All,
I'm trying to determine the cost of equity for GeoEye (GEOY). I have calced the beta from the monthly S&P returns v. geoy (Jan 2004-July 2007) and derived the same 0.69 number that many of the quote pages show. However, I ran a regression analysis and this is what I got:
Regression Statistics
Multiple R 0.091166935
R Square 0.00831141
Adjusted R Square -0.016480805
Standard Error 0.159134931
Observations 42
P-value
Intercept 0.934519427
X Variable 1 0.565834655
OK, so the values show there is no significant correlation between the two. In fact, it's useless. If I use a CAPM approach, assuming a risk free rate of 4.74% and a market risk premium of 4.8% (anybody have better rates?), I would end up with a cost of equity of 8%. This is obviously silly, given the nature of GeoEye's business (satellite imagery). Plus, the current coupon of their $250mm debt is about 14.88%. (6 mo LIBOR + 950bp)
Could anyone in the equity research profession tell me how the "pros" handle this descrepancy between calced numbers and reality? Should I use the cost of debt + equity risk premium (gets me to around 19-20%, which seems more reasonable.
Thanks
PS everyone could use a little diversion from the test-results!
I'm trying to determine the cost of equity for GeoEye (GEOY). I have calced the beta from the monthly S&P returns v. geoy (Jan 2004-July 2007) and derived the same 0.69 number that many of the quote pages show. However, I ran a regression analysis and this is what I got:
Regression Statistics
Multiple R 0.091166935
R Square 0.00831141
Adjusted R Square -0.016480805
Standard Error 0.159134931
Observations 42
P-value
Intercept 0.934519427
X Variable 1 0.565834655
OK, so the values show there is no significant correlation between the two. In fact, it's useless. If I use a CAPM approach, assuming a risk free rate of 4.74% and a market risk premium of 4.8% (anybody have better rates?), I would end up with a cost of equity of 8%. This is obviously silly, given the nature of GeoEye's business (satellite imagery). Plus, the current coupon of their $250mm debt is about 14.88%. (6 mo LIBOR + 950bp)
Could anyone in the equity research profession tell me how the "pros" handle this descrepancy between calced numbers and reality? Should I use the cost of debt + equity risk premium (gets me to around 19-20%, which seems more reasonable.
Thanks
PS everyone could use a little diversion from the test-results!