If a company needs money for a short time would they issue stock or borrow from banks and for long term would the issue bonds or borrow from banks? Also: What is the "minimum rate of return on a common stock that an investor must receive" called?
Yes you are right, thanks. if you can help me with this one as well: To calculate the interest payment in dollars a bond will pay the owner each year Do you multiply the YTM by the bond price? or do you either divide the YTC by the call price or divide Rd by coupon?
This reeks of a finance quiz you should be doing yourself! Short term = banks, long term = bonds Second question is worded a little funny. Investors aren't entitled to any rate of return on stocks. But they are probably referring to required rate of return.
If a company needs money for a short time would they issue stock or borrow from banks -- they would issue stocks and for long term would the issue bonds or borrow from banks? -- they would borrow from banks
And a bond pays the coupon value to the owner. If it pays twice a year the 2(coupon) / (face value of the bond) = interest the bond earns.
I am reviewing for an exam, the teacher doesn't give back the right answers for questions missed on homeworks/quizzes so I needed some help on the answers lol.
everyone has something different for the short term/long term. I think that short term is issue stocks and long term is issue bonds. Thank you guys for the help. I have these two that I am also not sure about, if anyone has the time: returns that a company makes in excess of the WACC would be expected to go to: ... is it common equity? and An expected inflation that would affect a bond/stock would be included in the:... is it coupon interest payments OR required rate of return an investor must receive to buy the bond/stock. I broke it down to these two, not sure which one it is?
BTW, from the balance sheets of my clients i've seen, I think short term you borrow money from the bank and long term is issue bonds. Stocks seems like a mid-term capital raising solution... but then again i graduated over 7 years ago with finance being 8+ yrs ago so no idea how i'd do on a quiz