This one might take a few minutes. I’ll post answers in an hour or so, let folks play if they want to. I was doing fine on the single questions but got brutalized here.
Jaden Hoyle is evaluating the MegaFood Market chain of grocery stores and Strinson Carburetors, a maker of automobile and industrial engine parts. MegaFood is publicly traded, while Strinson is a private company. Hoyle’s firm, Janssen and Associates, is considering the purchase of a 50% equity stake in one or both of the companies, and may be willing to purchase the companies outright. Janssen only invests in companies with a weighted average cost of capital of less than 11%.
Hoyle has assembled the following data on the two companies:
MegaFood Market
Strinson Carburetors
Beta
0.87
1
Market value of equity
$173 million
$993 million
Market value of debt
$38 million
$567 million
Marginal tax rate
42.8%
31%
Target debt/equity rating
35%
78%
Equity risk premium
0
4.6%
Required return on debt
9%
6.5%
The risk-free rate of return is 5.2%. Hoyle must make recommendations regarding both MegaFood Market and Strinson Carburetors.
Hoyle does not have all of the data she needs and knows she will have to estimate some values using the data she does possess. To help estimate the required return on equity for Strinson Carburetors, Hoyle takes three actions:
Action A: She selects a benchmark company, unlevers the beta of that company, then levers up the adjusted beta using Strinson’s debt and equity allocation.
Action B: She calculates a risk premium, then adds that premium to the yield to maturity of the company’s long-term debt.
Action C: She prepares a supply-side multifactor model considering expected inflation, expected GDP growth, and expected changes in P/E ratio.
Before she finishes her analysis of MegaFood Market and Strinson Carburetors, Hoyle must construct valuation models for two other companies, Halberd Hardware, a maker of hand tools, and the Jones Group, one of the world’s largest consultants. She has assembled the following information about each company.
Halberd Hardware
* Gary Halberd, the founder, still owns 85% of the company, and all the rest is in the hands of company directors and friends of Halberd who bought stakes 20 years ago.
* Historical data on equity returns is sparse, as there have been very few trades over the last two decades.
* Halberd Hardware is headquartered in New York City.
* The company plans to go public in the next six months, with Gary Halberd selling 30% of his ownership interest.
Jones Group
* Jones Group, one of the world’s largest consulting companies, has been publicly traded for four years on the South Pittson Island stock market. Its ADR trades on the U.S. market.
* South Pittson Island is a small island nation in the Mediterranean known for its business-friendly tax code.
For her analysis of Halberd Hardware, Hoyle is considering three models to calculate the estimated return. But she has already decided to use the Gordon Growth model to calculate the equity risk premium.
As soon as Hoyle finishes determining which models are best suited to her purposes, her boss comes into the office and tells her to use the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) for all four of the companies she is reviewing. Hoyle is concerned about the effectiveness of the CAPM. With regards to Jones Group, her three main worries are:
Worry A: The need to use the country spread model to revise the equity risk premium.
Worry B: The CAPM’s effectiveness because of Jones Group’s ADR.
Worry C: The need to create a beta estimate using an unlevered beta.
Assuming MegaFood Market has an expected return on equity (ROE) of 13.6% and Strinson Carburetors has an expected ROE of 15.3%, what recommendation should Hoyle give her superiors at Janssen regarding each company?
MegaFood Market
Strinson Carburetors
A)
Don’t buy the company
Don’t buy the company
B)
Don’t buy the company
Buy the company
C)
Buy the company
Buy the company
Which of Strinson’s actions is least helpful in the calculation of required return on equity for Strinson Carburetors?
A) Action B.
B) Action A.
C) Action C.
Which of the following is the best model for calculating Strinson Carburetors’ required return?
A) Fama-French model.
B) Pastor-Stambaugh model.
C) Capital asset pricing model.
Hoyle wants to calculate an expected return for Halberd Hardware and Jones Group. She has access to a variety of models, but her best option is:
for Halberd
for Jones
A)
bond-yield plus risk
premium method
capital asset pricing model
B)
build-up method
country spread model
C)
build-up method
capital asset pricing model
Hoyle wants to use a macroeconomic model to derive equity risk premiums for both Halberd Hardware and Jones Group. Such a model is appropriate for:
A) Jones Group, but not Halberd Hardware, because macroeconomic models don’t work for closely held companies.
B) Halberd Hardware, but not Jones Group, because macroeconomic models don’t work for nations like South Pittson Island.
C) both Halberd Hardware and Jones Group.
Which of Hoyle’s worries about using the CAPM for Jones Group is most justified?
