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Chapter 9
Cost of Capital




   Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall.
   All rights reserved.
Learning Objectives

    1. Describe the concepts underlying the firm’s cost of
       capital.
    2. Calculate the after-tax cost of debt, preferred stock,
       and common equity.
    3. Calculate a firm’s weighted average cost of capital.
    4. Describe the procedure used by PepsiCo to
       estimate the cost of capital for a multidivisional firm.
    5. Use the cost of capital to evaluate new investment
       opportunities.
    6. Calculate equivalent interest rates for different
       countries.
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                     9-2
Slide Contents

     Cost of Capital: Key Definitions and Concepts
     Determining the Cost of Individual Sources of Capital
     The Weighted Average Cost of Capital
     Calculating Divisional Costs of Capital for PepsiCo, Inc.
     Cost of Capital and New Investment
     Shareholder Value-Based Management
     Multinational Firms and Interest Rates

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                  9-3
1. Cost of Capital:
            Key Definitions and Concepts

    Capital
     Capital represents the funds used to finance
      a firm's assets and operations. Capital
      constitutes all items on the right hand side of
      balance sheet i.e. liabilities and common
      equity.
     Main sources: Debt, Preferred stock,
      Retained earnings and Common Stock
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                           9-4
Investor’s Required
                        Rate of Return

     Investor’s Required Rate of Return – is the
      minimum rate of return necessary to attract
      an investor to purchase or hold a security.
     Investor’s required rate of return is not the
      same as cost of capital due to taxes and
      transaction costs.
        Impact of taxes: For example, a firm may pay 8%
          interest on debt but due to tax benefit on interest
          expense, the net cost to the firm will be lower than
          8%.
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                     9-5
Investor’s Required
                        Rate of Return
     Impact of transaction costs on cost of capital: For
      example, If a firm sells new stock for $50.00 a
      share and incurs $5 in flotation costs, and the
      investors have a required rate of return of 15%,
      what is the cost of capital?
     The firm has only $45.00 to invest after
      transaction cost.
      .15 × $50.00 = $7.5
      k = $7.5/($45.00)
        = .1667 or 16.67% (rather than 15%)

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                              9-6
Financial Policy

     A firm’s financial policy indicates the
      desired sources of financing and the
      particular mix in which it will be used.
     For example, a firm may choose to
      raise capital by issuing stocks and
      bonds in the ratio of 6:4 (60% stocks
      and 40% bonds). The choice of mix
      may impact the cost of capital.
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                        9-7
2. Determining the Costs of the
               Individual Sources of Capital

    The Cost of Debt
    The bondholder’s required rate of return on debt is the
    return that bondholders demand. As seen in Chapter 7,
    this can be estimated using the bond price equation:




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                 9-8
The Cost of Debt

   Since firms must pay floatation costs when they sell bonds,
   the net proceeds per bond received by firm is less than the
   market price of the bond. Hence, the cost of debt capital (Kd)
   will be higher than the bondholder’s required rate of return. It
   can be calculated using the following equation:




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                         9-9
The Cost of Debt

    See Example 9-1
     Investor’s required rate of return = 9%
     However, due to floatation cost, the before-
      tax cost of capital for the firm is = 9.73%
     After-tax cost of debt =
      Cost of debt*(1-tax rate)
     At 34% tax bracket = 9.73*(1 – .34) = 6.422%

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                            9-10
The Cost of Preferred Stock

     Similar to bond issue, since floatation costs are
      incurred, preferred stockholder’s required rate of
      return will be less than the cost of preferred capital to
      the firm.
     Thus, in order to determine the cost of preferred
      stock, we adjust the price of preferred stock for
      floatation cost to give us the net proceeds.
     Net proceeds = issue price per share – floatation cost
      per share.

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                    9-11
The Cost of Preferred Stock

     Cost of Preferred Stock:
        Pn = net proceeds (i.e. Issue price – Floatation costs)
        Dp = Preferred stock dividend per share


    Example: Determine the cost for a preferred stock that
    pays annual dividend of $4.25, has current stock price
    $58.50 and incurs flotation costs of $1.375 per share
    Cost = $4.25/(58.50 – 1.375) = .074 or 7.44%

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                          9-12
The Cost of Common Equity

     Cost of equity is more challenging to estimate
      than the cost of debt or the cost of preferred
      stock because common stockholder’s rate of
      return is not fixed as there is no stated
      coupon rate or dividend.
     Furthermore, the costs will vary for two
      sources of equity (i.e. retained earnings and
      new issue).

