There’s always something to howl about.

So, Boss…You Want I Should WACC Dis Guy?

You know how lenders are. We’re always talking about WACC-ing a guy who borrows money. Do you REALLY know what we’re tawkin’ about, though?

The Weighted Average Cost of Capital or WACC, is a corporate finance term used to measure the true cost of debt. You can find that figure in any bank’s annual report, on the Sources and Uses of Funds Page. They refer to it as a Cost of Funds.
It’s a pretty simple analysis. I use WACC analysis to determine whether you should refinance your home loan.

I can just WACC a property, I can WACC a certain person, I can even WACC your whole family if you want me to. Here’s how I would do it:

Let’s assume this homeowner has a $210,000 first mortgage at 6%, a $60,000 second mortgage at 9%, and $30,000 in consumer debt at 12%.

1- Add up all of your debt.

$210,000 + 60,000 + 30,000 = $300,000

2- Determine what the percentage each loan is to the sum of all the debts.

First mortgage= 70%, Second Mortgage= 20%, Consumer debt = 10%

3- Multiply the loan rate by that percentage for each loan.

First Mortgage= 70% * 6.0= 4.2, Second Mortgage= 20% * 9= 1.8, Consumer Debt= 10% * 12= 1.2

4- Add up all of those figures. That’s your WACC

WACC= 4.2 + 1.8 + 1.2 = 7.2%

Now, compare that WACC to the loan you could get to refinance those debts. If it’s lower than 7.2%, dat’s an offer you can’t refuse. Pretty simple, huh?

Fuhgeddaboudit.

P.S.- I tried this earlier and it seemed awfully confusing. You can figure for after-tax WACC to be more accurate but this post is probably easier to understand.