You are on page 1of 6

Scholarship applications for Wikimania 2009 are now open. Apply now!

Weighted average cost of capital


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search This article includes a list of references or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (October 2007) The weighted average cost of capital (WACC) is the rate that a company is expected to pay to finance its assets. WACC is the minimum return that a company must earn on existing asset base to satisfy its creditors, owners, and other providers of capital. Companies raise money from a number of sources: common equity, preferred equity, straight debt, convertible debt, exchangeable debt, warrants, options, pension liabilities, executive stock options, governmental subsidies, and so on. Different securities are expected to generate different returns. WACC is calculated taking into account the relative weights of each component of the capital structure. Calculation of WACC for a company with a complex capital structure is a laborious exercise.

Contents

1 The formula for a simple case 2 How it works 3 Sources of information 4 Effect on valuation 5 References 6 See also 7 External links

The formula for a simple case


The weighted average cost of capital is defined by:

where

and the following table defines each symbol:

Symbol weighted average cost of capital

Meaning

Units % % % % currency currency currency

required or expected rate of return on equity, or cost of equity" required or expected rate of return on borrowings, or cost of debt corporate tax rate total debt and leases (including current portion of long-term debt and notes payable) total market value of equity and equity equivalents total capital invested in the going concern

This equation describes only the situation with homogeneous equity and debt. If part of the capital consists, for example, of preferred stock (with different cost of equity y), then the formula would include an additional term for each additional source of capital. or WACC[1] = wd (1-T) rd + we re wd = debt portion of value of corporation T = tax rate rd = cost of debt (rate) we = equity portion of value of corporation re = cost of internal equity (rate)

How it works
Since we are measuring expected cost of new capital, we should use the market values of the components, rather than their book values (which can be significantly different). In addition, other, more "exotic" sources of financing, such as convertible/callable bonds, convertible preferred stock, etc., would normally be included in the formula if they existed in any significant amounts since the cost of those financing methods is usually different from the plain vanilla bonds and equity due to their extra features. WACC is a special way to measure the capital discount of the firms gaining and spending. A calculation of a firm's cost of capital in which each category of capital is proportionately weighted. All capital sources - common stock, preferred stock, bonds and any other long-term debt - are included in a WACC calculation. WACC is calculated by multiplying the cost of each capital component by its proportional weight and then summing: Broadly speaking, a companys assets are financed by either debt or equity. 2

WACC is the average of the costs of these sources of financing, each of which is weighted by its respective use in the given situation. By taking a weighted average, we can see how much interest the company has to pay for every dollar it finances. A firm's WACC is the overall required return on the firm as a whole and, as such, it is often used internally by company directors to determine the economic feasibility of expansionary opportunities and mergers. It is the appropriate discount rate to use for cash flows with risk that is similar to that of the overall firm.

Sources of information
How do we find out the values of the components in the formula for WACC? First let us note that the "weight" of a source of financing is simply the market value of that piece divided by the sum of the values of all the pieces. For example, the weight of common equity in the above formula would be determined as follows: Market value of common equity / (Market value of common equity + Market value of debt + Market value of preferred equity). So, let us proceed in finding the market values of each source of financing (namely the debt, preferred stock, and common stock).

The market value for equity for a publicly traded company is simply the price per share multiplied by the number of shares outstanding, and tends to be the easiest component to find. The market value of the debt is easily found if the company has publicly traded bonds. Frequently, companies also have a significant amount of bank loans, whose market value is not easily found. However, since the market value of debt tends to be pretty close to the book value (for companies that have not experienced significant changes in credit rating, at least), the book value of debt is usually used in the WACC formula. The market value of preferred stock is again usually easily found on the market, and determined by multiplying the cost per share by number of shares outstanding.

Now, let us take care of the costs.

