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Risk and Return Analysis Problems

This document presents 15 problems related to estimating risk and return for various companies using beta and capital asset pricing model calculations. The problems involve estimating costs of equity, betas, and effects of changes in capital structure for companies in different industries such as biotechnology, oil and gas, airlines, and others. Calculations required include estimating unlevered betas, effects of acquisitions and divestitures on firm risk, and decomposing total risk into diversifiable and non-diversifiable components.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
248 views6 pages

Risk and Return Analysis Problems

This document presents 15 problems related to estimating risk and return for various companies using beta and capital asset pricing model calculations. The problems involve estimating costs of equity, betas, and effects of changes in capital structure for companies in different industries such as biotechnology, oil and gas, airlines, and others. Calculations required include estimating unlevered betas, effects of acquisitions and divestitures on firm risk, and decomposing total risk into diversifiable and non-diversifiable components.

Uploaded by

Kin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Risk and Return in Practice: Problems and Questions

1. In December 1995, Boise Cascade's stock had a beta of 0.95. The treasury bill rate at the time was 5.8%,
and the treasury bond rate was 6.4%. The firm had debt outstanding of $ 1.7 billion and a market value of
equity of $ 1.5 billion; the corporate marginal tax rate was 36%.

a. Estimate the expected return on the stock for a short term investor in the company.

b. Estimate the expected return on the stock for a long term investor in the company.

c. Estimate the cost of equity for the company.

2. Boise Cascade also had debt outstanding of $ 1.7 billion and a market value of equity of $ 1.5 billion; the
corporate marginal tax rate was 36%.

a. Assuming that the current beta of 0.95 for the stock is a reasonable one, estimate the unlevered beta
for the company.

b. How much of the risk in the company can be attributed to business risk and how much to financial
leverage risk?

3. Biogen Inc., as biotechnology firm, had a beta of 1.70 in 1995. It had no debt outstanding at the end of that
year.

a. Estimate the cost of equity for Biogen, if the treasury bond rate is 6.4%.

b. What effect will an increase in long term bond rates to 7.5% have on Biogen's cost of equity?

c. How much of Biogen's risk can be attributed to business risk?

4. Genting Berhad is a Malaysian conglomerate, with holding in plantations and tourist resorts. The beta
estimated for the firm, relative to the Malaysian stock exchange, is 1.15, and the long term government
borrowing rate in Malaysia is 11.5%.

a. Estimate the expected return on the stock.

b. If you were an international investor, what concerns, if any, would you have about using the beta
estimated relative to the Malaysian Index? If you do, how would you modify the beta?

5. You have just done a regression of monthly stock returns of HeavyTech Inc., a manufacturer of heavy
machinery, on monthly market returns over the last five years and come up with the following regression:

RHeavyTech = 0.5% + 1.2 RM

The variance of the stock is 50% and the variance of the market is 20%. The current T.Bill rate is 3% (It was
5% one year ago). The stock is currently selling for $50, down $4 over the last year, and has paid a dividend
of $2 during the last year and expects to pay a dividend of $2.50 over the next year. The NYSE composite
has gone down 8% over the last year, with a dividend yield of 3%. HeavyTech Inc. has a tax rate of 40%.

a. What is the expected return on HeavyTech over the next year?

b. What would you expect HeavyTech's price to be one year from today?

c. What would you have expected HeavyTech's stock returns to be over the last year?

d. What were the actual returns on HeavyTech over the last year?

e. HeavyTech has $100 million in equity and $ 50 million in debt. It plans to issue $50 million in new
equity and retire $50 million in debt. Estimate the new beta.
6. Safecorp, which owns and operates grocery stores across the United States, currently has $50 million in
debt and $100 million in equity outstanding. Its stock has a beta of 1.2. It is planning a leveraged buyout ,
where it will increase its debt/equity ratio of 8. If the tax rate is 40%, what will the beta of the equity in the
firm be after the LBO?

7. Novell, which had a market value of equity of $2 billion and a beta of 1.50, announced that it was
acquiring WordPerfect, which had a market value of equity of $ 1 billion, and a beta of 1.30. Neither firm
had any debt in its financial structure at the time of the acquisition, and the corporate tax rate was 40%.

a. Estimate the beta for Novell after the acquisition, assuming that the entire acquisition was financed
with equity.

b. Assume that Novell had to borrow the $ 1 billion to acquire WordPerfect. Estimate the beta after the
acquisition.

8. You are analyzing the beta for Hewlett Packard and have broken down the company into four broad
business groups, with market values and betas for each group.
Market Value of
Business Group Beta
Equity
Mainframes $ 2.0 billion 1.10
Personal
$ 2.0 billion 1.50
Computers
Software $ 1.0 billion 2.00
Printers $ 3.0 billion 1.00

a. Estimate the beta for Hewlett Packard as a company. Is this beta going to be equal to the beta
estimated by regressing past returns on HP stock against a market index. Why or Why not?

b. If the treasury bond rate is 7.5%, estimate the cost of equity for Hewlett Packard. Estimate the cost
of equity for each division. Which cost of equity would you use to value the printer division?

c. Assume that HP divests itself of the mainframe business and pays the cash out as a dividend.
Estimate the beta for HP after the divestiture. (HP had $ 1 billion in debt outstanding.)

