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Consider a simple firm that has the following market value balance sheet: Assets $1 010 Liabilities end equity Debt Equity $450 560 Next year, there are two possible values for its assets, each equally likely: $1 200 and $970
Consider a simple firm that has the following market value balance sheet: Assets $1 010 Liabilities end equity Debt Equity $450 560 Next year, there are two possible values for its assets, each equally likely: $1 200 and $970. Its debt will be due with 5.1% interest. Because all of the cash flows from the assets must go to either the debt or the equity, if you hold a portfolio of the debt and equity in the same proportions as the firm's capital structure, your portfolio should earn exactly the expected return on the firm's assets. Show that a portfolio invested 45% in the firm's debt and 55% in its equity will have the same expected return as the assets of the firm. That is, show that the firm's pre-tax WACC is the same as the expected return on its assets. If the assets will be worth $1 200 in one year, the expected return on assets will be 18.8 %. (Round to one decimal place.) If the assets will be worth $970 in one year, the expected return on assets will be - 4.0 %. (Round to one decimal place.) The expected return on assets will be 7. %. (Round to one decimal place.) For a portfolio of 45% debt and 55% equity, the expected return on the debt will be %. (Round to one decimal place.)
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