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 4QP
Calculating Cost of Debt For the firm in the previous problem, suppose the book value of the debt issue is $35 million. In addition, the company has a second debt issue on the market, a zero coupon bond with 12 years left to maturity; the book value of this issue is $80 million and the bonds sell for 61 percent of par. What is the company’s total book value of debt? The total market value? What is your best estimate of the aftertax cost of debt now?
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Consider a firm whose debt has a market value of $35 million and whose stock has a market value of $55 million. The firm pays a 7 percent rate of interest on its new debt and has a beta of 1.23. The corporate tax rate is 21%. Assume that the security market line holds, that the risk premium on the market is 10.5 percent, and that the current Treasury bill is rate is 1 percent. Using the pretax cost of debt from Question 7, what is the cost of equity, RS?
Chapter 13 Solutions
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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- Bond Valuation and Changes in Maturity and Required Returns Suppose Hillard Manufacturing sold an issue of bonds with a 10-year maturity, a 1,000 par value, a 10% coupon rate, and semiannual interest payments. a. Two years after the bonds were issued, the going rate of interest on bonds such as these fell to 6%. At what price would the bonds sell? b. Suppose that 2 years after the initial offering, the going interest rate had risen to 12%. At what price would the bonds sell? c. Suppose that 2 years after the issue date (as in Part a) interest rates fell to 6%. Suppose further that the interest rate remained at 6% for the next 8 years. What would happen to the price of the bonds over time?arrow_forwardWACC Estimation On January 1, the total market value of the Tysseland Company was $60 million. During the year, the company plans to raise and invest $30 million in new projects. The firm’s present market value capital structure, shown here, is considered to be optimal. There is no short-term debt. New bonds will have an 8% coupon rate, and they will be sold at par. Common stock is currently selling at $30 a share. The stockholders’ required rate of return is estimated to be 12%, consisting of a dividend yield of 4% and an expected constant growth rate of 8%. (The next expected dividend is $1.20, so the dividend yield is $1.20/$30 = 4%.) The marginal tax rate is 40%. In order to maintain the present capital structure, how much of the new investment must be financed by common equity? Assuming there is sufficient cash flow for Tysseland to maintain its target capital structure without issuing additional shares of equity, what is its WACC? Suppose now that there is not enough internal cash flow and the firm must issue new shares of stock. Qualitatively speaking, what will happen to the WACC? No numbers are required to answer this question.arrow_forwardSuppose there is a large probability that L will default on its debt. For the purpose of this example, assume that the value of Ls operations is 4 million (the value of its debt plus equity). Assume also that its debt consists of 1-year, zero coupon bonds with a face value of 2 million. Finally, assume that Ls volatility, , is 0.60 and that the risk-free rate rRF is 6%.arrow_forward
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