Cost of Preference Share Capital
Cost of preference share capital is the annual preference share dividend by the net proceeds from the sale of preference share.
There are two types of preference shares irredeemable and redeemable. Cost of redeemable preference share capital is calculated with the help of the following formula:
Where,
Kp = Cost of preference share
Dp = Fixed preference dividend
Np = Net proceeds of an equity share
Cost of irredeemable preference share is calculated with the help of the following formula:
Where,
Kp = Cost of preference share
Dp = Fixed preference share
P = Par value of debt
Np= Net proceeds ofthe preference share
n = Number of maturity period.
Example 7
XYZ Ltd. issues 20,000, 8% preference shares of Rs. 100 each. Cost of issue is Rs. 2 per share. Calculate cost of preference share capital if these shares are issued (a) at par, (b) at a premium of 10% and (c) of a debentures of 6%.
Solution
Cost of preference share capital
(a)
(b)
Example 8
ABC Ltd. issues 20,000, 8% preference shares of Rs. 100 each. Redeemable after 8 years at a premium of 10%. The cost of issue is Rs. 2 per share. Calculate the cost of preference share capital.
= 9.13%
where
Dp = 20,000 x 100 x 8%=1,60,000
P = 20,00,000+2,00,000 =22,00,00
Np = 20,00,000 – 40,000 =19,60,000
n = 8 years
Example 9
ABC Ltd. issues 20,000, 8% preference shares of Rs. 100 each at a premium of 5% redeemable after 8 years at par. The cost of issue is Rs. 2 per share. Calculate the cost of preference share capital.
Solution
= 7.51%
where,
Dp = 20,000 x 100 x 8%=1,60,000
P =20,00,000
n = 8 years
Np = 20,00,000 + 10,00,000 – 40,000 =20,60,000
Cost of Retained Earnings
Retained earnings is one of the sources of finance for investment proposal; it is different from other sources like debt, equity and preference shares. Cost of retained earnings is the same as the cost of an equivalent fully subscripted issue of additional shares, which is measured by the cost of equity capital. Cost of retained earnings can be calculated with the help of the following formula:
Kr=Ke (1 – t) (1 – b) |
Where,
Kr =Cost of retained earnings
Ke =Cost of equity
t = Tax rate
b = Brokerage cost
Example 10
A firm’s Ke (return available to shareholders) is 10%, the average tax rate of shareholders is 30% and it is expected that 2% is brokerage cost that shareholders will have to pay while investing their dividends in alternative securities. What is the cost of retained earnings?
Solution
Cost of Retained Earnings, Kr = Ke (1 – t) (1 – b)
Where,
Ke=rateof returnavailabletoshareholders
t = tax rate
b = brokerage cost
So, Kr=10% (1–0.5) (1–0.02)
= 10% x 0.5 x 0.98
= 4.9%
Measurement of Overall Cost of Capital It is also called as weighted average cost of capital and composite cost of capital. Weighted average cost of capital is the expected average future cost of funds over the long run found by weighting the cost of each specific type of capital by its proportion in the firms capital structure. The computation of the overall cost of capital (Ko) involves the following steps.
(a) Assigning weights to specific costs.
(b) Multiplying the cost of each of the sources by the appropriate weights.
(c) Dividing the total weighted cost by the total weights.
The overall cost of capital can be calculated with the help of the following formula;
Ko = Kd Wd + Kp Wp + Ke We + Kr Wr
Where,
Ko=Overall cost of capital
Kd = Cost ofdebt
Kp =Cost of preference share
Ke = Cost ofequity
Kr = Cost of retained earnings
Wd= Percentage of debt of total capital
Wp=Percentageofpreferencesharetototal capital
We=Percentageofequitytototalcapital
Wr = Percentage of retained earnings
Weighted average cost of capital is calculated in the following formula also:
Where,
Kw = Weighted average cost of capital
X = Cost of specific sources of finance
W = Weight, proportion of specific sources of finance.
Example 11
A firm has the following capital structure and after-tax costs for the different sources of funds used :
Source of Funds | Amount Rs | Proportion % | After-tax cost % |
Debt | 12,000 | 20 | 4 |
Preference Shares | 15,000 | 25 | 8 |
Equity Shares | 18,000 | 30 | 12 |
Retained Earnings | 15,000 | 25 | 11 |
Total | 60,000 | 100 |
You are required to compute the weighted average cost of capital.
Example 12
A company has on its books the following amounts and specific costs of each type of capital.
Type of Capital | Book Value Rs. | Market Value Rs. | Specific Costs (%) |
Debt | 4,00,000 | 3,80,000 | 5 |
Preference | 1,00,000 | 1,10,000 | 8 |
Equity | 6,00,000 | 9,00,000 | 15 |
Retained Earnings | 2,00,000 | 3,00,000 | 13 |
13,00,000 | 16,90,000 |
Determine the weighted average cost of capital using:
(a) Book value weights, and
(b) Market value weights.
How are they different? Can you think of a situation where the weighted average cost of capital would be the same using either of the weights?
Solution
Computation of Weighted Average Cost of Capital
A. BookValue
Source of Funds | Amount | Cost % (X) | Weighted Cost Proportion X Cost (XW) |
Debt | 4,00,000 | 5 | 20,000 |
Preference Shares | 1,00,000 | 8 | 8,000 |
Equity Shares | 6,00,000 | 15 | 90,000 |
Retained Earnings | 2,00,000 | 13 | 26,000 |
∑W = 13,00,000 | ∑XW = 1,44,000 |
Computation Weighted Average Cost of Capital
B. Market Value
Source of Funds | Amount | Cost % (X) | Weighted Cost Proportion X Cost (XW) |
Debt | 3,80,000 | 5 | 19,000 |
Preference Shares | 1,10,000 | 5 | 8,800 |
Equity Shares | 9,00,000 | 15 | 13,500 |
Retained Earnings | 3,00,000 | 13 | 39,000 |
∑W = 16,90,000 | ∑XW = 2,01,800 |
Example 13
ABC Ltd. has the following capital structure
Rs | |
Equity (expected dividend 12%) | 10,00,000 |
10% preference | 5,00,000 |
8% loan | 15,00,000 |
You are required to calculate the weighted average cost of capital, assuming 50% as the rate of income-tax, before and after tax.
Solution
Solution showing weighted average cost of capital:
Particulars | Rs. | After | Weights | Cost |
Equity | 10,00,000 | 12% | 33.33% | 3.99 |
Preference | 5,00,000 | 10% | 16.67 | 1.67 |
8% Loan | 15,00,000 | 4% | 50.00 | 2.00 |
7.66% |
Weight average cost of capital = 7.66%
44 videos|75 docs|18 tests
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1. What is the concept of cost of capital in accounting and financial management? |
2. How is the cost of debt calculated for determining the cost of capital? |
3. What factors affect the cost of equity in the computation of cost of capital? |
4. How is the cost of preferred stock determined in the calculation of cost of capital? |
5. Why is it important for a company to determine its cost of capital? |
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