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Discounted Cash Flow Analysis

Street of Walls Investment Banking Technical Training


In this Discounted Cash Flow chapter, we will cover four key topics:

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Overview


Free Cash Flow
Terminal Value
WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital)

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Overview


WHAT IS DCF?
DCF is a direct valuation technique that values a company by projecting its future cash flows and then
using the Net Present Value (NPV) method to value those cash flows. In a DCF analysis, the cash
flows are projected by using a series of assumptions about how the business will perform in the future,
and then forecasting how this business performance translates into the cash flow generate by the
business the one thing investors care the most about.
NPV is simply a mathematical technique for translating each of these projected annual cash flow
amounts into today equivalent amounts so that each years projected cash flows can be summed up
in comparable, current-dollar amounts.
WHY USE DCF?
DCF should be used in many cases because it attempts to measure the value created by a business
directly and precisely. It is thus the most theoretically correct valuation method available: the value of a
firm ultimately derives from the inherent value of its future cash flows to its stakeholders.
DCF is probably the most broadly used valuation technique, simply because of its theoretical
underpinnings and its ability to be used in almost all scenarios. Investment Bankers, Internal Corporate
Finance and Business Development professionals, and Academics use DCF.
However, DCF is fraught with potential perils. The valuation obtained is very sensitive to a large
number of assumptions/forecasts, and can therefore vary over a wide range. If even one key
assumption is off significantly, it can lead to a wildly different valuation. This is quite possible, given
that DCF involves predicting future events (forecasting), and even the best forecasters will generally
be off by some amount. This leads to the concept of Garbage in = Garbage Out if wrong
assumptions are made, the result will be wrong.
Additionally, DCF does not take into account any market-related valuation information, such as the
valuations of comparable companies, as a sanity check on its valuation outputs. Therefore, DCF
should generally only be done alongside other valuation techniques, lest a questionable assumption or
two lead to a result that is substantially different from what market forces are indicating.
DCF ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES

PROs and CONs of Using DCF


PROs
CONs
Theoretically the most sound method if
Valuation obtained is very sensitive to a
the analyst is confident in his
large number of assumptions/forecasts,
assumptions
and can thus vary over a wide range
Not significantly influenced by temporary
Often very time-intensive relative to
market conditions or non-economic
some other valuation techniques.
factors
Involves forecasting future performance,
Especially useful when there is limited or
which is very difficult.

no comparable information
REMEMBER C.V.S.
When doing a DCF analysis, a useful checklist of things to do has a mnemonic that is easy to
remember: C.V.S.

Confirm historical financials for accuracy.


Validate key assumptions for projections.
Sensitize variables driving projections to build a valuation range

Note that the C.V.S. acronym for Comparable Companies Analysis, discussed in the previous
chapter, is slightly different (in that acronym, S stands for Select rather than Sensitize.)
KEY ASSUMPTIONS & PROJECTIONS:
When performing a DCF analysis, a series of assumptions and projections will need to be made.
Ultimately, all of these inputs will boil down to three main components that drive the valuation result
from a DCF analysis.

Free Cash Flow Projections: Projections of the amount of Cash produced by a companys
business operations after paying for operating expenses and capital expenditures.
Discount Rate: The cost of capital (Debt and Equity) for the business. This rate, which acts
like an interest rate on future Cash inflows, is used to convert them into current dollar
equivalents.
Terminal Value: The value of a business at the end of the projection period (typical for a DCF
analysis is either a 5-year projection period or, occasionally, a 10-year projection period).

The DCF valuation of the business is simply equal to the sum of the discounted projected Free Cash
Flow amounts, plus the discounted Terminal Value amount.
There is no exact for deriving Free Cash Flow projections. The key is to be diligent when making the
assumptions needed to derive these projections, and where uncertain, use valuation techniques
guidelines to guide your thinking (some examples of this are discussed later in this chapter). It is very
easy to increase or decrease the valuation from a DCF substantially by changing the assumptions,
which is why it is so important to be thoughtful when specifying the inputs.
The Discount Rate is usually determined as a function of prevailing market (or known) required rates
of return for Debt and Equity, as well as the split between outstanding Debt and Equity in the
companys capital structure. These required rates of return (or discount rates or cost of capital) are
generally then blended into a single discount rate for the Free Cash Flows of the company as a whole
this is known as the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC). We will discuss WACC
calculations in detail later in this chapter.
Terminal Value is the value of the business that derives from Cash flows generated after the year-byyear projection period. It is determined as a function of the Cash flows generated in the final projection
period, plus an assumed permanent growth rate for those cash flows, plus an assumed discount rate
(or exit multiple). More is discussed on calculating Terminal Value later in this chapter.
TWO DIFFERENT DCF APPROACHES: LEVERED VS. UNLEVERED CASH FLOWS
There are two ways of projecting a companys Free Cash Flow (FCF): on an unlevered basis, or on a
levered basis.
A levered DCF projects FCF after Interest Expense (Debt) and Interest (Cash) while an unlevered DCF
projects FCF before the impact on Debt and Cash. A levered DCF therefore attempts to value the
Equity portion of a companys capital structure directly, while an unlevered DCF analysis attempts to
value the company as a whole; at the end of the unlevered DCF analysis, Net Debt and other claims
can be subtracted out to arrive at the residual (Equity) value of the business.

An Unlevered DCF involves the following steps:

Project FCF for each year, before the impact from Debt and Cash.
Discount FCF using the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC), which is a blend of the
required returns on the Debt and Equity components of the capital structure.
Value obtained is the Enterprise Value of the business.

By comparison, a Levered DCF involves the following steps:

Project FCF after Interest Expense (to debt) and Interest Income (from Cash).
Discount FCF using the Cost of Equity (the required rate of return on Equity).
Value obtained is the Equity Value (aka Market Value) of the business.

WHY USE UNLEVERED FREE CASH FLOW (UFCF) VS. LEVERED FREE CASH FLOW (LFCF)?
UFCF is the industry norm, because it allows for an apples-to-apples comparison of the Cash flows
produced by different companies. A UFCF analysis also affords the analyst the ability to test out
different capital structures to determine how they impact a companys value. By contrast, in an LFCF
analysis, the capital structure is taken into account in the calculation of the companys Cash flows. This
means that the LFCF analysis will need to be re-run if a different capital structure is assumed.
In effect, UFCF allows the analyst to separate the Cash flows produced by the business from the
structure of the ownership and liabilities of the business. In a UFCF the Cash flows of the business are
projected irrespective of the capital structure chosen in a UFCF analysis; the exact capital structure is
not taken into account until the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) is determined.
WHICH IS MORE SENSITIVE PART OF A DCF MODEL: FREE CASH FLOWS OR DISCOUNT
RATE?
FCF (and Terminal Value, which uses FCF as an input) are the more sensitive. Be careful, therefore,
when making key Cash flow projection assumptions, because a small tweak may result in a large
valuation change. The analyst should test several reasonable assumption scenarios to derive a
reasonable valuation range. Within FCF projections, the best items to test include Sales growth and
assumed margins (Gross Margin, Operating/EBIT margin, EBITDA margin, and Net Income margin).
Also, sensitivity analysis should be conducted on the Discount Rate (WACC) used.
DCF PITFALLS
Avoid these common pitfalls when building a DCF Model:

Making important assumptions based upon insufficient research.


Lack of footnotes and details documenting the thought process (and research process) behind
the assumptions chosen.
Taking an improper approach to deriving the Cost of Capital for Debt and/or Equity (and/or
WACC).

DCF STEPS
1.

2.

Project the companys Free Cash Flows: Typically, a targets FCF is projected out 5 to 10
years in the future. The further these numbers are projected out, the less visibility the
forecaster will have (in other words, later projection periods will typically be subject to the
most estimation error).
Determine the companys Terminal Value: Terminal Value is calculated using one of two
methods: the Terminal Multiple Method or the Perpetuity Method. (Note that if the
Perpetuity Method is used, the Discount Rate from the following step will be needed.)

3.
4.
5.

Determine the companys Discount Rate: Calculate the companys Weighted Average Cost
of Capital (WACC) to determine the Discount Rate for all future Cash flows.
Use Net Present Value: Discount the projected FCF and Terminal Value back to Year 0 (back
to today) and sum these figures to determine the Enterprise Value of the company/
Make Adjustments: If using an Unlevered Free Cash Flow (UFCF) approach, subtracting out
net debt and other adjustments from Enterprise Value to derive the Market Value of the
company.

Here is a graphical representation of these DCF Steps:

SOURCES OF DCF INFORMATION


In order to project a companys future Cash flows reasonably well, the analyst will need to take into
account as much known information about the company (and several market metrics) as possible. The
following sources can help provide needed information to produce a high-quality DCF analysis:

Historical Financial Results: The SEC (http://www.sec.gov/) has company Annual Reports
(10-K), Quarterly Reports (10-Q), and Investment Prospectuses (where available).
Cost of Debt: Use a weighted average of the Debt interest rates in a companys capital
structure to calculate the companys pre-tax Cost of Debt.
Cost of Equity: The Risk Free Rate: The risk-free rate is needed in determining the Cost of
Equity, and is estimated as a function of the current long-term Treasury bond rate (assuming
that the companys cash flows are being projected in terms of US$). The benchmark rate used
is generally that of the 10-year bond. The Department of the Treasury
(http://www.treasury.gov/) publishes U.S. Treasury bond rates on a daily basis. For European
companies, use the relevant rate from Euro-dominated government bonds.
Beta: Beta is a measure of the relationship between changes in the prices of a companys
securities and changes in the value of an overall market benchmark, such as the S&P 500
index. Bloomberg, FactSet, Google Finance, and Capital IQ all publish historical and

estimated Beta figures for individual stocks. If the Beta is not published, it can be estimated by
means of a simple linear regression.
Market Risk: The Market Risk Premium is a measure of the degree to which investors expect
to be compensated for owning risky equity securities, rather than risk-free, fixed-rate
investments 9such as in government bonds). It is calculated using the Capital Asset Pricing
Model, which assumes that the ONLY sources of risk that demands compensation is overall
market risk (as measured by Beta) rather than idiosyncratic (or stock-specific) risk. This model
is generally used to determine the Cost of Equity for a company.
Estimates of the Market Risk Premium are available from Morningstar, and can also be
estimated using historical returns on government bond investments vs. overall equity market
investments.

Financial Projections:

Management Estimates can be useful starting point for determining a companys expected
performance and Cash flow projections. However, keep in mind that these projections are
often on the optimistic side.
Sell-side Research Estimates also can provide useful insight into a companys path of
expected performance. Again, however, keep in mind that sell-side analysts often have an
incentive to be optimistic in projecting a companys expected performance.
Internal Estimates (from the investment bank you work for) can be the most useful source of
information for projecting a companys expected Cash flow particularly if these estimates
were not used as part of a sell-side advisory engagement (wherein the purpose of the
analysis would be, at least in part, to advocate for a higher selling price for the client.) If using
internal estimates, be sure to note how they were generated and for what purpose.

Free Cash Flow (FCF)


In projecting Free Cash Flow for a business, remember C.V.S., and that Garbage In = Garbage Out:

Confirm historical financials for accuracy.


Validate key assumptions for projections.
Sensitize variables driving projections to build a valuation range.

In order to calculate Free Cash Flow projections, you must first collect historical financial results.
KEY INPUTS TO FREE CASH FLOW (FCF)
Free Cash Flow (FCF) is calculated by taking the Operating Income (EBIT) for a business, minus its
Taxes, plus Depreciation & Amortization, minus the companys Capital Expenditures for the year. This
derives a much more accurate representation of the Cash that a company generates than does pure
Net Income:

PROJECTING FREE CASH FLOW (FCF)


Key Assumptions in Projecting Business Performance
The projected FCF in the nearest-out years (Year 1, Year 2, etc.) will have the most impact on a
companys DCF valuation. The good news is that these Cash flow figures are the least difficult to
project, because the closer we are to an event, the more visibility we have about that event. (The bad
news, of course, is that any error in projecting these figures will have a large impact on the output of
the analysis.)
FCF is derived by projecting the line items of the Income Statement (and often Balance Sheet) for a
company, line by line. As a result, the FCF results are sensitive to a variety of assumptions about the
future operations of the companys business, including the following:

Income Statement Items:

Revenue (Sales) Growth: Year-over-year growth projections are the most common
mechanism, but the more granularity used, the better. For example, being able to
project out unit growth and pricing per unit is better than a simple year-over-year growth
projection for the Sales number as a whole.

