What sources of capital should be included when you estimate Jana’s weighted average cost of capital?

During the last few years, Jana Industries has been too constrained by the high cost of capital to make many capital investments. Recently, though, capital costs have been declining, and the company has decided to look seriously at a major expansion program proposed by the marketing department. Assume that you are an assistant to Leigh Jones, the financial vice president. Your first task is to estimate Jana’s cost of capital. Jones has provided you with the following data, which she
believes may be relevant to your task:
The firm’s tax rate is 40%.
The current price of Jana’s 12% coupon, semiannual payment, noncallable bonds with 15
years remaining to maturity is $1,153.72. Jana does not use short-term interest-bearing
debt on a permanent basis. New bonds would be privately placed with no flotation cost.
The current price of the firm’s 10%, $100 par value, quarterly dividend, perpetual
preferred stock is $116.95. Jana would incur flotation costs equal to 5% of the proceeds on
a new issue.
Jana’s common stock is currently selling at $50 per share. Its last dividend (D0) was $3.12
(4.19), and dividends are expected to grow at a constant rate of 5.8% (5) in the foreseeable
future. Jana’s beta is 1.2, the yield on T-bonds is 5.6% (7), and the market risk premium is
estimated to be 6%. For the own-bond-yield-plus-judgmental-risk-premium approach, the
firm uses a 3.2% (4) risk premium.
Jana’s target capital structure is 30% long-term debt, 10% preferred stock, and 60%
common equity

1. What sources of capital should be included when you estimate Jana’s weighted average cost of capital?

2. Should the component costs be figured on a before-tax or an after-tax basis?

3. Should the costs be historical (embedded) costs or new (marginal) costs?

2. Should the component costs be figured on a before-tax or an after-tax basis?
Stockholders are concerned primarily with those corporate cash flows that are available for their use, namely, those cash flows available to pay dividends or for reinvestment. Since
dividends are paid from and reinvestment is made with after-tax dollars, all cash flow and
rate of return calculations should be done on an after-tax basis.
3. Should the costs be historical (embedded) costs or new (marginal) costs?
In financial management, the cost of capital is used primarily to make decisions which
involve raising new capital. Thus, the relevant component costs are today’s marginal costs
rather than historical costs.
b. What is the market interest rate on Jana’s debt, and what is the component cost of this
debt for WACC purposes?

What are the two primary ways companies raise common equity?

Why is there a cost associated with reinvested earnings?

Jana doesn’t plan to issue new shares of common stock. Using the CAPM approach,
what is Jana’s estimated cost of equity?

What is the estimated cost of equity using the dividend growth approach?

Suppose the firm has historically earned 15% on equity (ROE) and has paid out 62% of earnings, and suppose investors expect similar values to obtain in the future. How could you use this information to estimate the future dividend growth rate, and what growth rate would you get? Is this consistent with the 5.8% growth rate given earlier?

Could the dividend growth approach be applied if the growth rate were not constant?
How?
f. What is the cost of equity based on the own-bond-yield-plus-judgmental-risk-premium method?

What is your final estimate for the cost of equity, ?

What factors influence a company’s WACC?