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《海归黄埔军校》课程《中国企业资本运营》第四章《资金成本》:资金成本分 |
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《海归黄埔军校》课程《中国企业资本运营》第四章《资金成本》:资金成本分 -- 安普若 - (4072 Byte) 2004-11-13 周六, 20:13 (4377 reads) |
安普若 [博客] [个人文集]
头衔: 海归元勋 声望: 大师 性别: 加入时间: 2004/02/21 文章: 26038 来自: 中国美国的飞机上 海归分: 4196257
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作者:安普若 在 海归黄埔军校 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
How can a company raise money to build, for example, a new factory?
What are the Capital Components?
Common Stock
Preferred Stock
Bonds (debt)
Retained Earnings - (profit the company makes, but does not give to the shareholders in the form of dividends)
Each of these components has a cost. We can determine the cost of each capital component.
Cost of Retained Earnings
This is kind of weird to think about. It takes some time to understand so take it slowly. After a company makes money (earnings), who owns that money? The shareholders, right? But when you retain earnings you are not giving the money to the shareholders. You are keeping it. In a way, you are investing it for them in your company. Well those shareholders want some return on that money you are keeping. How much return do they expect? They want the same amount as if they had gotten the retained earning in the form of dividends, and bought more stock in your company with them. THAT is the cost of retained earnings. You as a financial genius, have to ensure that if you are retaining earning, that the shareholders will get at least as good a return on the money as if they had re-invested the money back into the company.
If you don't understand this, re-read it and re-think it until you do get it. There is really no "cost" in the cost of retained earnings. I mean, no money is changing hands. You aren't paying anyone anything. But you are keeping the shareholders money. You can't say it is "free" money. Frankly if you did, it would screw up your capital budgeting. So when you are doing your capital budgeting, to ensure that the shareholders are getting a decent rate of return, you "guess" a cost of retained earnings. How?? One way is CAPM. Another way is the bond yield plus risk premium approach, in which you take the interest rate on the company's own long term debt and then add between 5% and 7%. Again, you are kind of guessing here. A third way is the discounted cash flow method, in which you divide the dividend by the price of stock and add the growth rate. Again, a lot of guessing.
Cost of Issuing Common Stock
Flotation Cost of Common Stock = Costs of issuing the actual stock (ink, printing, paper, computers, etc.) + The cost of retained earnings.
Cost of Preferred Stock
Cost of Preferred Stock = What you give. divided by What you get.
Cost of Preferred Stock = Dividend divided by Price - Underwriting Costs
Cost of Bonds (debt)
Cost of Debt = Coupon rate on the bonds minus The Tax Savings
Interest on bonds is tax deductible. So we can reduce our taxable income by the amount of money we pay to the bondholders.
WACC - The Weighted Average Cost of Capital.
Every company has a capital structure - a general understanding of what percentage of debt comes from retained earnings, common stocks, preferred stocks, and bonds. By taking a weighted average, we can see how much interest the company has to pay for every dollar it borrows. This is the weighted average cost of capital.
Capital Component=Cost X "% of capital structure"=Total
Retained Earnings=10% X 25%=2.50%
Common Stocks=11% X 10%=1.10%
Preferred Stocks=9% X 15%=1.35%
Bonds=6% X 50%=3.00%
TOTAL 7.95%
So the WACC of this company is 7.95%.
作者:安普若 在 海归黄埔军校 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
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- 《海归黄埔军校》课程《中国企业资本运营》第四章《资金成本》:资金成本分 -- 安普若 - (4072 Byte) 2004-11-13 周六, 20:13 (4377 reads)
- How can a company raise money to build, for example, a new factory? (转贴) -- 安普若 - (3305 Byte) 2005-12-13 周二, 23:49 (456 reads)
- 资金成本(转贴) -- 安普若 - (420 Byte) 2005-12-13 周二, 19:52 (669 reads)
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