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 15, Problem 6QP
Financial Leverage Frusciante, Inc., has 290,000 bonds outstanding. The bonds have a par value of $1,000, a coupon rate of 7 percent paid semiannually, and 8 years to maturity. The current YTM on the bonds is 7.5 percent. The company also has 10 million shares of stock outstanding, with a market price of $23 per share. What is the company’s market value debt-equity ratio?
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CMS Corporation's balance sheet as of today is as follows:
Long-term debt (bonds, at par)
$10,000,000
Preferred stock
1,700,000
Common stock ($10 par)
10,000,000
Retained earnings
4,600,000
Total debt and equity
$26,300,000
The bonds have a 3.8% coupon rate, payable semiannually, and a par value of $1,000. They mature exactly 10 years from today. The yield to maturity is 11.1%, so the bonds now sell below par. What is the current market value of the firm's debt?
Group of answer choices
$5,429,902
$5,656,148
$5,260,218
$6,165,201
$5,938,955
Suppose Westerfield Co. has the following financial information:
Debt: 900,000 bonds outstanding with a face value of $1,000. The bonds currently trade at 85% of par and have 12 years to maturity. The coupon rate equals 7%, and the bonds make semiannual interest payments.
Preferred stock: 600,000 shares of preferred stock outstanding; currently trading for $108 per share, paying a dividend of $9 annually.
Common stock: 25,000,000 shares of common stock outstanding; currently trading for $185 per share. Beta equals 1.22.
Market and firm information: The expected return on the market is 9%, the risk-free rate is 5%, and the tax rate is 21%.
Calculate the cost of preferred stock. (Enter percentages as decimals and round to 4 decimals)
Suppose Westerfield Co. has the following financial information:
Debt: 900,000 bonds outstanding with a face value of $1,000. The bonds currently trade at 85% of par and have 12 years to maturity. The coupon rate equals 7%, and the bonds make semiannual interest payments.
Preferred stock: 600,000 shares of preferred stock outstanding; currently trading for $108 per share, paying a dividend of $9 annually.
Common stock: 25,000,000 shares of common stock outstanding; currently trading for $185 per share. Beta equals 1.22.
Market and firm information: The expected return on the market is 9%, the risk-free rate is 5%, and the tax rate is 21%.
Calculate the weight of the common stock in the capital structure. (Enter percentages as decimals and round to 4 decimals)
Chapter 15 Solutions
Loose Leaf for Corporate Finance (Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series in Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate)
Ch. 15 - Bond Features What are the main features of a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 2CQCh. 15 - Preferred Stock Preferred stock doesnt offer a...Ch. 15 - Preferred Stock and Bond Yields The yields on...Ch. 15 - Prob. 5CQCh. 15 - Call Provisions A company is contemplating a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 7CQCh. 15 - Preferred Stock Do you think preferred stock is...Ch. 15 - Long-Term Financing As was mentioned in the...Ch. 15 - Internal versus External Financing What is the...
