Suppose your company needs $45 million to build a new assembly line. Your target debt-equity ratio is
Question:
Suppose your company needs $45 million to build a new assembly line. Your target debt-equity ratio is .45. The flotation cost for new equity is 7 percent, but the flotation cost for debt is only 3 percent. Your boss has decided to fund the project by borrowing money because the flotation costs are lower and the needed funds are relatively small.
a. What do you think about the rationale behind borrowing the entire amount?
b. What is your company’s weighted average flotation cost, assuming all equity is raised externally?
c. What is the true cost of building the new assembly line after taking flotation costs into account? Does it matter in this case that the entire amount is being raised from debt?
Step by Step Answer:
Corporate Finance Core Principles And Applications
ISBN: 9781260571127
6th Edition
Authors: Stephen Ross, Randolph Westerfield, Jeffrey Jaffe, Bradford Jordan