DES Chapter 11 1 Estimating the Weighted Average Cost of Capital Chapter 11
Apr 01, 2015
DES Chapter 11 1
Estimating the Weighted
Average Cost of Capital
Chapter 11
DES Chapter 11 2
Using the Corporate Valuation Spreadsheet
Look at the file: Home Depot (for Ch 9-11, WACC, default inputs).xls.
This file will be called Home Depot.xls for short.
DES Chapter 11 3
Steps to estimate value using the Corporate Valuation Spreadsheet
The valuation spreadsheet has seven interrelated worksheets The valuation spreadsheet has seven interrelated worksheets, each of which performs an essential function:
(1) Proj & Val(2) Inputs(3) WACC(4) Hist Analys(5) Condensed(6) Comprehensive(7) Actual
DES Chapter 11 4
DES Chapter 11 5
The WACC Sheet
The WACC worksheet has cells for the inputs needed to calculate the WACC.
Following is an explanation of how to find reasonable inputs.
See DES Chapter 11 for details.
DES Chapter 11 6
WACC Concept
The WACC is the return required by all of the firm’s investors.
To calculate WACC, we need to know the return required by each class of investors, and the percentage of the firm that is financed by each class.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 7
WACC Concept (continued)
Focus is on four classes of investors:
Long-term debtholders
Preferred stockholders
Short-term debtholders
Common stockholders
DES Chapter 11 8
Target Weights
Weights for the WACC
wLTD = weight, or percentage of firm that will be
financed with long-term debt.
wSTD = weight, or percentage of firm that will be
financed with short-term debt.
wPs = weight, or percentage of firm that will be
financed with preferred stock.
wS = weight, or percentage of firm that will be
financed with common equity. (Continued)
DES Chapter 11 9
Target Weights (continued)
These percentages should be based on:
target market values of equity and debt, not book values of equity and debt
target percentages that the firm expects to
have in the future, not necessarily the weights it has now.
DES Chapter 11 10
Common Stock Value (Row 12)always use an estimate of the current market value of equity, also known as market capitalization, or just market capenter the current price per share (row 10) and the current number of shares (row 11) the default value for the number of shares is the number reported for the end of the last fiscal year (Comprehensive worksheet)
(Continued)
Target Weights (continued)
DES Chapter 11 11
Long-term Debt Value (Row 15)if you know the actual total market value of long-term debt, enter it in the WACC worksheet market data for long-term debt is often not available It is ok to use the value of long-term debt shown on its financial statements as an estimate of the market value of its long-term debt
(Continued)
Target Weights (continued)
DES Chapter 11 12
Short-term Debt Value (Row 18)if you know the actual total market value of short-term debt, enter it in the WACC worksheetshort-term debt often has a floating interest rate, so its market value is close to its book valuethe market value of the debt is close to its maturity value because the time until maturity is relatively short.
(Continued)
Target Weights (continued)
DES Chapter 11 13
Preferred Stock Value (Row 21)the market value of the preferred stock is found by multiplying the number of preferred shares by the price per shareIf market value is not readily available, it is ok to accept the default value in the WACC worksheet (the book value of preferred stock as reported on the Condensed balanced sheets)
(Continued)
Target Weights (continued)
DES Chapter 11 14
Estimating Weights in the Spreadsheet
The total market value of Home Depot is:
Total market value = LTD + STD + Preferred stock + Common equity= $1,321 + $0 + $0 + $71,528= $72,849 million
(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 15
WACC worksheet - Home Depot:
DES Chapter 11 16
Estimating Weights in the Spreadsheet (continued)
Are current percentages reasonable as estimates of long-term targets?
Consider the firm’s debt load relative to industry averages.
Consider the circumstances (e.g., startup vs. a mature firm).
Consider firm’s own statements about its intentions.
DES Chapter 11 17
Estimating Weights in the Spreadsheet (continued)
Row 24: target percent to be financed with long-term debt. In the absence of other information, choose the current value shown in Row 23.
Row 29: target percent to be financed with preferred stock. In the absence of other information, choose the current value shown in Row 28.
Row 33: target percent to be financed with short-term debt. In the absence of other information, choose the current value shown in Row 32.
(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 18
DES Chapter 11 19
Target Weight for Common Equity
The target weights have already been estimated for the other components.
The weights must sum to 100%, so the target percentage financed with common stock is:
wS = 1.0 – (wLTD + wSTD + wPS)
Estimating Weights in the Spreadsheet (continued)
DES Chapter 11 20
Cost of Long-Term Debt
The rate at which a company could
issue new long-term debt.
rLTD = before tax cost of debt.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 21
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Methods: 1. calculate the yield on existing debt using the
techniques discussed in Chapter 4 (or obtain from a published source, as we describe later)
2. proxy using yields on other companies’ debt with similar features, including risk and maturity
3. interest payments are deductible for tax purposes, so the after-tax cost is:
(1-T) rLTD
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 22
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Yield on Existing Long-Term Debt If a company has publicly-traded debt, go to: www.bondsonline.com
(You will have to register, but it’s free.)
On the left side of the page is a “BondSearch/Quote Center”.Select “Corporate Bonds”For “Issue” enter company name.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 23
Here’s an example for Procter & Gamble, obtained on October 6, 2003:
Source: http://www.bondsonline.com/.
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 24
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Cost of Long-Term Debt Using Similar Bonds
An alternative approach if a company doesn’t have long-term publicly traded debt is to proxy using the interest rate on a bond of similar risk.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 25
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
“Similar” Risk is Defined by Ratings
Companies pay rating agencies (Moody’s, S&P, etc.) to rate their bonds so that investors will know how risky they are.