A) Worry B.
B) Worry A.
C) Worry C.
Jaden Hoyle is evaluating the MegaFood Market chain of grocery stores and Strinson Carburetors, a maker of automobile and industrial engine parts. MegaFood is publicly traded, while Strinson is a private company. Hoyle’s firm, Janssen and Associates, is considering the purchase of a 50% equity stake in one or both of the companies, and may be willing to purchase the companies outright. Janssen only invests in companies with a weighted average cost of capital of less than 11%.
Hoyle has assembled the following data on the two companies:
MegaFood Market
Strinson Carburetors
Beta
0.87
1
Market value of equity
$173 million
$993 million
Market value of debt
$38 million
$567 million
Marginal tax rate
42.8%
31%
Target debt/equity rating
35%
78%
Equity risk premium
0
4.6%
Required return on debt
9%
6.5%
The risk-free rate of return is 5.2%. Hoyle must make recommendations regarding both MegaFood Market and Strinson Carburetors.
Hoyle does not have all of the data she needs and knows she will have to estimate some values using the data she does possess. To help estimate the required return on equity for Strinson Carburetors, Hoyle takes three actions:
Action A: She selects a benchmark company, unlevers the beta of that company, then levers up the adjusted beta using Strinson’s debt and equity allocation.
Action B: She calculates a risk premium, then adds that premium to the yield to maturity of the company’s long-term debt.
Action C: She prepares a supply-side multifactor model considering expected inflation, expected GDP growth, and expected changes in P/E ratio.
Before she finishes her analysis of MegaFood Market and Strinson Carburetors, Hoyle must construct valuation models for two other companies, Halberd Hardware, a maker of hand tools, and the Jones Group, one of the world’s largest consultants. She has assembled the following information about each company.
Halberd Hardware
* Gary Halberd, the founder, still owns 85% of the company, and all the rest is in the hands of company directors and friends of Halberd who bought stakes 20 years ago.
* Historical data on equity returns is sparse, as there have been very few trades over the last two decades.
* Halberd Hardware is headquartered in New York City.
* The company plans to go public in the next six months, with Gary Halberd selling 30% of his ownership interest.
Jones Group
* Jones Group, one of the world’s largest consulting companies, has been publicly traded for four years on the South Pittson Island stock market. Its ADR trades on the U.S. market.
* South Pittson Island is a small island nation in the Mediterranean known for its business-friendly tax code.
For her analysis of Halberd Hardware, Hoyle is considering three models to calculate the estimated return. But she has already decided to use the Gordon Growth model to calculate the equity risk premium.
As soon as Hoyle finishes determining which models are best suited to her purposes, her boss comes into the office and tells her to use the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) for all four of the companies she is reviewing. Hoyle is concerned about the effectiveness of the CAPM. With regards to Jones Group, her three main worries are:
Worry A: The need to use the country spread model to revise the equity risk premium.
Worry B: The CAPM’s effectiveness because of Jones Group’s ADR.
Worry C: The need to create a beta estimate using an unlevered beta.
Assuming MegaFood Market has an expected return on equity (ROE) of 13.6% and Strinson Carburetors has an expected ROE of 15.3%, what recommendation should Hoyle give her superiors at Janssen regarding each company?
MegaFood Market
Strinson Carburetors
A)
Don’t buy the company
Don’t buy the company
B)
Don’t buy the company
Buy the company
C)
Buy the company
Buy the company
Which of Strinson’s actions is least helpful in the calculation of required return on equity for Strinson Carburetors?
A) Action B.
B) Action A.
C) Action C.
Which of the following is the best model for calculating Strinson Carburetors’ required return?
A) Fama-French model.
B) Pastor-Stambaugh model.
C) Capital asset pricing model.
Hoyle wants to calculate an expected return for Halberd Hardware and Jones Group. She has access to a variety of models, but her best option is:
for Halberd
for Jones
A)
bond-yield plus risk
premium method
capital asset pricing model
B)
build-up method
country spread model
C)
build-up method
capital asset pricing model
Hoyle wants to use a macroeconomic model to derive equity risk premiums for both Halberd Hardware and Jones Group. Such a model is appropriate for:
A) Jones Group, but not Halberd Hardware, because macroeconomic models don’t work for closely held companies.
B) Halberd Hardware, but not Jones Group, because macroeconomic models don’t work for nations like South Pittson Island.
C) both Halberd Hardware and Jones Group.
Which of Hoyle’s worries about using the CAPM for Jones Group is most justified?
A) Worry B.
B) Worry A.
C) Worry C.