Weighted average cost of capital

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Revision as of 22:14, 14 November 2015 by imported>Doug Williamson (Reference Example 1 expressly.)
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(WACC).

Weighted average cost of capital is used as:

  • a discount rate in net present value analysis and
  • a hurdle rate in internal rate of return analysis.


The WACC is the average cost of capital of a firm, taking into account:

(1) All sources of capital

(2) Weighted by their current market values.


For a firm with both equity and debt capital, the WACC would be calculated as:


WACC = Ke x proportion of equity + Kd(1-t) x proportion of debt

= Ke x E / ( D + E ) + Kd(1 - t) x D / ( D + E )


Where:

Ke = cost of equity.

Kd(1 -t) = after-tax cost of debt.

E = market value of equity.

D = market value of debt.


Example 1

Where:

Ke = cost of equity = 10%

Kd(1-t) = after-tax cost of debt = 3.6%

E = market value of equity = $100m

D = market value of debt = $100m


WACC = Ke x E / ( D + E ) + Kd(1 - t) x D / ( D + E )

= 10 x 100 / ( 100 + 100 ) + 3.6 x 100 / ( 100 + 100 )

= 10 x 100 / 200 + 3.6 x 100 / 200

= 10 x 1/2 + 3.6 x 1/2

= 5 + 1.8

= 6.8%


This weighted average is exactly mid-way between the cost of equity (10%) and the after-tax cost of debt (3.6%), because the proportions of equity and debt are exactly equal in this first example.


Example 2

Making a number of simplifying assumptions, if the proportion of equity were increased to 75% (= 0.75), the proportion of debt would fall to 25% and the WACC might theoretically increase to:

= 10 x 0.75 + 3.6 x 0.25

= 7.5 + 0.9

= 8.4%


Example 3

If the firm was 'geared up' to reduce the proportion of equity to 25%, and increase the proportion of debt to 75%, again simplifying, the WACC might in theory fall to:

= 10 x 0.25 + 3.6 x 0.75

= 2.5 + 2.7

= 5.2%


However, the simplified second and third calculations above ignore the change in the risk to shareholders and to debt holders when the firm's capital structure is changed in this way.

In practice both the cost of equity and the cost of debt would normally change, following the change in capital structure, leading to a more complex analysis.


Creating shareholder value

In order to create or add shareholder value, the managers of this firm would need to earn:

(1) An after-tax rate of return on their investment projects

(2) Of more than the WACC - of, for example in Example 1 above, 6.8%.


See also


Other links

Treasury essentials: Weighted average cost of capital, The Treasurer, May 2013