Different agencies use slightly different codes, but the more A’s in a rating (including more capital A’s vs. lower-case A’s, and the more + signs), the better it is.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 26
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Add the average spread for bonds of similar risk and maturity to the T-bond yield of the desired maturity to estimate the interest rate on an identically rated bond. Bond yield = T-bond yield + Spread.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 27
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 43: input the company’s bond rating.Get this from www.bondsonline.com or
www.moodys.com . (You may have to register, but it’s free.)
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 28
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 44: input the bond spread that corresponds to the bond rating. The spread is the extra return required by bondholders above the rate on a government bond.Start by going to www.bondsonline.com
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 29
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
At Bondsonline, look at right side, look under section called Corporate/Agency Bonds, then pick Industrial Spreads (if you have a regular company).
An example is shown (for October 6, 2003) on the next slide:
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 30Source: http://www.bondsonline.com/. (Continued)
DES Chapter 11 31
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Pick the spread that is shown for a long-term (10 to 30 years) bond.
The spread is shown in basis points, so be sure to enter it as a percentage
E.g.,for a Aa3 10 year bond, 67 basis points = 0.67 percentage point, or .0067.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 32
Cost of Long-Term Debt (Continued)
Row 45: Input tax rate, based on your knowledge of company or historical rates.
U.S.: normally 34% to 39%.
(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 33
WACC worksheet - Home Depot’s cost of LTD:
DES Chapter 11 34
Cost of Short-Term Debt
rSTD = before tax cost of debt.
This is the rate at which a company
can borrow short-term debt (less than
a year until it must be repaid).
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 35
Cost of Short-Term Debt (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 57: input the
prime rate (the rate banks charge their
best customers). Go to: www.bloomberg.com/markets/rates/index.html
Then select country. U.S.: the prime is shown. Other countries: the “reference rate” may be
different, e.g., LIBOR, or a short-term government bond rate.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 36
Cost of Short-Term Debt (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 58: Input an adjustment to the prime rate. If your company is very strong, then enter 0%. If
your company is a little risky, enter 0.5% to 1.0%. Enter a bigger number if you company is even
riskier. 2% is about the biggest number to enter, since banks won’t loan to anyone riskier.
(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 37
WACC worksheet - Home Depot’s cost of STD:
DES Chapter 11 38
Cost of Preferred Stock
This is the rate at which a company
could issue new preferred stock.
rPs= cost of preferred stock.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 39
Cost of Preferred Stock (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 51: Input the yield on the company’s preferred stock. Get a quote from finance.yahoo.com. The yield is shown.
(The symbol is usually the company’s symbol, followed by a “_pa”. For example, Duke Power’s common stock symbol is DUK, its preferred (class A) is DUK_pa.)
WACC worksheet, Row 52: If yield info is not available, enter the coupon rate on outstanding preferred stock(Recall that Home Depot had no preferred stock)
(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 40
WACC worksheet - Home Depot’s cost of preferred:
DES Chapter 11 41
Return Required by Stockholders: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
rs = rRF + Beta (RPM)
rs: return required by stockholders.
rRF: the risk free rate.
Beta: measure of stock’s risk.
RPM: market risk premium (Continued)
DES Chapter 11 42
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
The Risk-Free Rate
rRF is the yield on a long-term (10 to 30
years) government bond.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 43
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
Beta
Beta measures how much risk a stock contributes to a portfolio.Beta measures the volatility of the stock relative to the volatility of the stock market. The average beta is equal to 1.Higher beta stocks should get higher returns.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 44
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
The Market Risk Premium (RPM)
How much extra return above a Treasury bond do investors expect from stocks?
RPM = Expected market return over and beyond the risk-free rate.
In the U.S., the market risk premium has been around 5.0% to 6.5% during the last decade.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 45
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
The Market Risk Premium (cont’d.)
When the market is high, the premium is on the low end of the range.
When the market is low, the premium is on the high end.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 46
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 36: input the beta from the Yahoo Profile.
WACC worksheet, Row 37: input the long-term (10 to 30 year) government bond rate. Go to: www.bloomberg.com/markets/rates/index.html
Then select country.(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 47
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 38: input the market risk premium. This is the extra expected return that it takes to entice an investor to invest in the risky stock market instead of a long-term government bond. U.S.: between 4.5% and 6.5%. If the stock
market is currently high, pick a value closer to 4.5%. If the market is low, pick a value closer to 6.5%.
(Continued)
DES Chapter 11 48
Return Required by Stockholders: CAPM (continued)
WACC worksheet, Row 40 - calculation of rs
for Home Depot:
rs = rRF + Beta(RPM)
rs = 3.32% + 1.38(5%)
rs = 10.2% (next slide)
DES Chapter 11 49
WACC worksheet - Home Depot’s cost of equity:
DES Chapter 11 50
Calculating the WACC
WACC worksheet, Row 64 - Putting the Pieces Together:
WACC = wsrs + wLTD (1 – T)rLTD + wSTD(1 – T)rSTD
+ wPSrPS
DES Chapter 11 51
Calculating the WACC (continued)
WACC for Home DepotHome Depot’s tax rate is about 38.6%. Using the other values we estimated earlier, Home Depot’s WACC is approximately:
WACC = 0.78(10.2%)+ 0.22(1 – 0.386)(4.0%) + 0.0(1 – 0.386)(4.25%) + 0.0(0%)
= 8.5%.(next slide)
DES Chapter 11 52
WACC worksheet - Home Depot’s WACC: