Week 2 FINA2207
Week 2 FINA2207
Duc Hong Vo
Department of Accounting & Finance
Business School
Week 2
• Valuation schemes
• Various multiples
• Asset based valuation
• Forecasting
The Big Picture for This Lecture
3-4
Simple (and Cheap) Schemes for
Valuation
• Fundamental analysis is detailed and costly.
• Simple methods:
–Method of Comparables
–Screening on Multiples
–Asset-Based Valuation
3-5
The Method of Comparables: Comps
3-6
The Method of Comparables:
Hewlett Packard, Lenovo, and Dell 2011
3-7
How Cheap is this Method?
• Conceptual Problems:
– Circular reasoning: Price is ascertained from price (of the
comps)
– Violates the tenet: “When calculating value to challenge
price, don’t put price into the calculation”
– If the market is efficient for the comparable
companies....Why is it not for the target company ?
• Implementation Problems:
– Finding the comparables that match precisely
– Different accounting methods for comps and target
– Different prices from different multiples
– What about negative denominators?
• Applications:
– IPOs; firms that are not traded (to approximate price, not
value)
3-8
Unlevered (or Enterprise) Multiples (that are
Unaffected by the Financing of Operations)
3-9
Variations of the P/E Ratio
3-10
Dividend-Adjusted P/E
3-11
Typical Values for Common Multiples
Multiple
Enterprise Trailing Forward Unlevered Unlevered Unlevered
Percentile P/B P/B P/E P/E P/S P/S P/CFO P/ebitda P/ebit
3-12
Screening Analysis
• Technical Screens: identify positions based on trading indicators
– Price screens
– Small stock screens
– Neglected stocks screens
– Seasonal screens
– Momentum screens
– Insider trading screens
3-14
Problems with Screening
3-15
Asset Based Valuation
• Values the firm’s assets and then subtracts the value of debt:
• Applications:
– “Asset-base” firms such as oil and gas and mineral products
– Calculating liquidation values
3-16
The Process of Fundamental Analysis
Current Financial
Statements
Financial
Statements
Year 1 Financial
Statements
Year 2 Financial
Forecasts Statements
Year 3
Other Information
Valuation
of
Convert forecasts to a valuation
Equity
The analyst forecasts future financial statements and converts forecasts in the future
financial statements to a valuation.
Current financial statements are used to extract information for forecasting.
3-18
The Architecture of Fundamental Analysis:
The Valuation Model
3-19
Payoffs to Investing: Terminal Investments
and Going-Concern Investments
For a terminal investment
Investment
P0 Initial price horizon When
stock is sold
1 2 3 T-1 T •For terminal investment,
I 0= amount invested at time zero
CF = cash flows received from the investment
0
d1 d2 d3 dT-1 •For investment in equity,
P0= price paid for the share at time zero
3-20
Two Terminal Investments:
A Bond and a Project
A Bond:
Periodic cash coupon 100 100 100 100 100
Cash at redemption 1000
Purchase price (1079.85)
Time, t 0 1 2 3 4 5
A Project:
Periodic flow 430 460 460 380 250
Salvage value
120
Initial investment (1200)
Time, t 0 1 2 3 4 5
3-21
The Valuation Model: Bonds
CF1 CF2 CF3 CFT
V =
D
+ 2 + 3 + + T
D D D D
0
D=is (one
− tplus)
t =1
D
CF t the required return on the debt
Required return: 8%
3-22
The Valuation Model: A Project
CF1 CF2 CF3 CF T
V =
p
+ 2 + 3 + + T
p p p p
0
P is (one
T
= p CF t
plus)
−t the required return (hurdle rate) for the project
t =1 Required return: 12%
3-23
Value Creation: V0 > I0
V0 = 1,079.85
I0 = 1,079.85
NPV = 0.00
V0 = 1,529.50
I0 = 1,200.00
NPV = 329.50
3-24
Valuation Models: Going Concerns
A Firm
0 1 2 3 4 5
CF 1 CF2 CF3 CF4 CF5
Equity
0 1 2 3 4 5 T
Dividend
Flow d1 d2 d3 d4 d5 dT
TVT
The terminal value, TVT is the price payoff, PT when the share is sold
Valuation issues :
The forecast target: dividends, cash flow, earnings?
The time horizon: T = 5, 10, ?
The terminal value?
The discount rate?
3-25
Criteria for Practical Valuation
To be practical, we require:
2. Validation
–Whatever we forecast must be observable ex post, so
the forecast can be verified for its accuracy.
3. Parsimony
–Information gathering & analysis should be
straightforward
–The fewer pieces of information, the better
3-26
The Question for Forecasting:
What Creates Value in a Firm
3-27
Valuation Models and Asset Pricing
Models
3-28
The Required Return
Otherwise known as:
– The Discount Rate
– The Cost of Capital
3-29
Beware of the Required Return in
Valuation
3-30
THANK YOU