Margins: Project Gross Margin and Operating (EBIT) Margin based on historical
patterns. Consider inputs like commodity costs in Gross Margin and SG&A (Sales,
General, and Administrative) expenses for Operating Margin.

Balance Sheet & Statement of Cash Flow Items:

Capital Expenditures (CapEx): Consider both Expansion CapEx and Maintenance


CapEx. The difference delineates company costs associated with buying new fixed
assets to facilitate growth in the business (Expansion CapEx) from company costs
associated with adding to/maintaining the value of existing assets required to service
existing business (Maintenance CapEx). Unfortunately, this breakdown is generally
unavailable in a companys financial reports.

Changes in Operating Working Capital (OWC): Operating Working Capital is equal to


Current Assets minus Current Liabilities, excluding Cash, Cash-like items (such as
Marketable Securities and Securities Available for Sale), and Debt. It can be found by
incorporating the relevant line items from the Balance Sheet. Use historical patterns
and common sense to evaluate this line item most OWC items are driven by Sales of
the company. Thus, growth in these should at least to some extent be a function of
Sales growth.

Remember C.V.S. when projecting all of these items. The assumptions driving these projections are
critical to the credibility of the output.

Confirm historical financials for accuracy.


Validate key assumptions for projections.
Sensitize variables driving projections to build a valuation range.

PROJECTING BUSINESS PERFORMANCE


As mentioned, we first project the companys Income Statement. Below, we will walk you through a
simple example of how to do this.

Revenue: For simplicity, Revenue in our example is projected out an annual growth rate of
10%, which is in-line with historical growth rates of the hypothetical company. In order to
increase accuracy for this assumption, remember to study management projections, sell-side
projections, and internal estimates. Also remember that more granularity, where possible, is
better.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): As Revenue grows; we increased the gross profit margin by
shrinking COGS as a percentage of Revenue because of the concept of economies of scale
at the company (as the company grows it should experience at least some improved
utilization of existing equipment and human resources, increased purchasing power,
increased pricing power, etc.). Also note that for the purposes of this simple example, we are
excluding Depreciation from COGS. In many cases, we would include it and back it out later.
Selling, General, & Administrative (SG&A): Kept constant as a percentage of Revenue
(14.5%) in this example, as the company will need to increase advertising and overhead in
order to drive Sales growth. In some cases, some portion of SG&A can be considered fixed
(such as Corporate Headquarters costs), which may lead to diminishing SG&A expenses as a
percentage of Sales as the company grows.
EBITDA: This is a direct output of our Revenue and cost assumptions. Had we incorporated
Depreciation into expenses, we would need to add it back to Operating Income (EBIT) to
arrive at EBITDA.

DEPRECIATION AND CAPITAL EXPENDITURES


Depreciation is a non-Cash expense, meaning the company books Depreciation as an expense on the
income statement for GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) purposes but in reality, no
Cash was actually spent. It is an expense of Capital Expenditures made in prior years. Therefore, in

order to calculate true Cash flow, this must be added this back. Similarly, CapEx must be subtracted
out, because it does not appear in the Income Statement, but it is an actual Cash expense.
It should be noted that Amortization acts in much the same way as Depreciation, but is used to
expense non-Fixed Assets rather than Fixed Assets. An example of this would be Amortization on the
value of a patent purchased when acquiring a company that owned it.
BUILDING UP TO UNLEVERED FREE CASH FLOW
The next step is to take our business performance projections and calculate Unlevered FCF (UFCF) in
each year:

Tax-adjusted EBIT: D&A needs to be taken out of EBITDA in order to calculate after-tax
Operating Profit (EBIT). D&A is an expense for tax purposes. Thus, first we must subtract
D&A in this model to calculate taxes, and then add it back after taxes. In this case, it is
projected as 5.1% of Sales.
Tax Rate: Use last twelve months (LTM, also referred to as trailing twelve months, or TTM) tax
rate in order to project future tax rates. In this case, 35% is used.
Depreciation & Amortization (D&A): D&A was initially taken out to calculate taxes but then
added back, because it is a non-cash expense.
Capital Expenditures (CapEx): Subtracted out, as this represents Cash needed to fund new
and existing assets. It is not expensed on the Income Statement, as these purchased assets
will be used to support operations in upcoming years for the business (and is this gradually
expensed, via Depreciation, in those years). Note that net of inflation; CapEx and
Depreciation should converge over time, provided that the company is not growing rapidly.
Change in Operating Working Capital (OWC): This is subtracted out, as it represents
investments in short-term net operating assets needed to fund Revenue growth. This figure
represents the annual change in Current Assets minus Current Liabilities on the Balance
Sheet, excluding Cash, Cash-like items, and Debt.

