| 1 Burse Co wishes to calculate its weighted average cost of capital and the following information relates to the companyat the current time:
 Number of ordinary shares 20 million
 Book value of 7% convertible debt $29 million
 Book value of 8% bank loan $2 million
 Market price of ordinary shares $5·50 per share
 Market value of convertible debt $107·11 per $100 bond
 Equity beta of Burse Co 1·2
 Risk-free rate of return 4·7%
 Equity risk premium 6·5%
 Rate of taxation 30%
 Burse Co expects share prices to rise in the future at an average rate of 6% per year. The convertible debt can be
 redeemed at par in eight years’ time, or converted in six years’ time into 15 shares of Burse Co per $100 bond.
 Required:
 (a) Calculate the market value weighted average cost of capital of Burse Co. State clearly any assumptions that
 you make. (12 marks)
 (b) Discuss the circumstances under which the weighted average cost of capital can be used in investment
 appraisal. (6 marks)
 (c) Discuss whether the dividend growth model or the capital asset pricing model offers the better estimate of
 the cost of equity of a company. (7 marks)
 (25 marks)
 1 (a) Calculation of weighted average cost of capital (WACC)Cost of equity
 Cost of equity using capital asset pricing model = 4·7 + (1·2 x 6·5) = 12·5%
 Cost of convertible debt
 Annual after-tax interest payment = 7 x (1 – 0·3) = $4·90 per bond
 Share price in six years’ time = 5·50 x 1·066 = $7·80
 Conversion value = 7·80 x 15 = $117·00 per bond
 Conversion appears likely, since the conversion value is much greater than par value.
 The future cash flows to be discounted are therefore six years of after-tax interest payments and the conversion value received
 in year 6:
 Year Cash flow $ 10% DF PV ($) 5% DF PV ($)
 0 market value (107·11) 1·000 (107·11) 1·000 (107·11)
 1–6 interest 4·9 4·355 21·34 5·076 24·87
 6 conversion 117·00 0·564 66·00 0·746 87·28
 ––––––– ––––––––
 (19·77) 5·04
 ––––––– ––––––––
 Using linear interpolation, after-tax cost of debt = 5 + [(5 x 5·04)/(5·04 + 19·77)] = 6·0%.
 (Note that other after-tax costs of debt will arise if different discount rates are used in the linear interpolation calculation.)
 We can confirm that conversion is likely and implied by the current market price of $107·11 by noting that the floor value of
 the convertible debt at an after-tax cost of debt of 6% is $93·13 (4·9 x 6·210 + 100 x 0·627).
 Cost of bank loan
 After-tax interest rate = 8 x (1 – 0·3) = 5·6%
 This can be used as the cost of debt for the bank loan.
 An alternative would be to use the after-tax cost of debt of ordinary (e.g. not convertible) traded debt, but that is not available
 here.
 Market values
 Market value of equity = 20m x 5·50 = $110 million
 Market value of convertible debt = 29m x 107·11/100 = $31·06 million
 Book value of bank loan = $2m
 Total market value = 110 + 31·06 + 2 = $143·06 million
 WACC = [(12·5 x 110) + (6·0 x 31·06) + (5·6 x 2)]/143·06 = 11·0%
 (b) The weighted average cost of capital (WACC) can be used as a discount rate in investment appraisal provided that the risks
 of the investment project being evaluated are similar to the current risks of the investing company. The WACC would then
 reflect these risks and represent the average return required as compensation for these risks.
 WACC can be used in investment appraisal provided that the business risk of the proposed investment is similar to the
 business risk of existing operations. Essentially this means that WACC can be used to evaluate an expansion of existing
 business. If the business risk of the investment project is different from the business risk of existing operations, a projectspecific
 discount rate that reflects the business risk of the investment project should be considered. The capital asset pricing
 model (CAPM) can be used to derive such a project-specific discount rate.
 WACC can be used in investment appraisal provided that the financial risk of the proposed investment is similar to the
 financial risk of existing operations. This means that financing for the project should be raised in proportions that broadly
 preserve the capital structure of the investing company. If this is not the case, an investment appraisal method called adjusted
 present value (APV) should be used. Alternatively, the CAPM-derived project-specific cost of capital can be adjusted to reflect
 the financial risk of the project financing.
 A third constraint on using WACC in investment appraisal is that the proposed investment should be small in comparison with
 the size of the company. If this were not the case, the scale of the investment project could cause a change to occur in the
 perceived risk of the investing company, making the existing WACC an inappropriate discount rate.
 (c) The dividend growth model has several difficulties attendant on its use as a way of estimating the cost of equity. For example,
 the model assumes that the future dividend growth rate is constant in perpetuity, an assumption that is not supported by the
 way that dividends change in practice. Each dividend paid by a company is the result of a dividend decision by managers,
 who will consider, but not be bound by, the dividends paid in previous periods. Estimating the future dividend growth rate is
 also very difficult. Historical dividend trends are usually analysed and on the somewhat risky assumption that the future will
 repeat the past, the historic dividend growth rate is used as a substitute for the future dividend growth rate. The model also
 assumes that business risk, and hence business operations and the cost of equity, are constant in future periods, but reality
 shows us that companies, their business operations and their economic environment are subject to constant change. Perhaps
 the one certain thing about the future is its uncertainty.
 It is sometimes said that the dividend growth model does not consider risk, but risk is implicit in the share price used by themodel to calculate the cost of equity. A moment’s thought will indicate that share prices fall as risk increases, indicating that
 increasing risk will lead to an increasing cost of equity. What is certainly true is that the dividend growth model does not
 consider risk explicitly in the same way as the capital asset pricing model (CAPM). Here, all investors are assumed to hold
 diversified portfolios and as a result only seek compensation (return) for the systematic risk of an investment. The CAPM
 represent the required rate of return (i.e. the cost of equity) as the sum of the risk-free rate of return and a risk premium
 reflecting the systematic risk of an individual company relative to the systematic risk of the stock market as a whole. This risk
 premium is the product of the company’s equity beta and the equity risk premium. The CAPM therefore tells us what the cost
 of equity should be, given an individual company’s level of systematic risk.
 The individual components of the CAPM (the risk-free rate of return, the equity risk premium and the equity beta) are found
 by empirical research and so the CAPM gives rise to a much smaller degree of uncertainty than that attached to the future
 dividend growth rate in the dividend growth model. For this reason, it is usually suggested that the CAPM offers a better
 estimate of the cost of equity than the dividend growth model.
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