Solution to Case 23 Evaluating Project Risk It’s Better to Be Safe Than Sorry! Questions: 1. What seems to be wrong with the way the NPV of each project has been calculated? Indicate without any calculations‚ how Pete and John should go about recalculating the projects’ NPVs. The NPV of each project has been calculated by discounting the cash flows at the 8% before-tax cost of debt. This is incorrect. Since the company has debt‚ preferred stock and common
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Ch. 24 1. Leland Stanford- He was one of the "Big Four" who backed the Central Pacific Railroad. He was the ex-governor of California with useful political connections. 2. Collis P. Huntington- He was one of the "Big Four" who was an adept lobbyist. 3. James J. Hill- He created the Great Northern railroad and was the greatest railroad builder of all time. 4. Cornelius Vanderbilt- He was the head of New York Central railroad and he financed successful western railroads. 5. Jay Gould-
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Solutions – Chapter 5 Chapter 5 Financial Analysis Question 1. Which of the following types of firms do you expect to have particularly high or low asset turnover? Explain why. Supermarket—High asset turnover. Supermarkets tend to be high volume businesses. Many of the food products in supermarkets are perishable‚ and freshness is often used to differentiate products‚ forcing a certain amount of inventories turnover. The typical consumer buys groceries on a regular basis‚ guaranteeing grocery
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CHAPTER 12 Intangible Assets ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) Topics Questions 1. Intangible assets; concepts‚ definitions; items comprising intangible assets. 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8‚ 9‚ 10‚ 11‚ 12‚ 13‚ 14 2. Patents; franchise; organization costs; trade name. 9‚ 10‚ 13‚ 14‚ 25 3. Goodwill. 4. 5. Brief Exercises Exercises Concepts Problems for Analysis 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 5‚ 6 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4 1‚ 2‚ 3 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 7‚ 12‚ 13 4‚ 5‚ 6
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Jonas had just finished a small shelter for now 6 year old Gabe and himself. It has been 3 years since he left the community and he was starting to become weak. He sat down on a nearby log and thought about his old life and what his parents were thinking now. They probably figured he was gone forever. It was clear they had stopped searching for him. He wondered if they even noticed Gabe was gone as well. In his opinion he had saved Gabe from being released. Even though Gabe wouldn’t have known what
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CAPITAL BUDGETING PROBLEMS: CHAPTER 11 Answers to Warm-Up Exercises E11-1. Categorizing a firm’s expenditures Answer: In this case‚ the tuition reimbursement should be categorized as a capital expenditure since the outlay of funds is expected to produce benefits over a period of time greater than 1 year. E11-2. Classification of project costs and cash flows Answer: $3.5 billion already spent—sunk cost (irrelevant) $350 million incremental cash outflow—relevant cash flow $15 million per year cash
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Chapter 4 29. Annuity Present Values What is the value today of a 15-year annuity that pays $500 a year?The annuity’s first payment occurs at the end of year 6. The annual interest rate is 12 percentfor years 1 through 5‚ and 15 percent thereafter. (Ross‚ Stephen A.. Corporate Finance‚ 8th Edition. Irwin/McGraw-Hill‚ 112006. 4.8). 33. Growing Annuity Southern California Publishing Company is trying to decide whether to revise its popular textbook‚ Financial Psychoanalysis Made Simple. The company
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Case Solutions Corporate Finance Ross‚ Westerfield‚ and Jaffe 9th edition CHAPTER 2 CASH FLOWS AT WARF COMPUTERS The operating cash flow for the company is: (NOTE: All numbers are in thousands of dollars) OCF = EBIT + Depreciation – Current taxes OCF = $1‚332 + 159 – 386 OCF = $1‚105 To calculate the cash flow from assets‚ we need to find the capital spending and change in net working capital. The capital spending for the year was: | |Capital spending
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Solutions to Chapter 10 Introduction to Risk‚ Return‚ and the Opportunity Cost of Capital capital gain + dividend ($44 − $40) + $2 = = 0.15 = 15.0% initial share price $40 1. Rate of return = Dividend yield = dividend/initial share price = $2/$40 = 0.05 = 5% Capital gains yield = capital gain/initial share price = $4/$40 = 0.10 = 10% 2. Dividend yield = $2/$40 = 0.05 = 5% The dividend yield is unaffected; it is based on the initial price‚ not the final price. Capital gain = $36 – $40
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Assignment 1 NPV: = -PF + FV /(1+r) PV = FV/(1+r) or PV = C1/1-r + C2/(1-r)2 + .. + CT/(1-r)T Rate of return: R=(Vf-Vi)/Vf Rate r compounded m times a year: FV = C(1+r/m)mt 10% semiannually = 10.25% annually‚ Hence 10.25 is said to be the Effective Annual Yield (EAY) 1+EAY = (1+r/m)mt Assignment 2 Perpetuity The value of D received each year‚ forever: PV = D/r Annuity The value of D received each year for T years: PV = (D/r)*[1 – 1/(1+r)T] Growing Perpetuity PV = D/(R-g) R: the
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