Now we can apply the formula:

DISCOUNTING THE UFCF FIGURES


We have no projected the expected Unlevered Free Cash Flows (UFCF) in each of the upcoming
years. However, to value the company, we have to discount those cash flows into equivalent current
(todays) dollars. This is where Net Present Value (NPV) comes in.
The formula for calculating Present Value (PV) is as follows:
In this formula, the PV is equal to the FCF in each year (Year 1, Year 2, Year 3, etc.), divided by a
discount factor. In each case, the discount factor is 1 + the discount rate (r), taken to the nth power,
where n is the number of years into the future that the Cash flow is occurring (similar to the
compounding of an annual interest rate).

We will go into more detail on determining the discount rate, r, in the WACC section of this chapter.
The difference between Present Value and Net Present Value is simply to incorporate any cash
outflows that might occur in the scenario. Since a DCF analysis involves only the cash inflows from a
companys operations, Present Value and Net Present Value are equivalent.

TERMINAL VALUE
Terminal Value represents the value of the cash flows after the projection period. Projections only go
out so far in the DCF (5 or 10 years), so this is a mechanism for estimating the future value of the
businesss cash flows after that projection period.
The Terminal Value is based on the cash flows of the business in a normalized environment. What this
means is that the business should be assumed, after the projection period, to grow at a rate that is
appropriate for a business of its type at the end of the projection period, and/or to be valued at
multiples consistent with those of its peers (see the chapter on Comparable Companies Analysis
earlier in this training course).
CALCULATING TERMINAL VALUE
There are two primary methods to compute a companys terminal value:
1.
2.

Terminal Multiple Method: Also referred to as the Exit Multiple Method, this technique uses a
multiple of a financial metric (such as EBITDA) to drive a businesss valuation. These
multiples can be derived using multiples prevalent among comparable companies.
Perpetuity Method: Assumes that the Free Cash Flows of the business grow in perpetuity at
a given rate. The Perpetuity Method uses the Gordon Formula: FCFn (1 + g) (r g), where
r is the discount rate (discussed in the next section on WACC) and g is the assumed annual
growth rate for the companys FCF. This will be demonstrated with an example shortly.

As a sanity check, you can use the terminal method to back into as assumed growth rate for the
business, which should be similar to the growth rate used in the perpetuity method. Examples of this
calculation are discussed later in this section.
USING THE TERMINAL MULTIPLE METHOD
Continuing with our DCF example from earlier, we will demonstrate the two steps needed to apply the
Terminal Multiple Method:

1.
2.

Identify reasonable EBITDA multiple range. For this exercise, we are assuming a range of
6.0x-8.0x EV/EBITDA. We choose 6.0x to 8.0x based on historical trading rangers for the
company along with comparable companies in the industry.
Multiple the EV/EBITDA multiple range by the end of period EBITDA estimate. The result
equals the Enterprise Value of the company as of the end of the projection period.

Here are a couple of important considerations to make when using the Terminal Multiple Method:

Make sure the terminal year is a normalized year. Exclude years that are influenced cyclical
or economic factors.
The growth rate that the EBITDA multiple implies needs to be in-line with long-term
assumptions.
Be sure to use a normalized tax rate in the terminal year. A tax rate can be skewed by
previous losses, one-time losses, one-time items, and a change in international mix.

USING THE PERPETUITY METHOD


The Perpetuity Method uses the assumption that the Free Cash Flows grow at a constant rate in
perpetuity over the given time period. You should use a conservative approach when estimating
growth rates in perpetuity. Analysts typically use long-term growth rates such as GDP growth (or
perhaps something slightly higher), as companies typically cant register double digit FCF growth rates
forever.
Here are the two steps needed to apply the Perpetuity Method:
1.
2.

Identify reasonable long-term FCF growth rates to use in perpetuity, such as GDP or
something slightly higher, depending on industry and company dynamics.
Calculate the Terminal Value by taking FCF from the last projection year times (1 + the
perpetual growth rate). Divide this figure by the difference between the discount rate (r) and
the assumed perpetual growth rate (g).

