Question
You and your team are financial consultants who have been hired by a large, publicly-traded electronics firm, Brilliant Electronics (BI), a leader in its industry.
You and your team are financial consultants who have been hired by a large, publicly-traded electronics firm, Brilliant Electronics (BI), a leader in its industry. The company is looking into manufacturing its new product, a machine using sophisticated state of the art technology developed by BIs R&D team, overseas. This overseas project will last for five years. Theyve asked you to evaluate this project and to make a recommendation about whether or not the company should pursue it. BIs management team needs your recommendation and the analysis used to arrive at it by no later than December 3, 2019.
The following market data on BIs securities are current:
Debt: 210,000 6.4 percent coupon bonds outstanding, 25 years to maturity, selling or 108 percent of par; the bonds have $1000 par value each and make semi-annual payments
Common Stock: 8,300,000 shares outstanding, selling for $68 per share; beta=1.1
Preferred Stock: 450,000 shares of 4.5% preferred stock outstanding, selling or $81 per share
Market: 7 percent expected market risk premium; 3.5 percent risk-free rate
The company bought some land three years ago for $3.9 million in anticipation of using it as a toxic dump site for waste chemicals, but it built a piping system to safely discard the chemicals instead. The land was appraised last week for $4.4 million on an after-tax basis. In five years, the after-tax value of the land will be $4.8 million, but the company expects to keep the land for a future project. The company wants to build its new manufacturing plant on this land; the plant will cost $37 million to build.
At the end of the project (the end of year 5), the plant can be scrapped for $5.1 million. The manufacturing plant will be depreciated using the straight-line method.
The company will incur $6,700,000 in annual fixed costs excluding depreciation. The plan is to manufacture 15,300 machines per year and sell them at $11,450 per machine; the variable production costs are $9,500 per machine. Selling price and costs are expected to remain unchanged over the life of the project.
BI uses PK Global (PKG) as its lead underwriter. PKG charges BI spreads of 8% on new common stock issues, 6% on new preferred stock issues, and 4% on new debt issues. PKG has included all direct and indirect issuance costs (along with its profit) in setting these spreads. BIs tax rate is 35 percent. The project requires $1,300,000 in initial net working capital investment to get operational. Assume BI raises all equity for new projects externally (that is, BI does not use retained earnings).
The weighted average flotation cost is the sum of the weight of each source of funds in the capital structure of the company times the flotation costs, so:
fT = ($564.4/$827.65)(0.08) + ($36.45/$827.65)(0.06) + ($226.8/$827.65)(0.04) = 0.0682, or 6.82%
Thus the initial investment is increased by the amount of flotation costs:
(Amount raised)(1 0.0682) = $37,000,000
Amount raised = $37,000,000/(1 0.0682) = $39,708,092
- Calculate the firms current cost of capital using the information provided.
- Calculate the projects cost of capital (the appropriate discount rate to use to evaluate BIs new project) assuming the capital structure will remain the same if the project is undertaken.
This project is somewhat riskier than a typical project for BI; therefore, management has asked you to use an adjustment factor of 12% to account for this increased riskiness (that is, to add 12% to the firms cost of capital) to estimate the projects required rate of return.
(NOTE: Flotation costs do not have to be considered when calculating the required rate of return for each class of security they are addressed in this problem by adjusting the cost of the initial investment to $39,708,092 from $37,000,000).
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Calculate the projects annual cash flows, taking into account all the relevant cash flows.
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Calculate the projects initial Time 0 cash flow, taking into account all relevant cash flows.
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Calculate the projects annual operational cash flows (OCF) over the life of the project.
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Calculate the projects terminal (last year of the project) cash flow. Include all relevant cash flows.
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(Note: You can present the cash flows from Year 0 to Year 5 in a table format)
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What is the NPV and IRR of the project?
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