lets say there are three possible scenarios, each with its respective liklihood of occuring:
scenario a - 5%
scenario b - 30%
scenario c - 65%
under scenario a, which would happen tomorrow, you lose $10.
under scenario b, which would happen in one year, you gain $20.
under scenario c, which would happen in two years, you gain $40.
and lets say, for the sake of argument, that the amount of gain or loss is 100% certain.
now lets say this is a company and you wanted to know the probability-weighted present value of these outcomes right now. to get the present value of scenarios a and b, would you discount them at the wacc (or cost of equity, etc) or would you discount them at a risk-free rate?
in other words, if a company has a 65% chance of having a gain of $40 in two years, what discount rate would you use to bring that $40 back to time zero?
on one hand, i could see using the cost of capital because is how you would normally discount a future cash flow. but on the other hand, is the risk the cash flow may not occur (the reason the cost of capital would be higher than the risk-free rate) captured in the fact that there is only a 65% chance it will occur?
thanks.
scenario a - 5%
scenario b - 30%
scenario c - 65%
under scenario a, which would happen tomorrow, you lose $10.
under scenario b, which would happen in one year, you gain $20.
under scenario c, which would happen in two years, you gain $40.
and lets say, for the sake of argument, that the amount of gain or loss is 100% certain.
now lets say this is a company and you wanted to know the probability-weighted present value of these outcomes right now. to get the present value of scenarios a and b, would you discount them at the wacc (or cost of equity, etc) or would you discount them at a risk-free rate?
in other words, if a company has a 65% chance of having a gain of $40 in two years, what discount rate would you use to bring that $40 back to time zero?
on one hand, i could see using the cost of capital because is how you would normally discount a future cash flow. but on the other hand, is the risk the cash flow may not occur (the reason the cost of capital would be higher than the risk-free rate) captured in the fact that there is only a 65% chance it will occur?
thanks.