flotation costs
(noun)
Costs paid by a firm for the issuance of new stocks or bonds.
Examples of flotation costs in the following topics:
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Common and Preferred Stock
- If a company's stock currently sells for 40 a share, expects to pay a dividend of 2 next year, is subject to flotation costs of 10%, and expects to maintain a growth rate of 10%, the cost of newly issued common stock = 2/[40(1-.10)] + .1 = 14.5%
- There are capital costs associated with equity financing, including accounting and legal costs, as well as underwriting and filing fees.
- For new issues of stocks, there are flotation costs that must be taken into consideration before choosing equity as a method of long-term financing.
- Cost of preferred stock = Next dividend to be paid/[Current market value(1-flotation costs)]Cost of newly issued common stock = Next dividend to be paid/Current market value(1-flotation cost) + projected growth rate.
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Dividend Irrelevance Theory
- Firm's cost of equity is not affected in any way by distribution of income between dividend and retained earnings.
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Flotation
- This is often called the "principle of flotation" where a floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own weight.
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Average and Marginal Cost
- Marginal cost is the change in total cost when another unit is produced; average cost is the total cost divided by the number of goods produced.
- Marginal cost is not related to fixed costs.
- When the average cost declines, the marginal cost is less than the average cost.
- When the average cost increases, the marginal cost is greater than the average cost.
- This graph is a cost curve that shows the average total cost, marginal cost, and marginal revenue.
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Types of Costs
- In economics, the total cost (TC) is the total economic cost of production.
- It consists of variable costs and fixed costs.
- Total cost is the total opportunity cost of each factor of production as part of its fixed or variable costs .
- Variable costs are also the sum of marginal costs over all of the units produced (referred to as normal costs).
- Economic cost is the sum of all the variable and fixed costs (also called accounting cost) plus opportunity costs.
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Economic Costs
- An example of economic cost would be the cost of attending college.
- So, the economic cost of college is the accounting cost plus the opportunity cost.
- So, the economic cost of college is the accounting cost plus the opportunity cost.
- Total cost (TC): total cost equals total fixed cost plus total variable costs (TC = TFC + TVC) .
- Variable cost (VC): the cost paid to the variable input.
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Cost-Based Pricing
- Cost-based pricing is the act of pricing based on what it costs a company to make a product.
- Cost-based pricing is the act of pricing based on what it costs a company to make a product.
- Price = (1+ Percent Markup)(Unit Variable Cost + Average FixedCost) .
- A company must know its costs.
- Cost-based pricing is misplaced in industries where there are high fixed costs and near-zero marginal costs.
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Cost of capital
- The cost of capital refers to the cost of the money used to pay for the capital.
- In order to determine a company's cost of capital, the cost of debt and the cost of equity must be calculated.
- This determines the "market" cost of equity.
- One way of combining the cost of debt and equity to generate a single cost of capital number is through the weighted-average cost of capital (WACC).
- The cost of capital is the cost of the money used to finance the plant.
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The Supply Curve in Perfect Competition
- The total revenue-total cost perspective and the marginal revenue-marginal cost perspective are used to find profit maximizing quantities.
- In economics, a cost curve is a graph that shows the costs of production as a function of total quantity produced.
- In a free market economy, firms use cost curves to find the optimal point of production (minimizing cost).
- There are two ways in which cost curves can be used to find profit maximizing quantities: the total revenue-total cost perspective and the marginal revenue-marginal cost perspective.
- The total revenue-total cost perspective recognizes that profit is equal to the total revenue (TR) minus the total cost (TC).
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Information Costs and Bond Prices
- Information costs influence the bond prices and interest rates.
- We include these costs in the bond's market price and interest rate, and they raise the cost of borrowing.
- Investors pay a greater cost to acquire information for the high information cost bonds.
- Thus, investors are attracted to the low-information cost bonds, boosting their demand for low information cost bonds, increasing the market price and decreasing market interest rate.
- Therefore, low-information-cost bonds pay a lower interest rate.