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                             9-13
The Cost of Common Equity

     There is no flotation costs on retained
      earnings but the firm incurs costs when it
      sells new common stock.
     Note retained earnings are not a free source
      of capital. There is an opportunity cost.




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                            9-14
Cost estimation techniques

     Two commonly used methods for
      estimating common stockholder’s
      required rate of return are:
        The Dividend Growth Model
        The Capital Asset Pricing Model



 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-15
The Dividend Growth Model

     Investors’ required rate of return
      (For Retained Earnings):




     D1 = Dividends expected one year hence
     Pcs = Price of common stock;
     g = growth rate
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                      9-16
The Dividend Growth Model

     Investors’ required rate of return
      (For new issues)




     D1 = Dividends expected one year hence
     Pcs = Net proceeds per share
     g = growth rate
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                      9-17
The Dividend Growth Model

    Example: A company expects dividends this year to be
    $1.10, based upon the fact that $1 were paid last year.
    The firm expects dividends to grow 10% next year and
    into the foreseeable future. Stock is trading at $35 a
    share.
          Cost of retained earnings:
          Kcs = D1/Pcs + g
          1.1/35 + .10 = .1314 or 13.14%
          Cost of new stock (with a $3 floatation cost):
          Kncs = D1/NPcs + g
          1.10/(35 – 3) + .10 = .1343 or 13.43%
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                  9-18
The Dividend Growth Model

     Dividend growth model is simple to use
      but suffers from the following
      drawbacks:
        It assumes a constant growth rate
        It is not easy to forecast the growth rate



 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                             9-19
The Capital Asset Pricing
                       Model



   rf = Risk Free rate
   β = Beta
   rm – rf = Market Risk Premium or
             Expected rate of return for
             “average security” minus the
             risk free rate
© 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-20
Capital Asset Pricing Model

    Example: If beta is 1.25, risk-free rate is
    1.5% and expected return on market is
    10%
    kc = rrf + β (rm – rf)
       = .015 + 1.25(.10 – .015)
       = 12.125%
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                         9-21
Capital Asset Pricing Model
                  Variable estimates
     CAPM is easy to apply. Also, the estimates for model
      variables are generally available from public sources.
     Risk Free Rate: Wide range of US government
      securities on which to base risk-free rate
     Beta: Estimates of beta are available from a wide
      range of services, or can be estimated using
      regression analysis of historical data.
     Market risk premium: It can be estimated by looking
      at history of stock returns and premium earned over
      risk-free rate.
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                   9-22
3. The Weighted Average
                      Cost of Capital

    Bringing it all together: WACC
     To estimate WACC, we need to know the capital
      structure mix and the cost of each of the sources of
      capital.
     For a firm with only two sources: debt and common
      equity,




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                    9-23
WACC Example

     A firm borrows money at 7% after taxes
      and pays 12% for equity. The company
      raises capital in equal proportions i.e.
      50% debt and 50% equity.
     WACC = (.07 × .5) + (.12 × .5)
           = .095 or 9.5%


 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                    9-24
Business world
                         cost of capital

     In practice, the calculation of cost of
      capital may be more complex:
        If firms have multiple debt issues with
         different required rates of return.
        If firms also use preferred stock in addition
         to common stock financing.


 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                            9-25
Table 9-1




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-26
Table 9-1




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-27
Table 9-3




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-28
4. Calculating Divisional Costs of
                  Capital for PepsiCo Inc.

     PepsiCo calculated divisional cost of capital for each
      of its three major divisions: restaurants, food, and
      beverages.
     The target ratios for debt/equity mix and the pre-tax
      cost of debt were different for each division.
     PepsiCo estimated the WACC for each division in a 3
      step process:
        Estimate the cost of debt for each division
        Estimate the cost of equity for each division
        Estimate the WACC (with target capital structure) for each
         division
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                                             9-29
Table 9-4
                  PepsiCo’s Cost of Debt




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-30
Table 9-5
                 PepsiCo’s Cost of Equity




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-31
Table 9-6
                       PepsiCo’s WACC




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-32
5. Cost of Capital and
                      New Investment

     Cost of capital can serve as the
      discount rate in evaluating new
      investment when the projects offer the
      same risk as the firm as a whole.
     If risk differs, it is better to calculate a
      different cost of capital for each division.


