In: Finance
Suppose you have been hired as a financial consultant to Defense
Electronics, Inc. (DEI), a large, publicly traded firm that is the
market share leader in radar detection systems (RDSs). The company
is looking at setting up a manufacturing plant overseas to produce
a new line of RDSs. This will be a five-year project. The company
bought some land three years ago for $7 million in anticipation of
using it as a toxic dump site for waste chemicals, but it built a
piping system to safely discard the chemicals instead. If the land
were sold today, the net proceeds would be $7.7 million after
taxes. In five years, the land will be worth $8 million after
taxes. The company wants to build its new manufacturing plant on
this land; the plant will cost $13.4 million to build. The
following market data on DEI’s securities are current:
Debt: | 46,000 6.8 percent coupon bonds outstanding, 20 years to maturity, selling for 94.0 percent of par; the bonds have a $1,000 par value each and make semiannual payments. | |
Common stock: | 760,000 shares outstanding, selling for $95.00 per share; the beta is 1.19. | |
Preferred stock: | 36,000 shares of 6.2 percent preferred stock outstanding, selling for $93.00 per share. | |
Market: | 7 percent expected market risk premium; 5.2 percent risk-free rate. |
DEI’s tax rate is 35 percent. The project requires $875,000 in
initial net working capital investment to get operational.
a.
Calculate the project’s Time 0 cash flow, taking into account all
side effects. Assume that any NWC raised does not require
floatation costs. (A negative answer should be indicated by
a minus sign. Do not round intermediate calculations and enter your
answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g.,
1,234,567.)
Time 0 cash flow
$
b.
The new RDS project is somewhat riskier than a typical project for
DEI, primarily because the plant is being located overseas.
Management has told you to use an adjustment factor of +3 percent
to account for this increased riskiness. Calculate the appropriate
discount rate to use when evaluating DEI’s project. (Do not
round intermediate calculations and enter your answer as a percent
rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)
Discount rate
%
c.
The manufacturing plant has an eight-year tax life, and DEI uses
straight-line depreciation. At the end of the project (i.e., the
end of Year 5), the plant can be scrapped for $1.6 million. What is
the aftertax salvage value of this manufacturing plant? (Do
not round intermediate calculations and enter your answer in
dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g.,
1,234,567.)
Aftertax salvage value
$
d.
The company will incur $2,400,000 in annual fixed costs. The plan
is to manufacture 14,000 RDSs per year and sell them at $11,400 per
machine; the variable production costs are $10,600 per RDS. What is
the annual operating cash flow, OCF, from this project? (Do
not round intermediate calculations and enter your answer in
dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567.)
Operating cash flow
$
e.
Calculate the project's net present value. (Enter your
answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567. Do not
round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal
places, e.g., 32.16.)
Net present value
$
Calculate the project's internal rate of return. (Do not
round intermediate calculations and enter your answer as a percent
rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)
Internal rate of return
%