FIN 501 Week 3 Assignment Help | Trident University
- trident-university / FIN 501
- 06 Feb 2021
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FIN 501 Week 3 Assignment Help | Trident University
CAPITAL BUDGETING AND
THE COST OF CAPITAL
For your Module 3 SLP
assignment, continue to do research on the company that you wrote about for
Modules 1 and 2. For this assignment, you will be estimating the weighted
average cost of capital (WACC) for your chosen company. The final calculation
will be fairly straightforward, as it involves just plugging in some numbers
into an equation. However, the more challenging task will be finding the
necessary numbers to plug into the formulas. You will need information such as
the beta for your company, the bond-rating, and various information from its
balance sheet. Links to some suggested Web pages for finding this kind of
information is included in the instructions, but you might be able to find
other sources of information. Go step by step and present your information for
Steps 1-4 below in a Word document. Make sure to show all of your steps one by
one and include the sources of your information:
1. Find out your chosen company's credit
rating. Rating agencies such as Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s assign ratings
to companies. AAA is high, AA is lower, BBB is even lower, etc. The higher the
rating, the lower the cost of debt capital. Explain what your company’s credit
rating is and the reasons for the high or low rating based on your research.
Also, use the Fidelity Fixed Income Web
page to find out what the current return is for a 30-year bond for a
corporation with the rating that your company has. This yield will be the
approximate cost of debt capital for your company. We will call the cost of
debt RD.
2. Now estimate the cost of equity for
your company. First you will need the beta; you already found this for your
Module 1 SLP. You will also need the three-month treasury bill yield, which we
will use as our measure of the risk-free rate. This rate should be listed on
the Fidelity Fixed Income Web page linked above. Finally, you will need the
equity risk premium. You can find estimates of this on many Web pages including
Fidelity Fixed Income or Gutenberg Research. It
is usually around 5%. Once you have this information, you can estimate the cost
of equity as the 30-year treasury bill yield rate plus beta multiplied by the
equity premium:
Cost of Equity =
risk-free rate + Beta * (Equity Premium).
Show your calculations.
We will call the cost of equity RE.
3. Now find out how much of the firm's
capital is equity and how much is debt. For the total value, look at the
balance sheet for your company as found on Google Finance or a similar Web
page. The total value of your company will be “total liabilities and
shareholder’s equity.” The proportion of debt will be total liabilities divided
by total value, which we will call D/V. The proportion of equity will be
shareholder’s equity divided by total value, or E/V. If you calculate them
correctly, the proportions will add up to one.
4. Now we have all the information we need
to get at least a rough ballpark estimate of WACC. Let’s assume a corporate tax
rate of 35%. So the formula we will use is WACC = (E/V)* RE +(D/V)* RD *(1-.35)
Calculate WACC and show
your computations. As a “reality check” on your calculations, the WACC should
likely be in the single digits and positive. Compare what you found to the
average WACC in your company’s industry, which should be available on Web pages
such as Cost of Capital by Sector (US)Note
that 35% is the official corporate tax rate, but many corporations find tax
breaks. If your WACC is too low, try computing it with a lower tax rate such as
25% or 10%.
SLP Assignment
Expectations
• Answer the assignment questions
directly.
• Stay focused on the precise
assignment questions. Do not go off on tangents or devote a lot of space to
summarizing general background materials.
• For computational problems, make sure
to show your work and explain your steps.
• For short answer/short essay
questions, make sure to reference your sources of information with both a
bibliography and in-text citations. See the Student Guide to Writing a
High-Quality Academic Paper, including pages 11-14 on in-text
citations. Another resource is the “Writing Style Guide,” which is found under
“My Resources” in the TLC Portal.