 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                       9-33
6. Multinational Firms and
                      Interest Rates

     In an international setting, there can be
      different rates of inflation among
      different countries.
     The Fisher Model indicates that the
      nominal interest rate in the home or
      domestic country is a function of real
      interest rates and anticipated rate of
      inflation.
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                      9-34
Fisher Model and Domestic
                    Interest Rates

                 rn,h = (1 + rr,h)(1 + ih) – 1

   rn,h = Nominal rate of interest at home, U.S.

   rr,h = real interest rate at home, U.S.

   Ih = inflation rate at home, U.S
   Example: If Real interest rate is 3% and inflation
   rate is 5%, nominal rate will be 8.15%
 © 2011 Pearson (1.03)(1.05) All 1 = 8.15%
                Prentice Hall. – rights
reserved.                                          9-35
International or Foreign Rates
                   and Fisher Effect

                       rn,h – rn,h = ih – if
    Differences in observed nominal rates of
    interest between two countries should
    equal the difference in expected rates of
    inflation between the two countries.



 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                       9-36
Interest Rate Parity Theorem



     rn,h = Domestic one-period rate of interest
     rn,f = Corresponding rate in foreign country
     E0 & E1 = Exchange rates corresponding to
      current period (i.e. spot exchange rate) and
      one-period hence (i.e. the one-period forward
      exchange rate)
 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                            9-37
Interest Rate Parity Theorem

    Thus,
     Nominal interest rates are tied to
      exchange rates
     Differences in nominal interest rates are
      tied to expected rates of inflation


 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                    9-38
Interest Rates and Currency
                    Exchange Rates

     Example: If domestic one-period
      interest rate is 15.5%, and the
      Japanese rate of interest is 5%, the
      spot exchange rate is $1 to 1 yen and
      the forward exchange rate is $1.10 to
      1 yen.
            1 + .155 / 1 + .05 = 1.1/1= 1.10

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                      9-39
Figure 9-1




 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-40
Key Terms

     Capital Structure
     Financial Policy
     Economic Profit
     Market Value Added
     Weighted Average Cost of Capital

 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights
reserved.                                   9-41

