Title: Global Cost of Capital and Financial Structure
1Global Cost of Capital and Financial Structure
International Financial Management
Dr. A. DeMaskey
2Learning Objectives
- What is a firms cost of capital?
- How is the cost of capital for foreign
investments determined? - What key issues are involved in applying the CAPM
to estimating the cost of equity capital for
foreign projects? - How is the effective dollar cost of debt
determined? - What should be the MNCs worldwide capital
structure?
3Weighted Average Cost of Capital
- WACC wdkd(1 - T) weke
- where wi proportion of source of capital
used in the capital structure ki
marginal cost of source of capital - T corporate tax rate.
4The Cost of Equity Capital
- The CAPM Approach
- ks kRF (kM - kRF)bi
- where (kM kRF)bi risk premium
- bi systematic risk
- kM kRF market risk premium
-
5Beta Coefficient
- Beta is the measure of systematic risk for asset
i, which is computed as -
- Where ?im correlation between asset i and the
market - si standard deviation of
returns on asset i - sm standard deviation of returns on
the market - portfolio
6The Cost of Debt Capital
- Cost of debt requires
- Interest rate forecast for next few years
- Proportion of various classes of debt the firm
expects to use - Corporate income tax rate
- Effective cost of debt
- kd kd (1 T)
7The Weighted Average Cost of Capital for Foreign
Projects
- If project risk and financial structure for a
foreign project varies from the corporate norm,
the costs and weights of the different cost
components must be adjusted to reflect their
actual values. - The projects WACC will equal
- WACC wdkd(1 - T) weke
8Key Issues in Estimating Foreign Project Discount
Rates
- Should the corporate proxies be U.S. or local
companies? - Is the relevant base portfolio against which the
proxy beta are estimated the U.S. market
portfolio, the local portfolio, or the world
market portfolio? - Should the market risk premium be based on the
U.S. market or the local market? - How should country risk be incorporated in the
cost of capital estimates?
9Proxy Companies
- Local Companies
- Proxy Industries
- Adjusting U.S. Industry Beta
10The Relevant Base Portfolio
- Home Market Portfolio
- ri rf bius (rus rf)
- Global Capital Asset Model
- ri rf big (rg rf)
- where
11The Relevant Market Risk Premium
- U.S. Market Risk Premium
- Mostly U.S. investors
- Foreign betas should be estimated relative to the
U.S. market - Statistical validity of U.S. capital market data
12Estimating the Equity Cost of Capital for the
Foreign Subsidiary
- Find proxy portfolio in country in which
subsidiary operates - Calculate beta relative to U.S. market
- Multiply beta by the risk premium for U.S. market
- Add estimated equity risk premium for foreign
subsidiary to U.S. riskfree rate
13The Cost of Debt Capital
- Dollar cost of LC loan
- rL (1 c) c
- After-tax dollar cost of LC loan
- rL (1 c)(1 ta) c
- Multiyear LC loan
- Without taxes
- With taxes
14Establishing a Worldwide Capital Structure
- Consolidated worldwide capital structure
- Optimal global financing plan
- Cost and availability of other sources
- Worldwide debt ratio
- Default risk
- Target capital structure
15Subsidiary Capital Structure Funding Sources
- Parent raises capital in home country and invests
these funds as equity - Subsidiary debt ratio is zero
- Parent invests one dollar of share capital in
subsidiary and requires all to finance operations
on its own - Subsidiary debt ratio is 100
- Parent borrows funds and relends monies as an
intercorporate loan to subsidiary - Subsidiary debt ratio is 100
16Subsidiary Financial Structure
- Subsidiary financial structure is not
independent. - Debt/equity ratio of subsidiary is irrelevant
- Focus is on worldwide capital structure
- Vary subsidiary capital structure to take
advantage of local financing opportunities
17Foreign Subsidiary Capital Structure
- Conform to that of the parent company
- Reflect the capitalization norms in each foreign
country - Vary to take advantage of opportunities to
minimize the parent firms cost of capital
18Cost of Capital for MNCs versus Domestic Firms
- Is the WACC or an MNC higher or lower than for
its domestic counterpart? The answer is a
function of - The marginal cost of capital
- The after-tax cost of debt
- The optimal debt ratio
- The relative cost of equity
- An MNC should have a lower cost of capital
because it has access to a global cost and
availability of capital - This availability and cost allows the MNC more
optimality in capital projects and budgets
compared to its domestic counterpart