Corporate Finance: The Core Plus MyLab Finance with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (4th Edition)
Corporate Finance: The Core Plus MyLab Finance with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (4th Edition)
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780134409276
Author: Jonathan Berk, Peter DeMarzo
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 22, Problem 6P

You are a financial analyst at Global Conglomerate and are considering entering the shoe business. You believe that you have a very narrow window for entering this market. Because of Christmas demand, the time is right today and you believe that exactly a year from now would also be a good opportunity. Other than these two windows, you do not think another opportunity will exist to break into this business. It will cost you $35 million to enter the market. Because other shoe manufacturers exist and are public companies, you can construct a perfectly comparable company. Hence, you have decided to use the Black-Scholes formula to decide when and if you should enter the shoe business. Your analysis implies that the current value of an operating shoe company is $40 million and it has a beta of 1. However, the flow of customers is uncertain, so the value of the company is volatile-your analysis indicates that the volatility is 25% per year. Fifteen percent of the value of the company is attributable to the value of the free cash flows (cash available to you to spend how you wish) expected in the first year. If the one-year risk-free rate of interest is 4%:

  1. a. Should Global enter this business and, if so, when?
  2. b. How will the decision change if the current value of a shoe company is $36 million instead of $40 million?
  3. c. Plot the value of your investment opportunity as a function of the current value of a shoe company.
  4. d. Plot the beta of the investment opportunity as a function of the current value of a shoe company.
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You are considering entering the shoe business. You believe that you have a narrow window for entering this market. Because of Christmas demand, the time is right today, and you believe that exactly a year from now would also be a good opportunity. Other than these two windows, you do not think another opportunity will exist to break into this business. It will cost you $35 million to enter the market. Because other shoe manufacturers exist and are public companies, you can construct a perfectly comparable company. Hence, you want to use the Black-Scholes formula to decide when and if you should enter the shoe business. Your analysis implies that the current value of your shoe company would be $40 million, and that the volatility is 25% per year. Of the $40 million current value, $6 million is coming from the free cash flows expected in the first year. The risk-free rate is 4%. What is the value of the investment opportunity if you choose to wait? (Hint: think of the investment as a…
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TUV Hardware Stores is a major retailer of lumber and building products. They are privately owned but professionally managed. Recently, they took out a bank loan to build a new robotic warehouse. Debt to equity is now .2:1, and the bank has asked for financial statements. They have approached your audit firm to provide some assurance based on your excellent reputation. Each retail store is franchised and there are no corporate-owned stores. In 2020, franchise fees are expected to be $176 million while wholesale sales to stores are expected to be $2,416 million and wholesale sales direct to major builders are expected to be $203 million. Gross profit on wholesale sales is around 5%. The franchise fee goes to such things as store support (training, point of sale inventory, pricing systems) and advertising, and a 20% profit. TUV has operations across Canada with major warehouses in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Brampton, and St. John, New Brunswick. The new warehouse will be built in Kitchener.…

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Corporate Finance: The Core Plus MyLab Finance with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (4th Edition)

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