Final Practice Problems Flashcards
If you were told the risk free rate was 4%, the market return was 14% and the beta of a stock was 0.2, what is the expected (required) return on that stock?
CAPM: re = 0.04 + .2(0.14 - 0.04) = 6%
What is the WACC for a firm with 50% debt and 50% equity that pays 12% on its debt, 20% on its equity, and has a 40% tax rate?
WACC = [.5 x ((1-.4) x .12)] + (.5 x .2)
= .036 + .10
= .1360
= 13.60%
Find the required rate of return for equity investors of a firm with a beta of 1.3 when the risk free rate is 5%, and the return on the market is 10%.
CAPM: re = 0.05 + 1.30(0.10 - 0.05)
= 11.5%
What is the weighted-average cost of capital for a firm with the following sources of funds and corresponding required rates of return: $5 million common stock at 16%, $500,000 preferred stock at 10%, and $3 million debt at 9%. All amounts are listed at market values and the firm’s tax rate is 35%.
12.07%
You are considering a new investment. The rate on T-bills is 3.3% and the return on the S&P 500 is 8.5%. You have measured the non-diversifiable risk of the investment you are considering to be .5. What rate of return will you require on the investment?
CAPM: re = 0.033 + .5(0.085 - 0.033) = .0590 = 5.9%
What return on equity do investors expect for a firm with a $25 share price, an expected dividend in year 1 of $3.00, a beta of .6 and a constant growth rate of 2.5%?
re = (div1 / P0) +g
= (3.00/25) + .025 = .1450 = 14.5%
What is a firm’s weighted-average cost of capital if the stock has a beta of 1.45, Treasury bills yield 5%, and the market portfolio offers an expected return of 14%? In addition to equity, the firm finances 30% of its assets with debt that has a yield to maturity of 9%. The firm is in the 35% marginal tax bracket.
re = .05 + 1.45 (.14 - .05) rd = YTM=9%
= .05 + .1305
= 18.05%
WACC = (.3 × (1-.35) × .09) + (.7 × .1805) = .01755 + .12635 = 14.39%
Be SPECIFIC and DETAILED in answering the following questions:
a. Give one example of systematic risk and one example of unsystematic risk.
b. Which type of risk can a portfolio help you avoid? How?
c. Which type of risk are you rewarded for bearing? Why?
A. There are many possible answers here. Systematic risk is things like interest rates, war, and recessions. Unsystematic risk is anything firm-specific like a fire, or death of the CEO etc.
B. Portfolios help you avoid unsystematic risk. By holding stocks in a portfolio which are not perfectly positively correlated, you can diversify away unsystematic risk. Diversification lowers standard deviation.
C. You are rewarded for bearing systematic risk only because it cannot be avoided. You are not compensated for bearing unsystematic risk because it can be diversified away.
Why does risk matter in valuing projects, stocks, or any cash flows?
Risk matters because people are risk averse. Therefore if risk increases, required returns are going to increase as well.
What does the beta of a stock measure?
Systematic risk.
You hold one stock (A) with a standard deviation of 20%. You are thinking about buying another stock (B) with a standard deviation of 30%. You will hold these two stocks in a portfolio with 50% of your money invested in each. Stock B has a correlation coefficient of –0.2 with stock A. Calculate the standard deviation of the portfolio.
16.28%
You are considering purchasing a stock. You know that the rate on T-bills is 3.5% and the market return is 13%. The beta of the stock you are considering is 0.6. What is the expected return (required return) on the stock?
9.2%
You own a portfolio that is 50% invested in stock X, 30% in stock Y, and 20% in stock Z. The expected returns on these three stocks are 11%, 17%, and 14%, respectively. What is the expected return on the portfolio?
13.4%
You are considering investing in two stocks to form a portfolio. You are very risk averse (you do not like risk). Which one of the following stock combinations will you choose for your portfolio (these are your only options)? (Choose only one)
a. Stocks A & B which are in the same industry.
b. Stocks C & D have zero correlation with each other.
c. Stocks E & F which are negatively correlated.
d. Stocks G & H which are positively correlated.
c. Stocks E & F which are negatively correlated.
Your company is considering a project with the following cash flows: an immediate investment of $150 million, cash inflows of $60 million for 6 years (starting next year). If your discount rate for this project is 12%, what is the project’s NPV? Should you accept the project?
You should get 96.68 and because it is positive you accept the project. (Solution is in millions.)