Title: Estimating beta: Continental Airlines. Estimating bet
1(more practice with capital budgeting)
- SG Company currently uses a packaging machine
that was purchased 3 years ago. This machine is
being depreciated on a straight line basis toward
a 400 salvage value, and it has 5 years of
remaining life. Its current book value is 2500
and it can be sold for 3500 at this time. - SG is offered a replacement machine which has a
cost of 10,000, an estimated useful life of 5
years, and an estimated salvage value of 1000.
This machine would also be depreciated on a
straight line basis toward its salvage value.
The replacement machine would permit an output
expansion, so sales would rise by 1500 per year
even so, the new machines much greater
efficiency would still cause before tax operating
expenses to decline by 1800 per year. The
machine would require that inventories be
increased by 2000, but accounts payable would
simultaneously increase by 750. No further
change in working capital would be necessary over
th4 e5 years. SGs marginal tax rate is 40, and
its discount rate for this project is 12.
Should the company replace the old machine?
(Assume that at the end of year 5 SG would
recover all of its net working capital
investment, and the new machines could be sold at
book value at the end of its useful life).
2Risk Return
- Chapter 9 3,12,13,17
- Chapter 10 3,5,13,17,22,27,34,38
- Note - In chapter 10, skip the following
sections - Efficient set (section 10.4)
- Efficient set for many securities skip the
first part of section 10.5, page 270 to middle of
271 - The optimal portfolio, p. 278-280.
3Measuring historical returns
- Total return dividend income capital gains
- total return Rt1 (Divt1 Pt1- Pt)/Pt
- Geometric mean returns
- (1 R)T (1R1)(1R2)(1Rt)(1RT)
- RA (1.15)(1.00)(1.05)(1.20)(1/4)-1 ? .0972
9.72 - RB (1.30)(0.80)(1.20)(1.50)(1/4)-1 ? .1697
16.97 - Arithmetic mean returns
-
- R (R1 R2 RT)/T
- RA .15 .00 .05 .20/4 .10 10
- RB .30 -.20 .20 .50/4 .20 20
4Measuring total risk
- Return volatility the usual measure of
volatility is the standard deviation, which is
the square root of the variance.
5Calculating historical risk return example
- The variance, ?² or Var(R) .0954/(T-1)
.0954/3 .0318 - The standard deviation, ? or SD(R) ?.0318
.1783 or 17.83
6Historical Perspective
7Capital Market History Risk Return Tradeoff
(Ibbotson, 1926-2003)
Risk premium difference between risky
investment's return and riskless return.
8EXPECTED (vs. Historical) RETURNS VARIANCES
Calculating the Expected Return
Expected return (-1.25 7.50 8.75) 15
9EXPECTED (vs. Historical) RETURNS VARIANCES
Calculating the variance
10PORTFOLIO EXPECTED RETURNS VARIANCES
- Portfolio weights 50 in Asset A and 50 in
Asset B - E(RP) 0.40 x (.125) 0.60 x (.075) .095
9.5 - Var(RP) 0.40 x (.125-.095)² 0.60 x
(.075-.095)² .0006 - SD(RP) ?.0006 .0245 2.45
- Note E(RP) .50 x E(RA) .50 x E(RB) 9.5
- BUT Var(RP) ? .50 x Var(RA) .50 x Var(RB)
!!!!
11PORTFOLIO EXPECTED RETURNS VARIANCES
New Portfolio weights put 3/7 in A and 4/7 in
B
E(RP) 10 SD(RP) 0 !!!!
12Covariance and correlation measuring how two
variables are related
- Covariance is defined
- ?AB Cov(RA,RB)
- Expected value of (RA-RA) x (RB-RB)
- Correlation is defined (-1lt ?ABlt1)
- ?AB Corr(RA,RB) Cov(RA,RB) / (?A x ?B)
?AB / (?A x ?B)
13Portfolio risk return
- If XA and XB the portfolio weights,
- The expected return on a portfolio is a weighted
average of the expected returns on the individual
securities - Portfolio variance is measured
14Portfolio Risk Return Example
RA (-0.20 0.10 0.30 0.50)/4 0.175
Var(RA) ?²A .2675/4 .066875 SD(RA) ?A
?.066875 .2586 RB (0.05 0.20 - 0.12
0.09)/4 0.055 Var(RB) ?²B .0529/4
.013225 SD(RB) ?B ?.013225 .1150 ?AB
Cov(RA,RB) -0.0195/4 -0.004875 ?AB
Corr(RA,RB) ?AB / ?A?B -0.004875/(.2586x.1150)
-.1369
15Benefits of diversification
- Consider two companies A B, and portfolio
weights XA .5, XB .5 - Stock A Stock B
- E(RA)10 E(RB)15
- ?A10 ?B30
- Case 1 ?AB 1 (?AB ?AB/?A?B)
16Benefits of diversification
- Stock A Stock B
- E(RA)10 E(RB)15
- ?A10 ?B30
- Case 2 ?AB 0.2 (?AB ?AB/?A?B)
17Benefits of diversification
- Stock A Stock B
- E(RA)10 E(RB)15
- ?A10 ?B30
- Case 3 ?AB 0 (?AB ?AB/?A?B)
18Intuition of CAPM
- Components of returns
- ? Total return Expected return Unexpected
return - R E(R) U
- The unanticipated part of the return is the true
risk of any investment. - ? The risk of any individual stock can be
separated into two components. - 1. Systematic or market risks (nondiversifiable).