In this case:

FCFn = last projection period Free Cash Flow (Terminal Free Cash Flow)
g = the perpetual growth rate
r = the discount rate, a.k.a. the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC, covered in the next
section of this training course)

If we assume that WACC = 11% and that the appropriate long-term growth rate is 1%, we get:

This is a very conservative long-term growth rate, and of course higher assumed growth rates will lead
to higher Terminal Value amounts.

RECONCILING THE TWO METHODS


Note that there are formulas to determine the equivalent multiples and growth rates for the two given
methods.

Using the Terminal Multiple Method to solve for the equivalent Perpetuity Method growth rate:
Using the Perpetuity Method to solve for the equivalent Terminal Multiple Method multiple:

WEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF CAPITAL (WACC): Different ways to describe the same
concept
WACC can be a confusing concept. The technical definition of WACC is the required rate of return for
the entire business given the risks to investors of investing in the business. Meanwhile, the laypersons
(and probably analysts) definition of WACC is the rate used to discount projected Free Cash Flows
(FCF) in a DCF model.
These definitions refer to two sides of the same coin. If an investor requires a specific return on his
investment dollars today, then future cash flows from an investment he makes can be converted into
today dollars using that required return to create a today-equivalent value for those future cash flows.
(The WACC simply does this for all investors in a company weighted by their relative size.) Since the
future FCF represent all of the value of a company available to all investors (Debt and Equity) in the
company, they can be discounted by WACC to determine their value in todays dollars.
But how do we determine what that required return should be? Put simply, it is a function of the
alternative investment opportunities available to all of the investors in the company, and the riskiness
of making that investment in the company relative to those available alternative returns. If the riskequivalent return in other opportunities is X% per year, then an investor should require X% from this
investment as well. And in order to gauge the current value of the investment in todays dollars, we
need to discount all future benefits accruing to those investors (namely, future Cash flows) by %.

Here is a summary of things to make sure you understand about the WACC:

When discounting back projected Free Cash Flows and the Terminal Value in the DCF model,
the discount rate used for each Cash flow is WACC.
The capital structure mix of Debt (tax-affected) and Equity times the Cost of Debt and Cost of
Equity equals the WACC. In effect, WACC is the after-tax weighted average of the Costs of
Capital for Debt and Equity, where the weights correspond to the relative amount of each
component that is outstanding.
WACC is a forward-looking rate of return and is directly related to the risk of the investment
and the alternative investment opportunity set available to the companys investors across the
capital structure (for the business as a whole, not just for the shareholders).

Now that we have described WACC and what is represents fully, here is the mathematically definition
of WACC:
Where:

KE = Cost of Equity. KE = Krf + b RP, where Krf equals the Risk Free Rate, b equals the
levered (Equity) Beta for the company, and RP equals the Equity Market Risk Premium. The
Beta and Risk Premium are calculated using the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM).
KD = Cost of Debt. This is the weighted average of interest rates paid on the companys debt
obligations. Notice that in WACC, Cost of Debt is taken after taxesi.e., it is multiplied by (1
T). This is to acknowledge the fact that Interest Expense on Debt is (generally) tax-deductible,
thereby creating a tax shield, which adds value to the company. This is represented in the
DCF framework by reducing the Cost of Debt component of WACC, resulting in a lower
discount rate for the companys FCF, and therefore a higher valuation for the company.
E = Market Value of Equity (Market Capitalization)
D = Book Value of the companys Debt.
T = Marginal Tax Rate for the company. This rate can be different from the Effective Tax Rate
used to determine Tax Expense based on EBIT.

CALCULATING WACC: An Example


Here is an example that illustrates the calculation of WACC for our hypothetical company, using the
average adjusted (levered) beta for a sample of hypothetical, comparable companies:

Other WACC Hints:

WACC takes into account a capital structure that is assumed not to change over time. If it
does, and that change is known, the WACC associated with each future capital structure
should be used instead. An example of this might be a company in a leveraged buyout (LBO)
where the capital structure will be changing as the company reduces Debt.
When using a DCF analysis to value an M&A transaction, use the target companys WACC
rather than that of the acquiring company. This is because the WACC of the target company
will more accurately reflect the relevant risks inherent in the business being acquired.

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