Sign In

Calculating the cost of equity is vital for businesses to ensure they provide sufficient returns to compensate investors for the risks they undertake. The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) is a common method that defines the cost of equity as the sum of the risk-free rate plus the equity beta times the market risk premium.

Equation 1

Where,

Ri= expected return on a security

Rf= risk-free rate

Rm= expected market return

βi= Beta of the security

(Rm - Rf) = Market risk premium

For instance, consider a renewable energy company evaluating its cost of equity. The risk-free rate, reflecting returns on government bonds, is 2%. The company's equity beta, measuring its stock's volatility relative to the market, is 1.3. Investors expect an average market return of 10%.

Equation 2

Using these figures in the CAPM formula, the company's equity cost is 12.4%. This means the company must earn at least a 12.4% return on its equity investments to compensate investors for the associated risks adequately. Understanding the cost of equity helps the company assess new projects and ensure sustainable growth while maintaining investor confidence.

From Chapter 8:

article

Now Playing

8.4 : Calculating Cost of Equity

Cost of Capital

102 Views

article

8.1 : Concept of Cost of Capital

Cost of Capital

186 Views

article

8.2 : Required Return vs. Cost of Capital

Cost of Capital

79 Views

article

8.3 : Cost of Equity

Cost of Capital

62 Views

article

8.5 : Cost of Preferred Stock

Cost of Capital

62 Views

article

8.6 : Cost of Debt

Cost of Capital

70 Views

article

8.7 : Calculating Cost of Debt

Cost of Capital

66 Views

article

8.8 : Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Cost of Capital

114 Views

article

8.9 : Calculating Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Cost of Capital

166 Views

article

8.10 : Capital Structure Weights

Cost of Capital

51 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved