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Lecture 5 - 6 - Cost of Capital

The document discusses the cost of capital and weighted average cost of capital (WACC). It defines cost of capital as the expected return required by investors given the risk of a project or firm. WACC is calculated as a weighted average of the cost of debt and equity financing based on market values. The weights are the proportions of debt and equity in the firm's target capital structure. WACC provides a benchmark return required on average-risk projects undertaken by the firm.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views22 pages

Lecture 5 - 6 - Cost of Capital

The document discusses the cost of capital and weighted average cost of capital (WACC). It defines cost of capital as the expected return required by investors given the risk of a project or firm. WACC is calculated as a weighted average of the cost of debt and equity financing based on market values. The weights are the proportions of debt and equity in the firm's target capital structure. WACC provides a benchmark return required on average-risk projects undertaken by the firm.

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Cost of Capital

Week 3
IB125 Foundations of Financial Management
Jesús Gorrín

Key Readings: Hillier et al. Chapters 9.1-9.4, 10.1-10.2, 10.8-10.10, 12.1-12.2


PRESENT VALUE
 Remember: the present value of a stream of expected future
incremental cash flows C1, C2,..., CT
C1 C2 C3 CT
...
0 1 2 3 T
C C C C
3
PV = 1
+ 2
+ + ... + T

1+ R (1 + R) 2 (1 + R) 3 (1 + R) T
 But how do we determine the discount rate R?
 How do we adjust the discount rate for risk?
 Discount rate R is the opportunity cost of capital:
 i.e. rate of return that investors could obtain for themselves by investing
instead in a well-diversified portfolio of financial securities with the same level
of risk as the project
2
PRESENT VALUE
 Imagine you can invest in one of two projects
 Required investment: £96
 First project is riskless: get £100 in one year
 Second project is risky

50% £150

-£96

50% £50

 Which project do you invest in?

3
RISK AVERSION
 What is the expected return of the safe project?
 What is the expected return of the risky project?

E[CF1 ]  I 0
E[ R] 
I0

 A risk neutral person is indifferent between these 2 projects


 A risk averse person would choose safe project
 A risk loving person would choose risky project

4
RISK AVERSION

5
WHY INVEST IN RISKY PROJECTS?
 Trade-off between risk and return:
 investors prefer more wealth to less wealth, but are risk averse
 hence, return required by investors:
Required
Return
Risk
premium

Risk-free
Return
(Rf)
Risk

E[R] = Rf + Risk Premium

6
WHAT DETERMINES THE RISK PREMIUM?
 For risk-averse person, risk premium > 0
 but just how positive should it be…?
 Financial markets provide the answers
 highly efficient at pricing securities

 Suppose that you can invest £96 in the portfolio of market securities, e.g. S&P 500
index

50% £130

-£96

50% £80

7
MARKET RISK PREMIUM
 What is the expected return on the market portfolio?
 E[RM] = …
 E[RM] = Rf + Market Risk Premium
 Market Risk Premium = E[RM] - Rf = …

8
ESTIMATION OF MARKET RISK PREMIUM
 Estimating the market risk premium:
 Historical arithmetic average of E[RM] − RF
 for most of 20th Century, E[RM] − RF in UK averaged 8% to 9%
 for a variety of macro-economic reasons (e.g. lower, more stable inflation) a
better estimate of market risk premium at start of 21st Century is 4% to 6%

9
SENSITIVITY OF A PROJECT TO MARKET RISK
 What is sensitivity of our project returns to the market portfolio returns?

E[RM] E[Ri]
Bullish economy 35.41% 56.25%
Bearish economy -16.7% -47.91%
Difference 52.11% 104.16%

 Sensitivity (β) =…

10
INTUITION BEHIND 𝜷
 Beta measures degree to which returns on asset i on average move in step with
returns on the market portfolio

Cov( Ri , RM )
i 
 2 ( RM )

 When the stock market rises (or falls):


 the prices of high- β securities rise (or fall) faster than the market
 the prices of low- β securities rise (or fall) more slowly
 For most UK equities, the value of β lies within 0.7 and 1.3

11
SYSTEMATIC VS IDIOSYNCRATIC RISK
 Beta (𝛽) is a measure of a systematic risk
 Systematic risk: risk that cannot be
diversified away
 Diversification: Strategy designed to
reduce risk by spreading the portfolio
across many investments
 Specific Risk: Risk factors affecting only
that firm, also called “diversifiable risk”
 Market Risk: Economy-wide sources of Source: Brealey, Myers and Allen (2011), 10th ed.
risk that affect the overall stock market,
also called “systematic risk”

 only risk that cannot be diversified is


rewarded by financial markets with
additional return

12
ESTIMATING BETA
 Traded equities:
 estimate slope of best-fit line in regression of Ri − RF against RM − RF for
time series data of returns

Source: Hillier et al (2013), 2nd European ed.

