Loose Leaf for Corporate Finance (Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series in Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate)
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781259709685
Author: Stephen A. Ross Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics Professor, Randolph W Westerfield Robert R. Dockson Deans Chair in Bus. Admin., Jeffrey Jaffe
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 13, Problem 23QP
Flotation Costs Trower Corp. has a debt-equity ratio of .85. The company is considering a new plant that will cost $145 million to build. When the company issues new equity, it incurs a flotation cost of 8 percent. The flotation cost on new debt is 3.5 percent. What is the initial cost of the plant if the company raises all equity externally'! What if it typically uses 60 percent
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Loose Leaf for Corporate Finance (Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series in Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate)
Ch. 13 - Project Risk If you can borrow all the money you...Ch. 13 - WACC and Taxes Why do we use an aftertax figure...Ch. 13 - SML Cost or Equity Estimation If you use the stock...Ch. 13 - SML Cost or Equity Estimation What are the...Ch. 13 - Prob. 5CQCh. 13 - Cost of Capital Suppose Tom OBedlam, president of...Ch. 13 - Company Risk versus Project Risk Both Dow Chemical...Ch. 13 - Prob. 8CQCh. 13 - Leverage Consider a levered firms projects that...Ch. 13 - Beta What factors determine the beta of a stock?...
Ch. 13 - Calculating Cost of Equity The Dybvig Corporations...Ch. 13 - Prob. 2QPCh. 13 - Calculating Cost of Debt Shanken Corp. issued a...Ch. 13 - Calculating Cost of Debt For the firm in the...Ch. 13 - Calculating WACC Mullineaux Corporation has a...Ch. 13 - Taxes and WACC Miller Manufacturing has a target...Ch. 13 - Finding the Capital Structure Farnas Llamas has a...Ch. 13 - Book Value versus Market Value Filer Manufacturing...Ch. 13 - Calculating the WACC In the previous problem,...Ch. 13 - Prob. 10QPCh. 13 - Finding the WACC Given the following information...Ch. 13 - Finding the WACC Titan Mining Corporation has 8.7...Ch. 13 - SML and WACC An all-equity firm is considering the...Ch. 13 - Calculating Flotation Costs Suppose your company...Ch. 13 - Calculating Flotation Costs Southern Alliance...Ch. 13 - WACC and NPV Och, Inc., is considering a project...Ch. 13 - Prob. 17QPCh. 13 - Flotation Costs Goodbye, Inc., recently issued new...Ch. 13 - Calculating the Cost of Equity Floyd Industries...Ch. 13 - Firm Valuation Schultz Industries is considering...Ch. 13 - Prob. 21QPCh. 13 - Flotation Costs and NPV Photochronograph...Ch. 13 - Flotation Costs Trower Corp. has a debt-equity...Ch. 13 - Project Evaluation This is a comprehensive project...Ch. 13 - Prob. 1MCCh. 13 - Prob. 2MCCh. 13 - Go to www.reuters.com and find the list of...Ch. 13 - You now need to calculate the cost of debt for...Ch. 13 - You now have all the necessary information to...Ch. 13 - You used Tesla as a representative company to...
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- Payne Products had $1.6 million in sales revenues in the most recent year and expects sales growth to be 25% this year. Payne would like to determine the effect of various current assets policies on its financial performance. Payne has $1 million of fixed assets and intends to keep its debt ratio at its historical level of 60%. Payne’s debt interest rate is currently 8%. You are to evaluate three different current asset policies: (1) a restricted policy in which current assets are 45% of projected sales, (2) a moderate policy with 50% of sales tied up in current assets, and (3) a relaxed policy requiring current assets of 60% of sales. Earnings before interest and taxes are expected to be 12% of sales. Payne’s tax rate is 40%. What is the expected return on equity under each current asset level? In this problem, we have assumed that the level of expected sales is independent of current asset policy. Is this a valid assumption? Why or why not? How would the overall risk of the firm vary under each policy?arrow_forwardCost of Capital, Net Present Value Leakam Companys product engineering department has developed a new product that has a 3-year life cycle. Production of the product requires development of a new process that requires a current 100,000 capital outlay. The 100,000 will be raised by issuing 60,000 of bonds and by selling new stock for 40,000. The 60,000 in bonds will have net (after-tax) interest payments of 3,000 at the end of each of the 3 years, with the principal being repaid at the end of Year 3. The stock issue carries with it an expectation of a 17.5% return, expressed in the form of dividends at the end of each year (with 7,000 in dividends expected for each of the next 3 years). The sources of capital for this investment represent the same proportion and costs that the company typically has. Finally, the project will produce after-tax cash inflows of 50,000 per year for the next 3 years. Required: 1. Compute the cost of capital for the project. (Hint: The cost of capital is a weighted average of the two sources of capital, where the weights are the proportion of capital from each source.) 2. CONCEPTUAL CONNECTION Compute the NPV for the project. Explain why it is not necessary to subtract the interest payments and the dividend payments and appreciation from the inflow of 50,000 in carrying out this computation.arrow_forwardInflation Adjustments The Rodriguez Company is considering an average-risk investment in a mineral water spring project that has a cost of $150,000. The project will produce 1,000 cases of mineral water per year indefinitely. The current sales price is $138 per case, and the current cost per case is $105. The firm is taxed at a rate of 34%. Both prices and costs are expected to rise at a rate of 6% per year. The firm uses only equity, and it has a cost of capital of 15%. Assume that cash flows consist only of after-tax profits, because the spring has an indefinite life and will not be depreciated. Should the firm accept the project? (Hint: The project is a growing perpetuity, so you must use the constant growth formula to find its NPV.) Suppose that total costs consisted of a fixed cost of $10,000 per year plus variable costs of $95 per unit, and only the variable costs were expected to increase with inflation. Would this make the project better or worse? Continue to assume that the sales price will rise with inflation.arrow_forward
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What is WACC-Weighted average cost of capital; Author: Learn to invest;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0inqw9cCJnM;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY