share of company instead writing dividend per share. It
will be helpful to void the effect of dividend policy on calculation of working capital.
The price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E ratio, is an equity valuation multiple. It is defined as
market price per share divided by annual earnings per share.
There are multiple versions of the P/E ratio, depending on whether earnings are projected
or realized, and the type of earnings.
"Trailing P/E" uses net income for the most recent 12 month period, divided by
the weighted average number of common shares in issue during the period. This is
the most common meaning of "P/E" if no other qualifier is specified. Monthly
earnings data for individual companies are not available, and in any case usually
fluctuate seasonally, so the previous four quarterly earnings reports are used and
earnings per share are updated quarterly. Note, each company chooses its own
financial year so the timing of updates varies from one to another.
"Trailing P/E from continued operations" uses operating earnings, which exclude
earnings from discontinued operations, extraordinary items (e.g. one-off windfalls
and write-downs), and accounting changes.
"Forward P/E": Instead of net income, this uses estimated net earnings over next
12 months. Estimates are typically derived as the mean of those published by a
select group of analysts (selection criteria are rarely cited).
As an example, if stock A is trading at $24 and the earnings per share for the most recent
12-month period is $3, then stock A has a P/E ratio of 24/3 or 8. Put another way, the
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= 180 / 20 = Rs.9
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CHAPTER 5
COST OF RETAINED EARNINGS AND COST OF DEPRECIATION
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CHAPTER 6
WEIGHTED AVG. COST OF CAPITAL (WACC)
6.1 MEANING:
The Weighted Cost of Capital (WACC) is used in finance to measure a firm's cost of
capital. The total capital for a firm is the value of its equity plus the cost of its debt.
Notice that the "equity" in the debt to equity ratio is the market value of all equity, not
the shareholders' equity on the balance sheet. To calculate the firms weighted cost of
capital, we must first calculate the costs of the individual financing sources: Cost of Debt,
Cost of Preference Capital and Cost of Equity Cap.
Calculation of WACC is an iterative procedure which requires estimation of the fair
market value of equity capital.
CALCULATION OF WACC:
A three-step approach is taken to calculating the cost of the pool of long-term funds used
to finance operations (the weighted average cost of capital or WACC).
Step 1: Isolate the companys sources of longterm funds.
Step 2: Use appropriate models to calculate the cost of each source individually.
Step 3: Calculate the weighted average cost of capital by weighting each source
according to market value.
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10
Reserves
20
10
Net assets
40
The current share price is 1.20 ex div and a dividend of 15p per share has been paid for
many years. The debentures are trading at 90 cum int. Interest is paid annually and the
corporation tax rate is 30 percent. You are required to calculate the traditional weighted
average cost of capital at 31 December 20X3.
SOLUTION
Step 1 Isolate source of longterm funds.
The only sources relevant to X plc are the ordinary shares and the irredeemable
debentures.
Step 2 Calculate cost of each source
Ke = 15p = 12.5% per annum
120p
Kd = 10 (1 0.3 ) = 8.375% per annum
90-10
Step 3 Weight out according to market value.
Sources
MV
Cost
WACC
Equity
10m 2 1.20
= 24
12.5%
9.375
Debt
10m 80
=8
8.375%
2.094
100
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11.469
WACC = 11.47%
This represents the overall annual cost of servicing the pool of funds the company uses to
finance its operations in the long run.
6.2 LIMITATIONS OF WACC
The main limitation of using WACC is that it does not take into consideration the
floatation cost of raising the marginal capital for new projects. Another problem with
WACC is that it is based on an impractical assumption of same capital mix which is very
difficult to maintain.
If we use the existing WACC as the hurdle rate in NPV computations (benchmark), we
are assuming that when new funds are raised to finance new projects, the cost of capital
will be unchanged, i.e.:
The proportion of debt and equity remain unchanged.
The operating risk of the firm is unchanged.
The finance is not project specific.
CHAPTER 7
PROBLEMS IN DETERMINING COST OF CAPITAL
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Books:
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