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14 - Estimating a project's cost of capital

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Seth Armitage
Affiliation:
Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh
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Summary

The subject of this chapter is how to estimate the cost of capital of an existing or potential investment project that has not issued traded financial assets and is not regulated. There is no existing market price of the project and no historic record of market prices. The remarkable fact is that the cost of capital of an untraded project cannot be estimated directly without using an estimate of the expected rate of return on another asset. All respectable procedures involve, as part of the process, identifying one or more listed companies that are thought to be similar to the project, and then estimating the expected rates of return on the shares of these similar companies. Thus we have already considered, in the preceding two chapters, an indispensable step. The current chapter fills in the other steps in arriving at a project's weighted average cost of capital. It also discusses evidence of company practice, and offers a ranking of the decisions to be made in order of their impact on the final estimate of the WACC. It is hoped that, by the end of the chapter, the reader will have a clear view of the whole estimation process, and of what matters and what does not matter in the process.

Estimating a project's cost of equity

Cost of equity from pure-play companies

The estimation of a project's cost of equity requires the identification of similar listed companies – i.e. companies with shares of similar risk to the shares that would be issued, at least hypothetically, by the project.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Cost of Capital
Intermediate Theory
, pp. 300 - 322
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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