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Aswath Damodaran
Value of asset =
where CFt is the expected cash ow in period t, r is the discount rate appropriate given the riskiness of the cash ow and n is the life of the asset. Proposition 1: For an asset to have value, the expected cash ows have to be positive some time over the life of the asset. Proposition 2: Assets that generate cash ows early in their life will be worth more than assets that generate cash ows later; the latter may however have greater growth and higher cash ows to compensate.
Aswath Damodaran
Liabilities
Fixed Claim on cash flows Little or No role in management Fixed Maturity Tax Deductible
Growth Assets
Equity
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Equity Valuation
Liabilities
Growth Assets
Equity
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Firm Valuation
Liabilities
Growth Assets
Equity
Present value is value of the entire firm, and reflects the value of all claims on the firm.
Aswath Damodaran
A. B. C. D. A. B. C.
To get from rm value to equity value, which of the following would you need to do? Subtract out the value of long term debt Subtract out the value of all debt Subtract the value of any debt that was included in the cost of capital calculation Subtract out the value of all liabilities in the rm Doing so, will give you a value for the equity which is greater than the value you would have got in an equity valuation lesser than the value you would have got in an equity valuation equal to the value you would have got in an equity valuation
Aswath Damodaran
Assume that you are analyzing a company with the following cashows for the next ve years. Year CF to Equity Interest Exp (1-tax rate) CF to Firm 1 $ 50 $ 40 $ 90 2 $ 60 $ 40 $ 100 3 $ 68 $ 40 $ 108 4 $ 76.2 $ 40 $ 116.2 5 $ 83.49 $ 40 $ 123.49 Terminal Value $ 1603.0 $ 2363.008 Assume also that the cost of equity is 13.625% and the rm can borrow long term at 10%. (The tax rate for the rm is 50%.) The current market value of equity is $1,073 and the value of debt outstanding is $800.
Aswath Damodaran
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Never mix and match cash ows and discount rates. The key error to avoid is mismatching cashows and discount rates, since discounting cashows to equity at the weighted average cost of capital will lead to an upwardly biased estimate of the value of equity, while discounting cashows to the rm at the cost of equity will yield a downward biased estimate of the value of the rm.
Aswath Damodaran
Error 3: Discount CF to Firm at Cost of Equity, forget to subtract out debt, and get too high a value for equity
Value of Equity = $ 1613 Value of Equity is overstated by $ 540
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Estimate the current earnings and cash ows on the asset, to either equity investors (CF to Equity) or to all claimholders (CF to Firm) Estimate the future earnings and cash ows on the rm being valued, generally by estimating an expected growth rate in earnings. Estimate when the rm will reach stable growth and what characteristics (risk & cash ow) it will have when it does. Choose the right DCF model for this asset and value it.
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Cash flows Firm: Pre-debt cash flow Equity: After debt cash flows
Expected Growth Firm: Growth in Operating Earnings Equity: Growth in Net Income/EPS
Terminal Value Value Firm: Value of Firm Equity: Value of Equity Length of Period of High Growth CF1 CF2 CF3 CF4 CF5 CFn ......... Forever
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Value of Equity
Dividend 1
Terminal Value= Dividend n+1 /(k e-gn) Dividend 5 Dividend n ......... Forever
Cost of Equity
Riskfree Rate : - No default risk - No reinvestment risk - In same currency and in same terms (real or nominal as cash flows
Type of Business
Operating Leverage
Financial Leverage
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Value of Equity
FCFE1
FCFE2
FCFE3
FCFE4
Terminal Value= FCFE n+1 /(k e-gn) FCFE5 FCFEn ......... Forever
Cost of Equity
Riskfree Rate : - No default risk - No reinvestment risk - In same currency and in same terms (real or nominal as cash flows
Type of Business
Operating Leverage
Financial Leverage
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VALUING A FIRM
C ashow to Firm EBIT (1-t) - (C ap Ex - Dep r) - C hange in W C = FC FF Expected Grow th Reinvestment Rate * Return on C ap ital
Value of Op erating Assets + C ash & Non-op Assets = Value of Firm - Value of Deb t = Value of Equity
Terminal Value= FC FF n+1/(r-g n) FC FF1 FC FF2 FC FF3 FC FF4 FC FF5 FC FFn ......... Forever Discount at W AC C = C ost of Equity (Equity/(Deb t + Equity)) + C ost of Deb t (Deb t/(Deb t+ Equity))
C ost of Equity
Riskfree Rate : - No default risk - No reinvestment risk - In same currency and in same terms (real or nominal as cash ows
Typ e of Business
Op erating Leverage
Financial Leverage
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DCF Valuation
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Critical ingredient in discounted cashow valuation. Errors in estimating the discount rate or mismatching cashows and discount rates can lead to serious errors in valuation. At an intuitive level, the discount rate used should be consistent with both the riskiness and the type of cashow being discounted.
