WACC Calculator – Weighted Average Cost of Capital

WACC Calculator

Calculate Your Company’s Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Company Financial Data

WACC Result

0.00%
Total Value: $0
Equity Weight: 0%
Debt Weight: 0%
After-tax Cost of Debt: 0%

WACC Formula

WACC = (E/V × Re) + (D/V × Rd × (1 – Tc))

Where: E = Market value of equity, D = Market value of debt, V = E + D, Re = Cost of equity, Rd = Cost of debt, Tc = Tax rate

What is WACC?

The Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) represents the average rate a company expects to pay to finance its assets. It’s a crucial metric for investment decisions and corporate valuation.

WACC considers both equity and debt financing costs, weighted by their respective proportions in the company’s capital structure.

Key Components

  • Cost of Equity: Return required by equity investors
  • Cost of Debt: Interest rate paid on borrowed funds
  • Tax Shield: Tax savings from debt interest deductibility
  • Capital Structure: Proportion of debt vs equity financing

Applications

  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) valuation models
  • Capital budgeting and investment decisions
  • Performance measurement and benchmarking
  • Optimal capital structure analysis
  • Merger and acquisition evaluations

Industry Benchmarks

Technology: 8-12% (higher growth, more volatile)

Utilities: 5-8% (stable, regulated industries)

Manufacturing: 7-10% (moderate risk profile)

Healthcare: 6-9% (defensive characteristics)

Financial Services: 9-13% (leveraged business models)

Calculation Methods

Cost of Equity: Can be calculated using CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model), Dividend Growth Model, or Bond Yield Plus Risk Premium approaches.

Cost of Debt: Based on current borrowing rates, credit spreads, and existing debt yields to maturity.

Factors Affecting WACC

  • Interest rate environment and monetary policy
  • Company’s credit rating and financial health
  • Industry risk profile and market conditions
  • Capital structure decisions and leverage ratios
  • Tax policies and corporate tax rates

Limitations and Considerations

While WACC is widely used, it has several limitations:

  • Assumes constant capital structure over time
  • Based on market values which can be volatile
  • Tax rate assumptions may not reflect future changes
  • Cost of equity estimation involves subjective judgments
  • May not capture project-specific risks adequately

For more accurate valuations, consider using multiple approaches and sensitivity analysis around key assumptions.

Academic References

Modigliani, F., & Miller, M. H. (1958). The cost of capital, corporation finance and the theory of investment. The American Economic Review, 48(3), 261-297.

Myers, S. C. (1984). The capital structure puzzle. The Journal of Finance, 39(3), 574-592.

Damodaran, A. (2012). Investment valuation: Tools and techniques for determining the value of any asset. John Wiley & Sons.

Fernandez, P. (2019). WACC: Definition, misconceptions and errors. IESE Business School Working Paper.

Bruner, R. F., Eades, K. M., Harris, R. S., & Higgins, R. C. (1998). Best practices in estimating the cost of capital: Survey and synthesis. Financial Practice and Education, 8, 13-28.

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