Marginal cost of capital (Ali)

hunkali007 3,463 views 9 slides Jul 27, 2017
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About This Presentation

MCC VS WACC


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Marginal cost of capital Presented To-: Prof. Uttam Kumar Presented By-: Mohd Ali SRMS IBS

Marginal cost of capital Definition The   WACC  applicable to the next dollar of the total new financing . Capital is any money used to finance a business and/or its operations . Capital can be acquired from many different sources: traditional debt or equity financing or owner financing, grants, gains on investment capital, retained earnings, accrual financing contracts and forward payment agreements on capital . The WMCC and cost of capital change over time.

Example: Once retained earnings are depleted, Newco decides to access the capital markets to raise new equity. Newco , assume the company's stock is selling for $40, its expected ROE is 10%, next year's dividend is $2.00 and the company expects to pay out 30% of its earnings. Additionally, assume the company has a flotation cost of 5%. Newco's cost of new equity ( k c ) is thus 12.3%, as calculated below: k c  =  2  + 0.07 = 0.123, or 12.3%  40(1-0.05) Marginal Cost of Capital

Answer: Using this new cost of equity, we can determine the WACC as follows: WACC = (w d )( k d )(1-t) + ( w ps ) ( k ps )  + ( w ce )( k ce ) WACC = (0.4)(0.07)(1-0.4) + (0.05)(0.021) + (0.55)(0.123)  WACC = 0.086, or 8.6% The WACC has been stepped up from 8.4% to 8.6% given Newco's need to raise new equity. Marginal Cost of Capital

Look Out! At some point, as the company continues to raise capital, the MCC can be higher than the WACC. Marginal Cost of Capital

MCC Vs. WACC The marginal cost of capital is simply the weighted average cost of the last dollar of capital raised. As mentioned previously, in making capital decisions, a company keeps with a target capital structure. There comes a point, however, when retained earnings have been depleted and new common stock has to be used. When this occurs, the company's cost of capital increases. This is known as the "breakpoint" and can be calculated as follows:

Breakpoint for retained earnings =  retained earnings      w ce      Example: For Newco , assume we expect it to earn $50 million next year. As mentioned in our previous examples, Newco's payout ratio is 30%. What is Newco's breakpoint on the marginal cost curve, if we assume w ce  = 55%?                          MCC Vs. WACC

Answer: Newco's breakpoint =  $50 million (1-0.3)  = $63.6 million 0.55 Thus, after Newco raises roughly $64 million of total capital, new common equity will need to be issued and Newco's WACC will increase to 8.6%. Factors that affect the cost of capital can be categorized as those that are controlled by the company and those that are not. MCC Vs. WACC

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