Part - 3 - Application1 - Equity Valuation
Part - 3 - Application1 - Equity Valuation
Part - 3 - Application1 - Equity Valuation
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Bond Valuation
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Bond Valuation
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Equity Valuation
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Dividend Discount Model
• Basic Idea
– Over an infinite time horizon, all profits are paid out as
dividends
– Firm value is today’s PV of future dividends
• What is the right discount factor?
– The discount factor should reflect the riskiness of cash flows
– For equity, we can use the cost of equity as discount rate!
• Cost of equity is nothing else than the expected
return for the security
– If a security is more risky, inventors will demand a higher expected return
– For risky securities, the discount rate is thus higher, reflecting greater un-
certainty about the future and higher demand of investors for compensation
– The CAPM tells us that only systematic risk matters:
k = rf E (rM ) rf
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Dividend Discount Model: The
One-Period Model
• Simplest model, just using the expected dividend
and price over the next year.
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Dividend Discount Model: The
Generalized Model
• However, we normally don’t know the price in t=1
• Thus, the general model extends this to n periods:
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Dividend Discount Model: The
Generalized Model - Example
• Basic information
– Assume that a firm pays a dividend of $1 now
– We expect the dividend to grow by 5% each year
– Cost of equity 𝑘𝑒 for this firm are 10%
– What is the current equilibrium stock price?
𝐷𝑖𝑣1 1∗1.05
• 𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑒 = = = $21
(𝑘𝑒 −𝑔) 0.10−0.05
• However, assume that it turns out that this firm is riskier than
originally expected: 𝑘𝑒 goes up to 15%
𝐷𝑖𝑣1 1∗1.05
• 𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑒 = = = $10.5
(𝑘𝑒 −𝑔) 0.15−0.05
• Now assume that dividend growth drops to 3%
𝐷𝑖𝑣1 1∗1.03
• 𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑒 = = = $8.58
(𝑘𝑒 −𝑔) 0.15−0.03
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Dividend Discount Model:
Multistage Growth Model
• Firms typically pass through life cycles
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Dividend Discount Model:
Multistage Growth Model
• We can also use detailed dividend forecasts for the next years
and apply the constant growth assumption thereafter
• Suppose D0 = 2.00 and ke = 13%. We assume supernormal
dividend growth of 30% for 3 years, then a long-run constant
g = 6%. What is the current stock price (after payment of D0)?
•
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Dividend Discount Model:
Multistage Growth Model
• Is the stock price based on short-term growth in this model?
– The current stock price is $54.11.
– The PV of dividends beyond year 3 is $46.11 (P3 discounted back to t=0).
– The percentage of stock price due to “long-term” dividends is:
$46.11 / $54.11 = 85.2%
– This also means that small changes in the growth expectations and/or
discount rate can have a huge impact on today’s price!
• If most of a stock’s value is due to long-term cash flows, why
do so many managers focus on quarterly earnings?
– Changes in quarterly earnings can be a signal of future changes in cash
flows. This would affect the current stock price.
– If market expects a long run growth rate of g, then current dividend
earnings growth directly transfers into higher valuation!
– Sometimes managers have bonuses tied to quarterly earnings.
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Dividend Discount Model
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Free Cash Flow Valuation
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Free Cash Flow Valuation
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Free Cash Flow Valuation
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Free Cash Flow Valuation
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Consider a project (or firm) which buys assets in
t=0
– Cost for assets: $200,000 + $10,000 shipping + $30,000
installation
– Depreciable cost $240,000
– Economic life = 4 years
– MACRS 3-year class depreciation method [ special
method applies to project, high tax deduction early in the
projects live]
• The firm stops all operations and sells all assets for
their book value after year 4
– Salvage value = $0
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• In years one to four, the firm sells products
– Annual unit sales = 1,250.
– Unit sales price = $200.
– Unit costs = $100.
– Net operating working capital (NOWC) = 12% of (next
years) sales.
• Other important information
– Tax rate = 40%.
– WACC = 10%.
– Inflation is expected to be 3%
• Unit cost and prices rise with inflation!
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Depreciation
– Basis = Cost + Shipping + Installation = $240,000
– Annual Depreciation Expense [MACRS 3-year] (000s)
Year % x Basis = Depr.
1 33 $ 79.2
2 45 $240 108.0
3 15 36.0
4 7 16.8
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Unit sales and cost
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Operating cash flow
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
Sales $250,000 $257,500 $265,225 $273,188
- Costs $125,000 $128,750 $132,613 $136,588
- Depr. $79,200 $108,000 $36,000 $16,800
= EBIT $45,800 $20,750 $96,612 $119,800
- Taxes (40%) $18,320 $8,300 $38,645 $47,920
= NOPLAT $27,480 $12,450 $57,967 $71,880
+ Depr. $79,200 $108,000 $36,000 $16,800
= Net Op. CF $106,680 $120,450 $93,967 $88,680
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Cash Flows due to Investments in Net Operating
Working Capital (NOWC)
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Free Cash Flows for Years 0-4
Investment -$240,000 0 0 0 0
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Free Cash Flow Valuation -
Example
• Net present value of future Free Cash Flows
0 1 2 3 4
∞ 𝐹𝐶𝐹𝑡 4 𝐹𝐶𝐹𝑡
– 𝐹𝑖𝑟𝑚 𝑣𝑎𝑙𝑢𝑒 = 𝑡=0 (1+𝑊𝐴𝐶𝐶)𝑡 = 𝑡=0 (1+0.1)𝑡 = $77,784
• Assuming
– no debt and
– 1,000 shares
Share price equals $77,784/1000 = $77.78
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Multiples Valuation
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Multiples Valuation
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Multiples Valuation - PE
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Multiples Valuation – PE Example
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Multiples Valuation – Other
Multiples
• There are many different multiples
– Popular ones are P/E, Price-to-Book, or Firm value-to-EBIT
– Overview:
Source: www.cxoadvisory.com
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Multiples over Industries
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Multiples over Time
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Multiples Valuation – Practice
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Multiples Valuation – Practice
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