Preferred equity is equivalent to a perpetuity, where the holder is entitled to fixed payments forever. Thus the cost is determined by dividing the periodic payment by the price of the preferred stock, in percentage terms. The cost of common equity is usually determined using the capital asset pricing model. The cost of debt is the yield to maturity on the publicly traded bonds of the company. Failing availability of that, the rates of interest charged by the banks on recent loans to the company would also serve as a good cost of debt. Since a corporation normally can write off taxes on the interest it pays on the debt, however, the cost of debt is further reduced by 3

the tax rate that the corporation is subject to. Thus, the cost of debt for a company becomes (YTM on bonds or interest on loans) (1 tax rate). In fact, the tax deduction is usually kept in the formula for WACC, rather than being rolled up into cost of debt, as such: WACC = weight of preferred equity cost of preferred equity + weight of common equity cost of common equity + weight of debt cost of debt (1 tax rate). And now we are ready to plug all our data into the WACC formula.

Effect on valuation
Economists Merton Miller and Franco Modigliani showed in the Modigliani-Miller theorem that in an economy with no transaction costs or taxes, financing decisions are irrelevant to the company's value: an all-equity financed company is worth the same as an all-debt financed one. However, many governments allow a tax deduction on interest, thereby creating a bias towards debt financing. However, there is a cost to financial distress (e.g. bankruptcy) which creates a bias towards equity financing. Therefore theoretically, the appropriate level of Debt to Equity in a company will then be the point at which the benefits of the tax shield provided by debt financing are outweighed by the costs of financial distress.

References
1. ^ http://faculty.smu.edu/ozerturk/pdf4368/4368-note11.pdf This article includes a list of references or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (November 2007) G. Bennet Stewart III (1991). The Quest for Value. HarperCollins. F. Modigliani and M. Miller, "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment," American Economic Review (June 1958). M. Miller and F. Modigliani. "Corporate income taxes and the cost of capital: a correction." American Economic Review, 53 (3) (1963), pp. 433-443. J. Miles und J. Ezzell. "The weighted average cost of capital, perfect capital markets and project life: a clarification." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 15 (1980), S. 719-730.

See also

Beta coefficient Cost of capital Discounted cash flow Economic Value Added Internal rate of return Minimum acceptable rate of return Modigliani-Miller theorem 4

Net present value Opportunity cost

External links

Video about practical application of the WACC approach Yee, Kenton K., "Earnings Quality and the Equity Risk Premium: A Benchmark Model" . Contemporary Accounting Research, Vol. 23, No. 3, pp. 833-877, Fall 2006. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=921914. Velez-Pareja, Ignacio and Tham, Joseph, "A Note on the Weighted Average Cost of Capital WACC" (August 7, 2005). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=254587. Unpublished. calculate the WACC with your own values to understand the equation Find the WACC of any publicly traded company by entering the firm's stock ticker symbol Paper describing a method for generating the WACC curve when there is default risk spreadsheet available

Corporate finance and investment banking


Senior secured debt Senior debt Second lien debt Subordinated debt Mezzanine debt Convertible debt Exchangeable debt Preferred equity Shareholder loan Common equity Pari passu Initial public offering (IPO) Secondary Market Offering (SEO) Follow-on offering Greenshoe (Reverse) Book building Takeover Reverse takeover Tender offer Poison pill Freeze-out merger Tag-along right Drag-along right

Capital structure

Transactions (terms / conditions) Equity offerings

Mergers and acquisitions

Control premium Divestment Demerger Leveraged buyout Leveraged recap Financial sponsor Private equity Bond offering High-yield debt DIP financing

Leverage

Valuation

Financial modeling APV DCF Net present value (NPV) Cost of capital (Weighted average) Comparable company analysis Enterprise value Tax shield Minority interest EVA MVA

List of investment banks List of finance topics Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_average_cost_of_capital" Categories: Capital | Mathematical finance Hidden categories: Articles lacking in-text citations from October 2007 | Articles lacking in-text citations from November 2007

This page was last modified on 13 April 2009, at 13:40 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

You might also like