Your broker offers to sell you some shares of Bahnsen & Co.
common stock that paid a dividend of $3.25 yesterday. Bahnsen's
dividend is expected to grow at 7% per year for the next 3 years.
If you buy the stock, you plan to hold it for 3 years and then sell
it. The appropriate discount rate is 12%.
- Find the expected dividend for each of the next 3 years; that
is, calculate D1, D2, and D3. Note
that D0 = $3.25. Round your answer to the nearest
cent.
D1 = $
D2 = $
D3 = $
- Given that the first dividend payment will occur 1 year from
now, find the present value of the dividend stream; that is,
calculate the PVs of D1, D2, and
D3, and then sum these PVs. Round your answer to the
nearest cent. Do not round your intermediate calculations.
$
- You expect the price of the stock 3 years from now to be
$85.20; that is, you expect to equal $85.20. Discounted
at a 12% rate, what is the present value of this expected future
stock price? In other words, calculate the PV of $85.20. Round your
answer to the nearest cent. Do not round your intermediate
calculations.
$
- If you plan to buy the stock, hold it for 3 years, and then
sell it for $85.20, what is the most you should pay for it today?
Round your answer to the nearest cent. Do not round your
intermediate calculations.
$
- Calculate the present value of this stock.
- Assume that g = 7% and that it is constant. Do not round
intermediate calculations. Round your answer to the nearest
cent.
- Is the value of this stock dependent upon how long you plan to
hold it? In other words, if your planned holding period was 2 years
or 5 years rather than 3 years, would this affect the value of the
stock today, ?
- Yes. The value of the stock is dependent upon the holding
period as long as the growth rate remains constant for the
foreseeable future.
- No. The value of the stock is not dependent upon the holding
period. The value calculated in parts a through d is the value for
a 3-year holding period. It is equal to the value calculated in
part e. Any other holding period would produce the same value of
.
- Yes. The value of the stock is dependent upon the holding
period. The value calculated in parts a through d is the value for
a 3-year holding period. It is not equal to the value calculated in
part e. Any other holding period would produce a different value of
.
- Yes. The value of the stock is dependent upon the holding
period due to the fact that the value is determined as the present
value of all future expected dividends.
- No. The value of the stock is not dependent upon the holding
period unless the growth rate remains constant for the foreseeable
future.