9. The following table summarizes the percentage changes in operating income, percentage changes in
revenue and betas for four pharmaceutical firms.
% Change in Operating
Firm % Change in Revenue Beta
Income
PharmaCorp 27% 25% 1.00
SynerCorp 25% 32% 1.15
BioMed 23% 36% 1.30
Safemed 21% 40% 1.40

a. Calculate the degree of operating leverage for each of these firms.

b. Use the operating leverage to explain why these firms have different betas.

10. A prominent beta estimation service reports the beta of Comcast Corporation, a major cable TV operator,
to be 1.45. The service claims to use weekly returns on the stock over the prior five years and the NYSE
composite as the market index to estimate betas. You replicate the regression using weekly returns over the
same period and arrive at a beta estimate of 1.60. How would you reconcile the two estimates?

11. Battle Mountain is a mining company, which mines gold, silver and copper in mines in South America,
Africa and Australia. The beta for the stock is estimated to be 0.30. Given the volatility in commodity prices,
how would you explain the low beta?
12. You have collected returns on AnaDone Corporation (AD Corp.), a large diversified manufacturing firm,
and the NYSE index for five years:
Year AD Corp NYSE
1981 10% 5%
1982 5% 15%
1983 -5% 8%
1984 20% 12%
1985 -5% -5%

a. Estimate the intercept (alpha) and slope (beta) of the regression.

b. If you bought stock in AD Corp. today how much would you expect to make as a return over the
next year? [The six-month T.Bill rate is 6%]

c. Looking back over the last five years, how would you evaluate AD's performance relative to the
market? (The riskfree rate during the period was also 6% on an annual basis)

d. Assume now that you are an undiversified investor and that you have all of your money invested in
AD Corporation. What would be a good measure of the risk that you are taking on? How much of this
risk would you be able to eliminate if you diversify?

e. AD is planning to sell off one of its divisions. The division under consideration has assets which
comprise half of the book value of AD Corporation, and 20% of the market value. Its beta is twice the
average beta for AD Corp (before divestment). What will the beta of AD Corporation be after
divesting this division?

13. You run a regression of monthly returns of Mapco Inc, an oil and gas producing firm, on the S&P 500
index and come up with the following output for the period 1991 to 1995.

Intercept of the regression = 0.06%

X-coefficient of the regression = 0.46

Standard error of X-coefficient = 0.20

R squared = 5%

There are 20 million shares outstanding, and the current market price is $ 2. The firm has $ 20 million in debt
outstanding. (The firm has a tax rate of 36%)

a. What would an investor in Mapco's stock require as a return, if the T.Bond rate is 6%?

b. What proportion of this firm's risk is diversifiable?

c. Assume now that Mapco has three divisions, of equal size (in market value terms). It plans to divest
itself of one of the divisions for $ 20 million in cash and acquire another for $ 50 million (It will
borrow $ 30 million to complete this acquisition). The division it is divesting is in a business line
where the average unlevered beta is 0.20, and the division it is acquiring is in a business line where the
average unlevered beta is 0.80. What will the beta of Mapco be after this acquisition?

14. You have just run a regression of monthly returns of American Airlines (AMR) against the S&P 500 over
the last five years. You have misplaced some of the output and are trying to derive it from what you have.

a. You know the R squared of the regression is 0.36, and that your stock has a variance of 67%. The
market variance is 12%. What is the beta of AMR?

b. You also remember that AMR was not a very good investment during the period of the regression
and that it did worse than expected (after adjusting for risk) by 0.39 % a month for the five years of the
regression. During this period, the average riskfree rate was 4.84%. What was the intercept on the
regression?

c. You are comparing AMR Inc. to another firm which also has an R squared of 0.48. Will the two
firms have the same beta? If not, why not?

15. You have run a regression of monthly returns on Amgen, a large biotechnology firm, against monthly
returns on the S&P 500 index, and come up with the following output ñ

Rstock = 3.28% + 1.65 RMarket R2= 0.20

The current one-year treasury bill rate is 4.8% and the current thirty-year bond rate is 6.4%. The firm has 265
million shares outstanding, selling for $ 30 per share.

i. What is the expected return on this stock over the next year?

ii. Would your expected return estimate change if the purpose was to get a discount rate to analyze a
thirty-year capital budgeting project?

iii. An analyst has estimated, correctly, that the stock did 51.10% better than expected, annually, during
the period of the regression. Can you estimate the annualized riskfree rate that she used for her
estimate?

iv. The firm has a debt/equity ratio of 3%, and faces a tax rate of 40%. It is planning to issue $2 billion
in new debt and acquire a new business for that amount, with the same risk level as the firm's existing
business. What will the beta be after the acquisition?

