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Flotation costs

Flotation costs are the fees, such as underwriting and legal costs, a firm pays to issue new securities, which raise the effective cost of newly raised capital above its quoted cost.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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A firm issuing new shares at €25 each pays 6% in flotation costs, keeping net proceeds of only €23.50. Dividing the expected €1.50 dividend by that €23.50, then adding 4% growth, gives a cost of new equity of 10.38% — higher than the 10% a naive calculation ignoring flotation costs would show.

Where it fits
TopicCost of Capital & WACCAdvancedSubjectCorporate FinanceAdvanced

The formula

LaTeX
re=D1P0(1f)+gr_e = \frac{D_1}{P_0(1-f)} + g

Variables

Cost of newly issued equity (decimal)
Expected dividend per share next year ()
Current issue price per share ()
Flotation cost as a fraction of the issue price (decimal)
Constant dividend growth rate (decimal)

Gives the effective cost of newly issued equity once flotation costs reduce the net proceeds the firm actually receives per share.