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9. cost of capital

  • 1. Chapter 9 Cost of Capital Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
  • 2. Learning Objectives 1. Describe the concepts underlying the firm’s cost of capital. 2. Calculate the after-tax cost of debt, preferred stock, and common equity. 3. Calculate a firm’s weighted average cost of capital. 4. Describe the procedure used by PepsiCo to estimate the cost of capital for a multidivisional firm. 5. Use the cost of capital to evaluate new investment opportunities. 6. Calculate equivalent interest rates for different countries. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-2
  • 3. Slide Contents  Cost of Capital: Key Definitions and Concepts  Determining the Cost of Individual Sources of Capital  The Weighted Average Cost of Capital  Calculating Divisional Costs of Capital for PepsiCo, Inc.  Cost of Capital and New Investment  Shareholder Value-Based Management  Multinational Firms and Interest Rates © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-3
  • 4. 1. Cost of Capital: Key Definitions and Concepts Capital  Capital represents the funds used to finance a firm's assets and operations. Capital constitutes all items on the right hand side of balance sheet i.e. liabilities and common equity.  Main sources: Debt, Preferred stock, Retained earnings and Common Stock © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-4
  • 5. Investor’s Required Rate of Return  Investor’s Required Rate of Return – is the minimum rate of return necessary to attract an investor to purchase or hold a security.  Investor’s required rate of return is not the same as cost of capital due to taxes and transaction costs.  Impact of taxes: For example, a firm may pay 8% interest on debt but due to tax benefit on interest expense, the net cost to the firm will be lower than 8%. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-5
  • 6. Investor’s Required Rate of Return  Impact of transaction costs on cost of capital: For example, If a firm sells new stock for $50.00 a share and incurs $5 in flotation costs, and the investors have a required rate of return of 15%, what is the cost of capital?  The firm has only $45.00 to invest after transaction cost. .15 × $50.00 = $7.5 k = $7.5/($45.00) = .1667 or 16.67% (rather than 15%) © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-6
  • 7. Financial Policy  A firm’s financial policy indicates the desired sources of financing and the particular mix in which it will be used.  For example, a firm may choose to raise capital by issuing stocks and bonds in the ratio of 6:4 (60% stocks and 40% bonds). The choice of mix may impact the cost of capital. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-7
  • 8. 2. Determining the Costs of the Individual Sources of Capital The Cost of Debt The bondholder’s required rate of return on debt is the return that bondholders demand. As seen in Chapter 7, this can be estimated using the bond price equation: © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-8
  • 9. The Cost of Debt Since firms must pay floatation costs when they sell bonds, the net proceeds per bond received by firm is less than the market price of the bond. Hence, the cost of debt capital (Kd) will be higher than the bondholder’s required rate of return. It can be calculated using the following equation: © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-9
  • 10. The Cost of Debt See Example 9-1  Investor’s required rate of return = 9%  However, due to floatation cost, the before- tax cost of capital for the firm is = 9.73%  After-tax cost of debt = Cost of debt*(1-tax rate)  At 34% tax bracket = 9.73*(1 – .34) = 6.422% © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-10
  • 11. The Cost of Preferred Stock  Similar to bond issue, since floatation costs are incurred, preferred stockholder’s required rate of return will be less than the cost of preferred capital to the firm.  Thus, in order to determine the cost of preferred stock, we adjust the price of preferred stock for floatation cost to give us the net proceeds.  Net proceeds = issue price per share – floatation cost per share. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-11
  • 12. The Cost of Preferred Stock  Cost of Preferred Stock:  Pn = net proceeds (i.e. Issue price – Floatation costs)  Dp = Preferred stock dividend per share Example: Determine the cost for a preferred stock that pays annual dividend of $4.25, has current stock price $58.50 and incurs flotation costs of $1.375 per share Cost = $4.25/(58.50 – 1.375) = .074 or 7.44% © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-12
  • 13. The Cost of Common Equity  Cost of equity is more challenging to estimate than the cost of debt or the cost of preferred stock because common stockholder’s rate of return is not fixed as there is no stated coupon rate or dividend.  Furthermore, the costs will vary for two sources of equity (i.e. retained earnings and new issue). © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-13
  • 14. The Cost of Common Equity  There is no flotation costs on retained earnings but the firm incurs costs when it sells new common stock.  Note retained earnings are not a free source of capital. There is an opportunity cost. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-14
  • 15. Cost estimation techniques  Two commonly used methods for estimating common stockholder’s required rate of return are:  The Dividend Growth Model  The Capital Asset Pricing Model © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-15
  • 16. The Dividend Growth Model  Investors’ required rate of return (For Retained Earnings):  D1 = Dividends expected one year hence  Pcs = Price of common stock;  g = growth rate © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-16
  • 17. The Dividend Growth Model  Investors’ required rate of return (For new issues)  D1 = Dividends expected one year hence  Pcs = Net proceeds per share  g = growth rate © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-17
