CF Tutorial 11
CF Tutorial 11
Corporate Finance
1. Assume that you wish to purchase a bond with a 30-year maturity, an annual
coupon rate of 10 percent, a face value of $1,000, and semiannual interest
payments. If you require a 9 percent nominal yield to maturity on this
investment, what is the maximum price you should be willing to pay for the
bond?
FV = 1000
I = 9%
N = 30
PMT = 100 (10% x 1000)
Compounded semiannually
PV = RM1103.19
2. You intend to purchase a 10-year, $1,000 face value bond that pays interest of $60
every 6 months. If your nominal annual required rate of return is 10 percent with
semiannual compounding, how much should you be willing to pay for this bond?
FV = 1000
I = 10%
N = 10
PMT = 120 (60 x 2)
Compounded semiannually
PV = RM1124.62
mature in 10 years. If your nominal annual required rate of return is 12
percent with quarterly compounding, how much should you be willing
to pay for this bond?
FV= $1,000
i/r= 12%
N= 10
Compounded quarterly
PV= $1,115.57
4. A share of common stock has just paid a dividend of $3.00. If the
expected long-run growth rate for this stock is 5 percent, and if
investors require an 11 percent rate of return, what is the price of the
stock?
= 3.15 / 0.06
= $52.5
5. The Jones Company has decided to undertake a large project.
Consequently, there is a need for additional funds. The financial
manager plans to issue preferred stock with a perpetual
annual dividend of $5 per share and a par value of $30. If the
required return on this stock is currently 20 percent, what should
be the stock‘s market value?
Stock market value
=$5/0.2
=$25
6. A share of preferred stock pays a quarterly dividend of $2.50.
If the price of this preferred stock is currently $50, what is the
nominal annual rate of return?
Annual dividend= $2.50*4= $10
=$10/$50
=0.20/20%
QUESTION 7 (common stock with perpetual constant dividend)
NoGrowth Corporation currently pays a dividend of $2 per year,
and it will continue to pay this dividend forever. What is the price
per share if its equity cost of capital is 15% per year?
g=0, D= 2 r= 15%
g = (2/5) × 15% = 6%
(b) If DFB’s equity cost of capital is 12%, what price would
you estimate for DFB stock?
D1 = 3 , r = 12% , g = 6%
P = D1/ r - g
P = 3 / (12% – 6%)
= $50
(c) Suppose DFB instead paid a dividend of $4 per share this year and
retained only $1 per share in earnings. That is, it chose to pay a higher
dividend instead of reinvesting in as many new projects. If DFB maintains
this higher payout rate in the future, what stock price would you estimate
now?
Earning = $5, dividend payout = $4, retention = $1
P = D1/ r-g