Start networking and exchanging professional insights

Register now or log in to join your professional community.

Follow

What is the appropriate discount rate to use in an unlevered DCF analysis?

user-image
Question added by Ihab El Mortada , Commercial Coordinator , Barker Langham
Date Posted: 2014/04/24
Ihab El Mortada
by Ihab El Mortada , Commercial Coordinator , Barker Langham

  • Since the free cash flows in an unlevered DCF analysis are pre-debt (i.e. a helpful way to think about this is to think of unlevered cash flows as the company’s cash flows as if it had no debt – so no interest expense, and no tax benefit from that interest expense), the cost of the cash flows relate to both the lenders and the equity providers of capital. Thus, the discount rate is the weighted average cost of capital to all providers of capital (both debt and equity).
  • The cost of debt is readily observable in the market as the yield on debt with equivalent risk, while the cost of equity is more difficult to estimate.
  • Cost of equity is typically estimated using the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), which links the expected return of equity to its sensitivity to the overall market (see WSP’s DCF module for a detailed analysis of calculating the cost of equity).

More Questions Like This

Do you need help in adding the right keywords to your CV? Let our CV writing experts help you.