What’s your real cost of capital? By James J. McNulty‚ Tony D. Yeh‚ William s. Schulze‚ and Michael H. Lubatkin Harvard Business Review‚ October 2002 Issue of the article: valuing investment projects Number of pages: 12 Daniel Miravet Campos Part 1. Executive summary This article is fundamentally based on the exposition of a new method to calculate the cost of capital for a company (MCPM)‚ to meet the inefficiencies of the current one (CAPM). In valuing any investment project or
Premium Stock market Investment Stock
Cost of Capital Definition: cost of capital is the rate of return that a company must earn on its project investments to maintain its market value and attract funds. The cost of capital to a company is the minimum rate of return that is must earn on its investments in order to satisfy the various categories of investors‚ who have made investments in the form of shares ‚ debentures and loans. The cost of capital in operational terms refers to the discount rate that would be used in determining the
Premium Finance Net present value Weighted average cost of capital
ACT 5060 – Accounting for Decision Makers. Submitted to: Dr. Wonnell Submitted by: Daniel Castelblanco N01377525 7975 SW 86 St. Miami‚ FL 33143 Cell: (786) 546-5408 Date of Submission: September 7‚ 2012 Title of Assignment: Variance Analysis CERTIFICATION OF AUTHORSHIP: I certify that I am the author of this paper and that any assistance I received in its preparation is fully acknowledge and disclosed in the paper. I have also cited any sources from which I used data‚ ideas of
Premium Variance Direct material price variance Cost
Cost of Capital Firms need to make capital investment i.e.‚ purchasing fixed assets such as factories‚ machineries‚ equipment‚ etc. After deciding what capital investments to make‚ they need to decide on the financing – sources of capital. The sources: Long-Term Debt‚ Common Stock‚ Preferred Stock and Retained Earnings. Then they need to find the cost of obtaining each source of financing today (not historical). Cost of Capital - The rate of return that a firm must earn on its investment
Premium Finance Investment Rate of return
Optimal Capital Budget Finance theory says to accept all positive NPV projects. Two problems can occur when there is not enough internally generated cash to fund all positive NPV projects: Increasing Marginal Cost of Capital Externally raised capital can have large flotation costs‚ which increase the cost of capital. Investors often perceive large capital budgets as being risky‚ which drives up the cost of capital. (More...) An increasing marginal cost of capital. Capital rationing
Premium Cost Net present value Weighted average cost of capital
District of Columbia Analysis and Review of Fiscal Year 2011-2012 Budget and Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) of the Capital City Table of Contents Introduction………………………………………………………………………3 Washington‚ D.C. – Overview………………………………………………...…4 CAFR Analysis….……………………………………………………………….6 Budget Analysis ……………….………………………………………………...9 Budget Analysis - ____ ………………………………………………………….8 Budget Analysis…………………………………………………………………
Premium Strategic management Management Investment
Capital Budget Recommendation Managerial Accounting and Legal Aspect of Business/ACC 543 May 24‚ 2010 Capital Budget Recommendation Guillermo Navallez is the owner of Guillermo Furniture‚ a company that
Premium Investment Net present value Rate of return
Chapter 11 Two-Way ANOVA An analysis method for a quantitative outcome and two categorical explanatory variables. If an experiment has a quantitative outcome and two categorical explanatory variables that are defined in such a way that each experimental unit (subject) can be exposed to any combination of one level of one explanatory variable and one level of the other explanatory variable‚ then the most common analysis method is two-way ANOVA. Because there are two different explanatory variables
Premium Standard deviation Arithmetic mean Variance
CHAPTER 11: THE COST OF CAPITAL LEARNING GOALS: 1. Understand the key assumptions‚ the basic concept and the specific sources of capital associated with the cost of capital. 2. Determine the cost of long-term debt and the cost of preferred stock. 3. Calculate the cost of common stock equity and convert it into the cost of retained earnings and the cost of new issues of common stock. 4. Calculate the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) and discuss alternative weighing schemes
Premium Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Asset
Questions Case #5 – Marriott Corporation: The Cost of Capital 1. Are the four components of Marriott’s financial strategy consistent with its growth objective? 2. How does Marriott use its estimate of its cost of capital? Does this make sense? 3. What is the weighted average cost of capital for Marriott Corporation? a. What risk free rate and risk premium did you use to calculate the cost of equity? b. How did you measure Marriott’s cost of debt? 4. If Marriott used a single corporate
Premium Weighted average cost of capital Arithmetic mean Average