09 Zutter Smart PMF 16e ch09
09 Zutter Smart PMF 16e ch09
09 Zutter Smart PMF 16e ch09
Chapter 9
The Cost of Capital
Value of Value of
Outstanding Outstanding Total Capital
Company Debt ($ billions) % Debt Equity ($ billions) % Equity ($ billions)
Alphabet $ 1 0% $ 911 100% $ 912
Johnson & Johnson 29 7 386 93 415
Procter & Gamble 31 10 282 90 313
Facebook 6 1 580 99 586
General Electric 99 66 51 34 150
General Motors 105 77 31 23 136
Cost $100,000
Life 20 years
Expected Return 7%
Cost $100,000
Life 20 years
Expected Return 12%
where:
– Dp = Annual dollar dividend
– Np = Net proceeds from the sale of the stock
Copyright © 2022 Pearson Education, Ltd.
Matter of Fact (1 of 2)
Becoming Less Preferred
Preferred stock is in many ways a dying security. Of the 50
largest firms in the United States, only banks such as
JPMorgan and Bank of America raise money through
preferred stock. Banks use preferred shares to meet
regulatory minimum capital requirements without diluting
their common stock ownership. Many companies do not use
preferred stock because it has many of the disadvantages of
debt (e.g., fixed dividend payments that resemble interest
payments on bonds), but it does not enjoy debt’s main
advantage, which is tax deductibility of interest.
D1
P0 (9.3)
rs g
where:
– P0 = Current value of common stock
– D1 = Dividend expected in one year
– rs = Required return on common stock
– g = Constant rate of growth in dividends
Copyright © 2022 Pearson Education, Ltd.
9.4 Cost of Common Stock (3 of 9)
• Finding the Cost of Common Stock Equity
– Cost of Common Stock Equity
Constant-Growth Valuation (Gordon Growth) Model
– Solving Equation 9.3 for rs results in the following
expression for the required return on common stock:
D1
rs g (9.4)
P0
• The first term captures the return that
shareholders expect to earn from dividends
• The second term captures the return they expect
to earn from capital gains
$3.99
rs 0.05 0.0798 0.05 0.1298 12.98%
$50
Because this estimate depends on an imprecise forecast of the
company’s long-run dividend growth rate, a kind of false precision
arises in concluding that the required return on equity is 12.98%,
so we will just round up to 13%.
D1
rn g (9.6)
Nn
$3.99
rn 0.05 0.0858 0.05 0.1358 13.58%
$46.50
rr = rs (9.7)
– where
wd = proportion of long-term debt in capital structure
wp = proportion of preferred stock in capital structure
ws = proportion of common stock equity in capital
structure
wd + wp + ws = 1.0
rd (1 – T ) = 4.880% = 4.88%
rp = 8.258% = 8.26%
rs = 13.00%
Preferred stock 10
Total 100%
Blank
Weight Cost Weighted cost
Source of capital w r w×r