  • 18. The Dividend Growth Model Example: A company expects dividends this year to be $1.10, based upon the fact that $1 were paid last year. The firm expects dividends to grow 10% next year and into the foreseeable future. Stock is trading at $35 a share. Cost of retained earnings: Kcs = D1/Pcs + g 1.1/35 + .10 = .1314 or 13.14% Cost of new stock (with a $3 floatation cost): Kncs = D1/NPcs + g 1.10/(35 – 3) + .10 = .1343 or 13.43% © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-18
  • 19. The Dividend Growth Model  Dividend growth model is simple to use but suffers from the following drawbacks:  It assumes a constant growth rate  It is not easy to forecast the growth rate © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-19
  • 20. The Capital Asset Pricing Model rf = Risk Free rate β = Beta rm – rf = Market Risk Premium or Expected rate of return for “average security” minus the risk free rate © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-20
  • 21. Capital Asset Pricing Model Example: If beta is 1.25, risk-free rate is 1.5% and expected return on market is 10% kc = rrf + β (rm – rf) = .015 + 1.25(.10 – .015) = 12.125% © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-21
  • 22. Capital Asset Pricing Model Variable estimates  CAPM is easy to apply. Also, the estimates for model variables are generally available from public sources.  Risk Free Rate: Wide range of US government securities on which to base risk-free rate  Beta: Estimates of beta are available from a wide range of services, or can be estimated using regression analysis of historical data.  Market risk premium: It can be estimated by looking at history of stock returns and premium earned over risk-free rate. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-22
  • 23. 3. The Weighted Average Cost of Capital Bringing it all together: WACC  To estimate WACC, we need to know the capital structure mix and the cost of each of the sources of capital.  For a firm with only two sources: debt and common equity, © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-23
  • 24. WACC Example  A firm borrows money at 7% after taxes and pays 12% for equity. The company raises capital in equal proportions i.e. 50% debt and 50% equity.  WACC = (.07 × .5) + (.12 × .5) = .095 or 9.5% © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-24
  • 25. Business world cost of capital  In practice, the calculation of cost of capital may be more complex:  If firms have multiple debt issues with different required rates of return.  If firms also use preferred stock in addition to common stock financing. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-25
  • 26. Table 9-1 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-26
  • 27. Table 9-1 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-27
  • 28. Table 9-3 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-28
  • 29. 4. Calculating Divisional Costs of Capital for PepsiCo Inc.  PepsiCo calculated divisional cost of capital for each of its three major divisions: restaurants, food, and beverages.  The target ratios for debt/equity mix and the pre-tax cost of debt were different for each division.  PepsiCo estimated the WACC for each division in a 3 step process:  Estimate the cost of debt for each division  Estimate the cost of equity for each division  Estimate the WACC (with target capital structure) for each division © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-29
  • 30. Table 9-4 PepsiCo’s Cost of Debt © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-30
  • 31. Table 9-5 PepsiCo’s Cost of Equity © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-31
  • 32. Table 9-6 PepsiCo’s WACC © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-32
  • 33. 5. Cost of Capital and New Investment  Cost of capital can serve as the discount rate in evaluating new investment when the projects offer the same risk as the firm as a whole.  If risk differs, it is better to calculate a different cost of capital for each division. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-33
  • 34. 6. Multinational Firms and Interest Rates  In an international setting, there can be different rates of inflation among different countries.  The Fisher Model indicates that the nominal interest rate in the home or domestic country is a function of real interest rates and anticipated rate of inflation. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-34
  • 35. Fisher Model and Domestic Interest Rates rn,h = (1 + rr,h)(1 + ih) – 1 rn,h = Nominal rate of interest at home, U.S. rr,h = real interest rate at home, U.S. Ih = inflation rate at home, U.S Example: If Real interest rate is 3% and inflation rate is 5%, nominal rate will be 8.15% © 2011 Pearson (1.03)(1.05) All 1 = 8.15% Prentice Hall. – rights reserved. 9-35
  • 36. International or Foreign Rates and Fisher Effect rn,h – rn,h = ih – if Differences in observed nominal rates of interest between two countries should equal the difference in expected rates of inflation between the two countries. © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-36
  • 37. Interest Rate Parity Theorem  rn,h = Domestic one-period rate of interest  rn,f = Corresponding rate in foreign country  E0 & E1 = Exchange rates corresponding to current period (i.e. spot exchange rate) and one-period hence (i.e. the one-period forward exchange rate) © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-37
  • 38. Interest Rate Parity Theorem Thus,  Nominal interest rates are tied to exchange rates  Differences in nominal interest rates are tied to expected rates of inflation © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-38
  • 39. Interest Rates and Currency Exchange Rates  Example: If domestic one-period interest rate is 15.5%, and the Japanese rate of interest is 5%, the spot exchange rate is $1 to 1 yen and the forward exchange rate is $1.10 to 1 yen. 1 + .155 / 1 + .05 = 1.1/1= 1.10 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-39
  • 40. Figure 9-1 © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-40
  • 41. Key Terms  Capital Structure  Financial Policy  Economic Profit  Market Value Added  Weighted Average Cost of Capital © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 9-41