16. You have just run a regression of monthly returns on MAD Inc., a newspaper and magazine publisher,
against returns on the S&P 500, and arrived at the following result ñ

RMAD = - 0.05% + 1.20 RS&P

The regression has an R-squared of 22%. The current T.Bill rate is 5.5% and the current T.Bond rate is 6.5%.
The riskfree rate during the period of the regression was 6%.. Answer the following questions relating to the
regression ñ

a. Based upon the intercept, you can conclude that the stock did

A. 0.05% worse than expected on a monthly basis, during the regression.

B. 0.05% better than expected on a monthly basis during the period of the regression

C. 1.25% better than expected on a monthly basis during the period of the regression.

D. 1.25% worse than expected on a monthly basis during the period of the regression.

E. None of the above. (1 point)

b. You now realize that MAD Inc went through a major restructuring at the end of last month (which
was the last month of your regression), and made the following changes

The firm sold off its magazine division, which had an unlevered beta of 0.6, for $ 20 million.
It borrowed an additional $ 20 million, and bought back stock worth $ 40 million.

After the sale of the division and the share repurchase, MAD Inc. had $ 40 million in debt and $ 120 million
in equity outstanding.

If the firm's tax rate is 40%, re-estimate the beta, after these changes.
17. Time Warner Inc., the entertainment conglomerate, has a beta of 1.61. Part of the reason for the high beta
is the debt left over from the leveraged buyout of Time by Warner in 1989, which amounted to $10 billion in
1995. The market value of equity at Time Warner in 1995 was also $ 10 billion. The marginal tax rate was
40%.

a. Estimate the unlevered beta for Time Warner.

b. Estimate the effect of reducing the debt ratio by 10% each year for the next two years on the beta of
the stock.

18. Chrysler, the automotive manufacturer, had a beta of 1.05 in 1995. It had $ 13 billion in debt outstanding
in that year, and 355 million shares trading at $ 50 per share. The firm had a cash balance of $ 8 billion at the
end of 1995. The marginal tax rate was 36%.

a. Estimate the unlevered beta of the firm.

b. Estimate the effect of paying out a special dividend of $ 5 billion on this unlevered beta.

c. Estimate the beta for Chrysler after the special dividend.

19. You are trying to estimate the beta of a private firm that manufactures home appliances. You have
managed to obtain betas for publicly traded firms that also manufacture home appliances.
Firm Beta Debt MV of Equity
Black & Decker 1.40 $ 2,500 $ 3,000
Fedders Corp. 1.20 $5 $ 200
Maytag Corp. 1.20 $ 540 $ 2250
National Presto 0.70 $8 $ 300
Whirlpool 1.50 $ 2900 $ 4000

The private firm has a debt equity ratio of 25%, and faces a tax rate of 40%. The publicly traded firms all
have marginal tax rates of 40%, as well.

a. Estimate the beta for the private firm.

b. What concerns, if any, would you have about using betas of comparable firms?

20. As the result of stockholder pressure, RJR Nabisco is considering spinning off its food division. You
have been asked to estimate the beta for the division, and decide to do so by obtaining the beta of comparable
publicly traded firms. The average beta of comparable publicly traded firms is 0.95, and the average
debt/equity ratio of these firms is 35%. The division is expected to have a debt ratio of 25%. The marginal
corporate tax rate is 36%.

a. What is the beta for the division?

b. Would it make any difference if you knew that RJR Nabisco had a much higher fixed cost structure
than the comparable firms used here?

21. Southwestern Bell, a phone company, is considering expanding its operations into the media business.
The beta for the company at the end of 1995 was 0.90, and the debt/equity ratio was 1. The media business is
expected to be 30% of the overall firm value in 1999, and the average beta of comparable firms is 1.20; the
average debt/equity ratio for these firms is 50%. The marginal corporate tax rate is 36%.

a. Estimate the beta for Southwestern Bell in 1999, assuming that it maintains its current debt/equity
ratio.

b. Estimate the beta for Southwestern Bell in 1999, assuming that it decides to finance its media
operations with a debt/equity ratio of 50%.
22. The chief financial officer of Adobe Systems, a growing software manufacturing firm, has approached
you for some advice regarding the beta of his company. He subscribes to a service which estimates Adobe
System's beta each year, and he has noticed that the beta estimates have gone down every year since 1991 -
2.35 in 1991 to 1.40 in 1995. He would like the answers to the following questions ñ

a. Is this decline in beta unusual for a growing firm?

b. Why would the beta decline over time?

c. Is the beta likely to keep decreasing over time?

23. You are analyzing Tiffany's, an upscale retailer, and find that the regression estimate of the firm's beta is
0.75; the standard error for the beta estimate is 0.50. You also note that the average unlevered beta of
comparable specialty retailing firms is 1.15.

a. If Tiffany's has a debt/equity ratio of 20%, estimate the beta for the company based upon
comparable firms. (The tax rate is 40%)

b. Estimate a range for the beta from the regression.

c. How would you reconcile the two estimates? Which one would you use in your analysis?

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