Equity versus Firm: If the cash ows being discounted are cash ows to equity, the appropriate discount rate is a cost of equity. If the cash ows are cash ows to the rm, the appropriate discount rate is the cost of capital. Currency: The currency in which the cash ows are estimated should also be the currency in which the discount rate is estimated. Nominal versus Real: If the cash ows being discounted are nominal cash ows (i.e., reect expected ination), the discount rate should be nominal
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Cost of Equity
The cost of equity should be higher for riskier investments and lower for safer investments While risk is usually dened in terms of the variance of actual returns around an expected return, risk and return models in nance assume that the risk that should be rewarded (and thus built into the discount rate) in valuation should be the risk perceived by the marginal investor in the investment Most risk and return models in nance also assume that the marginal investor is well diversied, and that the only risk that he or she perceives in an investment is risk that cannot be diversied away (I.e, market or nondiversiable risk)
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Model CAPM
APM
E(R) = a + j=1..N bj Yj
Inputs Needed Riskfree Rate Beta relative to market portfolio Market Risk Premium Riskfree Rate; # of Factors; Betas relative to each factor Factor risk premiums Riskfree Rate; Macro factors Betas relative to macro factors Macro economic risk premiums Proxies Regression coefcients
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Consider the standard approach to estimating cost of equity: Cost of Equity = Rf + Equity Beta * (E(Rm) - Rf) where, Rf = Riskfree rate E(Rm) = Expected Return on the Market Index (Diversied Portfolio) In practice,
Short term government security rates are used as risk free rates Historical risk premiums are used for the risk premium Betas are estimated by regressing stock returns against market returns
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On a riskfree asset, the actual return is equal to the expected return. Therefore, there is no variance around the expected return. For an investment to be riskfree, then, it has to have
No default risk No reinvestment risk
Thus, the riskfree rates in valuation will depend upon when the cash ow is expected to occur and will vary across time. In valuation, the time horizon is generally innite, leading to the conclusion that a long-term riskfree rate will always be preferable to a short term rate, if you have to pick one.
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12.00%
11.50%
10.26% 10.00%
8.00%
4.45%
4.42%
4.25%
2.00%
1.50%
0.00% Germany 10year (Euro) Greece 10year (Euro) Italy 10-year (Euro) US 10-year Treasury ($) Brazil 10-year C Bond ($) Mexican 10year (Peso) Japanese 10Year (Yen)
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Do the analysis in real terms (rather than nominal terms) using a real riskfree rate, which can be obtained in one of two ways
from an ination-indexed government bond, if one exists set equal, approximately, to the long term real growth rate of the economy in which the valuation is being done.
Do the analysis in a currency where you can get a riskfree rate, say US dollars.
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A Simple Test
A. B. C. D. E.
You are valuing Embraer, a Brazilian company, in U.S. dollars and are attempting to estimate a riskfree rate to use in the analysis. The riskfree rate that you should use is The interest rate on a Brazilian Real denominated long term bond issued by the Brazilian Government (15%) The interest rate on a US $ denominated long term bond issued by the Brazilian Government (C-Bond) (10.30%) The interest rate on a US $ denominated Brazilian Brady bond (which is partially backed by the US Government) (10.15%) The interest rate on a dollar denominated bond issued by Embraer (9.25%) The interest rate on a US treasury bond (4.29%)
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The historical premium is the premium that stocks have historically earned over riskless securities. Practitioners never seem to agree on the premium; it is sensitive to
How far back you go in history Whether you use T.bill rates or T.Bond rates Whether you use geometric or arithmetic averages.
For instance, looking at the US: Arithmetic average Stocks - Stocks Historical Period T.Bills T.Bonds 1928-2004 7.92% 6.53% 1964-2004 5.82% 4.34% 1994-2004 8.60% 5.82%
Geometric Average Stocks - Stocks T.Bills T.Bonds 6.02% 4.84% 4.59% 3.47% 6.85% 4.51%
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Go back as far as you can. A risk premium comes with a standard error. Given the annual standard deviation in stock prices is about 25%, the standard error in a historical premium estimated over 25 years is roughly: Standard Error in Premium = 25%/25 = 25%/5 = 5% Be consistent in your use of the riskfree rate. Since we argued for long term bond rates, the premium should be the one over T.Bonds Use the geometric risk premium. It is closer to how investors think about risk premiums over long periods.
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Two Ways of Estimating Country Equity Risk Premiums for other markets..
Default spread on Country Bond: In this approach, the country equity risk premium is set equal to the default spread of the bond issued by the country (but only if it is denominated in a currency where a default free entity exists.
Brazil was rated B2 by Moodys and the default spread on the Brazilian dollar denominated C.Bond at the end of August 2004 was 6.01%. (10.30%-4.29%)
Relative Equity Market approach: The country equity risk premium is based upon the volatility of the market in question relative to U.S market.