13
ESTIMATING BETA
 Non-traded equities:
 Comparable companies approach
 Similar companies have same systematic risks
 Normally: companies from the same industry
 Take average beta of comparable companies
 Seminar exercise on comparable companies approach

 Which asset has a beta of zero?

 Which asset has a beta of one?

14
SECURITIES MARKET LINE
 Graph of expected return E[R] vs. beta is a straight line called Securities Market Line
(SML):

E[R]]
M SML
E[RM]
Slope: E[RM]−RF
RF

0 1 beta

15
CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL
 The Securities Market Line is the graph of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM).

 In other words, the CAPM says that:


 Expected return on asset i = risk-free rate + (beta of asset i) x (market risk premium)

 In symbols, CAPM is written as:



E ( Ri )  R f   i  E ( RM )  R f 

16
COST OF CAPITAL
 Cost of Capital: The return the firm’s investors could expect to earn if they
invested in securities with comparable degrees of risk

 Capital Structure: The mix of long-term debt and equity financing

17
COST OF EQUITY VS COST OF DEBT
 Return on equity (or: cost of equity) rE
 Appropriate for discounting dividends
 Opportunity cost: expected return on an alternative investment with the
same beta

 CAPM: E (rE )  R f   E  E ( RM )  R f 
 Return on debt (or: cost of debt) rD
 Appropriate for discounting interest and principal repayments

 If debt is investment grade, rD  R f


 If default is not unlikely, D  0


E (rD )  R f   D  E ( RM )  R f 
18
WACC FORMULA
 Pre-tax Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)

 WACC = (proportion of debt) x (cost of debt) + (proportion of equity) x (cost of equity)

D E
WACC   rD   rE  rA
DE ED
 D = market value of debt
 E = market value of equity = # shares × price per share

 But: Interest payments on debt are tax deductible


 After-tax Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
D E
WACC   (1  Tc )  rD   rE  rA
DE ED
19
WACC
 WACC represents the overall return on the firm’s assets required by providers of firm’s
capital.

 Company cost of capital = Weighted average of debt and equity returns

 WACC provides a benchmark:


 rate of return required on “average-risk” projects undertaken by company

 Need to use a higher (or lower) rate to discount cash flows from projects with higher
(or lower) risk than “average-risk” project.

 More about WACC when we discuss a firm’s capital structure.

20
AFTER-TAX WACC EXAMPLE
 The British TaxSaver plc is financed with
 £150 million (market) equity, cost of equity = 10%
 £100 million debt, long-term borrowing rate = 5%
 Tax rate T = 30%

Market Values (in £ millions) Cost of Equity / Debt


Debt (D) 100 rD 5.00%
Equity (E) 150 rE 10.00%
Firm Value 250 Pre-tax WACC 8.00%

Tax rate T 30.00%


Tax subsidy r D (D/V)T 0.60%
After-tax WACC 7.40%

21
CONCLUSIONS
 CAPM (or SML) quantifies the relationship between expected return and systematic risk for any asset
(or portfolio of assets):
 E[Ri]= RF +βi·(E[RM] − RF)
 where exposure to systematic risk is measured by asset’s βi

 Cost of capital is rate of return required by providers of firm’s finance:


 shareholders expect to earn cost of equity on their shareholdings
 lenders expect to earn cost of debt on their loans

 WACC equals weighted average of cost of debt and cost of equity:


 weights equal to the proportions (by market value) of equity and debt financing in the
company’s capital structure
 WACC is a key input to corporate financial decision-making:
 equals return on a firm’s assets required on average by providers of firm’s capital
 reflects overall risk level of firm’s operations

 Cost of debt is reduced by corporate tax shield: interest payments on debt are tax deductible.

22

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