Volcan Real Estate Company was founded 25 years ago by the current CEO, John Vol
ID: 2623953 • Letter: V
Question
Volcan Real Estate Company was founded 25 years ago by the current CEO, John Volcan. The company purchases real estate, including land and buildings, and rents the property to tenants. The company has shown a profit every year for the past 18 years, and the shareholders are satisfied with the company's management. Prior to founding Volcan Real Estate, Volcan was the founder and CEO of a failed alpaca farming operation. The resulting bankruptcy made him extremely averse to debt financing. As a result, the company is entirely equity financed, with 12 million shares of common stock outstanding. The stock currently trades at $48.50 per share.
Volcan is evaluating a plan to purchase a huge tract of land in the southeastern China for $45 million. The land will subsequently be leased to tenant farmers. This purchase is expected to increase Volcans annual pretax earnings by $11 million in perpetuity. Kim Weyand, the company's new CFO, has been put in charge of the project. Kim has determined that the company's current cost of capital is 11.5 percent. She feels that the company would be more valuable if it included debt in its capital structure, so she is evaluating whether the company should issue debt to entirely finance the project. Based on some conversations with investment banks, she thinks that the company can issue bonds at par value with a coupon rate of 7 percent. Based on her analysis, she also believes that a capital structure in the range of 70 percent equity?30 percent debt would be optimal. If the company goes beyond 30 percent debt, its bonds would carry a lower rating and a much higher coupon because the possibility of financial distress and the associated costs would rise sharply. Volcan has a 40 percent corporate tax rate.
Explanation / Answer
In 40 years in the market I have never seen declaring a dividend raise the stock price by the amount of the dividend.
Usually when a dividend is declared it has little impact on the price of the shares until the ex-dividend date. On the ex-dividend date the price per share will drop by the amount of the dividend if it is a cash dividend.
With a share dividend it is slightly more complicated. On the ex-dividend date the price per share drops to keep the total value of the stock the same.
Before the dividend was paid the company had 8,000 x $13.60 = $108,800 worth of stock outstanding
After the divided is paid the value of the stock outstanding will be the same but the number of share will be 8,800.
The new share price will be $108,800 / 8,800 = $12.36
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