Ch. 15 - Prob. 11CQCh. 15 - Classes of Stock Several publicly traded companies...Ch. 15 - Callable Bonds Do you agree or disagree with the...Ch. 15 - Bond Prices If interest rates fall, will the price...Ch. 15 - Sinking Funds Sinking funds have both positive and...Ch. 15 - Prob. 1QPCh. 15 - Prob. 2QPCh. 15 - Prob. 3QPCh. 15 - Prob. 4QPCh. 15 - Financial Leverage Kiedis, Corp., has...Ch. 15 - Financial Leverage Frusciante, Inc., has 290,000...Ch. 15 - Financial Leverage Harrison, Inc., has the...Ch. 15 - Valuing Callable Bonds KJC, Inc., plans to issue 5...Ch. 15 - Valuing Callable Bonds New Business Ventures,...Ch. 15 - Valuing Callable Bonds Bowdeen Manufacturing...Ch. 15 - Prob. 11QPCh. 15 - Prob. 12QP
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- Neubert Enterprises recently issued $1,000 par value 15-year bonds with a 5% coupon paid annually and warrants attached. These bonds are currently trading for $1,000. Neubert also has outstanding $1,000 par value 15-year straight debt with a 7% coupon paid annually, also trading for $1,000. What is the implied value of the warrants attached to each bond?arrow_forwardThe following table gives the current balance sheet for Travellers Inn Inc. (TII), a company that was formed by merging a number of regional motel chains. Travellers Inn (Millions of Dollars) The following facts also apply to TII. (1) The long-term debt consists of 29,412 bonds, each having a 20-year maturity, semiannual payments, a coupon rate of 7.6%, and a face value of 1,000. Currently, these bonds provide investors with a yield to maturity of 11.8%. If new bonds were sold, they would have an 11.8% yield to maturity. (2) TIIs perpetual preferred stock has a 100 par value, pays a quarterly dividend per share of 2, and has a yield to investors of 10%. New perpetual preferred stock would have to provide the same yield to investors, and the company would incur a 3.85% flotation cost to sell it. (3) The company has 3.8 million shares of common stock outstanding, a price per share = P0 = 20, dividend per share = D0 = 1, and earnings per share = EPS0 = 5. The return on equity (ROE) is expected to be 10%. (4) The stock has a beta of 1.6%. The T-bond rate is 6%, and RPM is estimated to be 5%. (5) TIIs financial vice president recently polled some pension fund investment managers who hold TIIs securities regarding what minimum rate of return on TIIs common would make them willing to buy the common rather than TII bonds, given that the bonds yielded 11.8%. The responses suggested a risk premium over TII bonds of 3 percentage points. (6) TII is in the 25% federal-plus-state tax bracket. Assume that you were recently hired by TII as a financial analyst and that your boss, the treasurer, has asked you to estimate the companys WACC under the assumption that no new equity will be issued. Your cost of capital should be appropriate for use in evaluating projects that are in the same risk class as the assets TII now operates. Based on your analysis, answer the following questions. a. What are the current market value weights for debt, preferred stock, and common stock? (Hint: Do your work in dollars, not millions of dollars. When you calculate the market values of debt and preferred stock, be sure to round the market price per bond and the market price per share of preferred to the nearest penny.) b. What is the after-tax cost of debt? c. What is the cost of preferred stock? d. What is the required return on common stock using CAPM? e. Use the retention growth equation to estimate the expected growth rate. Then use the expected growth rate and the dividend growth model to estimate the required return on common stock. f. What is the required return on common stock using the own-bond-yield-plus-judgmental-risk-premium approach? g. Use the required return on stock from the CAPM model, and calculate the WACC.arrow_forwardSmashing Cantaloupes Inc. issued 5-year bonds with a par value of $35,000 and an 8% semiannual coupon (payable June 30 and December 31) on January 1, 2018, when the market rate of interest was 10%. Were the bonds issued at a discount or premium? Assuming the bonds sold at 92.288, what was the sales price of the bonds?arrow_forward
- Waylan Sisters Inc. issued 3-year bonds with a par value of $100,000 and a 6% annual coupon when the market rate of interest was 5%. If the bonds sold at 102.438, how much cash did Williams Sisters Inc. receive from issuing the bonds?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_forwardBond 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_forward
- CMS Corporation's balance sheet as of today is as follows: Long-term debt (bonds, at par) $10,000,000 Preferred stock 2,000,000 Common stock ($10 par) 10,000,000 Retained earnings 4,000,000 Total debt and equity $26,000,000 The bonds have a 5.5% coupon rate, payable semiannually, and a par value of $1,000. They mature exactly 10 years from today. The yield to maturity is 12%, so the bonds now sell below par. What is the current market value of the firm's debt? Select the correct answer. a. $6,272,875 b. $6,271,677 c. $6,273,474 d. $6,272,276 e. $6,271,077arrow_forwardCMS Corporation's balance sheet as of today is as follows: Long-term debt (bonds, at par) $10,000,000 Preferred stock 2,000,000 Common stock ($10 par) 10,000,000 Retained earnings 4,000,000 Total debt and equity $26,000,000 The bonds have a 5.5% coupon rate, payable semiannually, and a par value of $1,000. They mature exactly 10 years from today. The yield to maturity is 12%, so the bonds now sell below par. What is the current market value of the firm's debt?arrow_forward
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