- 2. Unsystematic, unique, or asset-specific
(diversifiable risks). - R E(R) U
- E(R) systematic portion unsystematic
portion
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20Measuring systematic risk beta
- Rm proxy for the "market" return
-
- Portfolio beta weighted ave of individual
assets betas
21Portfolio risk (beta) vs. return
- Consider portfolios of
- Risky asset A, ßA 1.2, E(RA) 18
- Risk free asset, Rf 7
22 23Market equilibrium
- Reward/risk ratio E(Ri) - Rf constant!
- ßi
- The line that describes the relationship between
systematic risk and expected return is called the
security market line.
24Market equilibrium
- The market as a whole has a beta of 1. It also
plots on the SML, so
25Using the CAPM risk free rate and risk premium
26Historic Returns and Equity Premia
27Using the CAPM estimating beta
- Regression output
- Data providers
- Bloomberg, Datastream, Value Line
28Estimating beta Continental Airlines
29Estimating beta Continental Airlines
30Estimating beta Continental Airlines
31Estimating beta
- How much historical data should we use?
- What return interval should we use?
- What data source should we use?
32DETERMINANTS OF BETA Operating vs. financial
leverage
- Sales
- - costs
- - depr
- EBIT
- - interest
- - taxes
- Net income
33Determinants of beta financial leverage
- With no taxes, beta of a portfolio of debt
equity beta of assets, or - If Debt is not too risky, assume ?D 0 , so
- or
- In most cases, it is more useful to include
corporate taxes
34Example equity betas vs. leverage
- McDonnell Douglas (pre merger)
- equity (levered) beta 0.59 D/E .875
- Tax rate 34 risk premium 8.5
- T-Bill 5.24
- Unlevered beta current beta/(1 (1-tax
rate)(D/E) - .59/(1(1-.34)(.875) .374
35Estimating betas using betas of comparable
companies
- Continental Airlines, 1992 restructuring
36Example estimating beta
- Novell, which had a market value of equity of 2
billion and a beta of 1.50, announced that it was
acquiring WordPerfect, which had a market value
of equity of 1 billion, and a beta of 1.30.
Neither firm had any debt in its financial
structure at the time of the acquisition, and the
corporate tax rate was 40. - Estimate the beta for Novell after the
acquisition, assuming that the entire acquisition
was financed with equity. - Assume that Novell had to borrow the 1 billion
to acquire WordPerfect. Estimate the beta after
the acquisition.
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39Example estimating beta
- Southwestern Bell, a phone company, is
considering expanding its operations into the
media business. The beta for the company at the
end of 1995 was 0.90, and the debt/equity ratio
was 1. The media business is expected to be 30
of the overall firm value in 1999, and the
average beta of comparable media firms is 1.20
the average debt/equity ratio for these firms is
50. The marginal corporate tax rate is 36. - a. Estimate the beta for Southwestern Bell in
1999, assuming that it maintains its current
debt/equity ratio. - b. Estimate the beta for Southwestern Bell in
1999, assuming that it decides to finance its
media operations with a debt/equity ratio of 50.
40Boeing commercial aircraft division
41Boeing commercial aircraft division
42WACC
- The key is that the rate will depend on the risk
of the cash flows - The cost of capital is an opportunity cost - it
depends on where the money goes, not where it
comes from.
WACC (E/V) x Re (D/V) x RD x (1 - T)
43Cost of Equity Dividend Growth Model
44Northwestern Corporation 8/04 - WACC
- WACC (E/V) x Re (D/V) x RD x (1 - T)
- Historical beta?
- Sources for beta?
45Northwestern Corporation - peers
Sources?
46Northwestern Corporation - peers
47Northwestern Corporation - Beta
48Northwestern Corporation Cost of equity
- re rf ße(rm rf)
- Levered beta .41(1(1-.385)1.381) 0.75
- Ibbotson 03, (rm rf) 7
- 20 year bond 4/02 5.9
- Re 5.9 0.75(7) 9.85
- Adding a 1.48 size risk premia (Ibbottson), and
2 company specific risk premia, cost of equity
13.33 - Arithmetic mean, large stocks long term
treasury bonds, time period not specified
49Northwestern Corporation - WACC
- WACC (E/V) x re (D/V) x rD x (1 - T)