Total equity risk premium = Risk PremiumUS* Country Equity / US Equity Using a 4.82% premium for the US, this approach would yield: Total risk premium for Brazil = 4.82% (34.56%/19.01%) = 8.76% Country equity risk premium for Brazil = 8.76% - 4.82% = 3.94% (The standard deviation in weekly returns from 2002 to 2004 for the Bovespa was 34.56% whereas the standard deviation in the S&P 500 was 19.01%)
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Country ratings measure default risk. While default risk premiums and equity risk premiums are highly correlated, one would expect equity spreads to be higher than debt spreads. Another is to multiply the bond default spread by the relative volatility of stock and bond prices in that market. In this approach:
Country Equity risk premium = Default spread on country bond* Country Equity /
Country Bond
Standard Deviation in Bovespa (Equity) = 34.56% Standard Deviation in Brazil C-Bond = 26.34% Default spread on C-Bond = 6.01%
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Brazils nancial standing and country rating improved dramatically towards the end of 2004. Its rating improved to B1. In January 2005, the interest rate on the Brazilian C-Bond dropped to 7.73%. The US treasury bond rate that day was 4.22%, yielding a default spread of 3.51% for Brazil.
Standard Deviation in Bovespa (Equity) = 25.09% Standard Deviation in Brazil C-Bond = 15.12% Default spread on C-Bond = 3.51% Country Risk Premium for Brazil = 3.51% (25.09%/15.12%) = 5.82%
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Approach 1: Assume that every company in the country is equally exposed to country risk. In this case, E(Return) = Riskfree Rate + Country ERP + Beta (US premium)
Implicitly, this is what you are assuming when you use the local Governments dollar borrowing rate as your riskfree rate.
Approach 2: Assume that a companys exposure to country risk is similar to its exposure to other market risk. E(Return) = Riskfree Rate + Beta (US premium + Country ERP) Approach 3: Treat country risk as a separate risk factor and allow rms to have different exposures to country risk (perhaps based upon the proportion of their revenues come from non-domestic sales) E(Return)=Riskfree Rate+ (US premium) + (Country ERP) ERP: Equity Risk Premium
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Source of revenues: Other things remaining equal, a company should be more exposed to risk in a country if it generates more of its revenues from that country. A Brazilian rm that generates the bulk of its revenues in Brazil should be more exposed to country risk than one that generates a smaller percent of its business within Brazil. Manufacturing facilities: Other things remaining equal, a rm that has all of its production facilities in Brazil should be more exposed to country risk than one which has production facilities spread over multiple countries. The problem will be accented for companies that cannot move their production facilities (mining and petroleum companies, for instance). Use of risk management products: Companies can use both options/futures markets and insurance to hedge some or a signicant portion of country risk.
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The easiest and most accessible data is on revenues. Most companies break their revenues down by region. One simplistic solution would be to do the following: = % of revenues domesticallyrm/ % of revenues domesticallyavg rm Consider, for instance, Embraer and Embratel, both of which are incorporated and traded in Brazil. Embraer gets 3% of its revenues from Brazil whereas Embratel gets almost all of its revenues in Brazil. The average Brazilian company gets about 77% of its revenues in Brazil:
LambdaEmbraer = 3%/ 77% = .04 LambdaEmbratel = 100%/77% = 1.30 A companys risk exposure is determined by where it does business and not by where it is located Firms might be able to actively manage their country risk exposures
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30.00%
0.5
20.00%
Quarterly EPS
0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 1998 1998 1998 1998 1999 1999 1999 1999 2000 2000 2000 2000 2001 2001 2001 2001 2002 2002 2002 2002 2003 2003 2003 -0.5
10.00%
0.00%
-1
-10.00%
-1.5
-20.00%
-30.00%
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20
60
Return on Embrat el
-20 -10 0 10 20
Return on Embraer
-20
-40
-60 -30
Return on C-Bond
Return on C-Bond
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A. B.
The conventional practice in investment banking is to add the country equity risk premium on to the cost of equity for every emerging market company, notwithstanding its exposure to emerging market risk. Thus, Embraer would have been valued with a cost of equity of 17.34% even though it gets only 3% of its revenues in Brazil. As an investor, which of the following consequences do you see from this approach? Emerging market companies with substantial exposure in developed markets will be signicantly over valued by equity research analysts. Emerging market companies with substantial exposure in developed markets will be signicantly under valued by equity research analysts. Can you construct an investment strategy to take advantage of the misvaluation?
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If we assume that stocks are correctly priced in the aggregate and we can estimate the expected cashows from buying stocks, we can estimate the expected rate of return on stocks by computing an internal rate of return. Subtracting out the riskfree rate should yield an implied equity risk premium. This implied equity premium is a forward looking number and can be updated as often as you want (every minute of every day, if you are so inclined).
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We can use the information in stock prices to back out how risk averse the market is and how much of a risk premium it is demanding.
Analysts expect earnings to grow 8.5% a year for the next 5 years . After year 5, we will assume that earnings on the index will grow at 4.22%, the same rate as the entire economy 52.85
In 2004, dividends & stock buybacks were 2.90% of the index, generating 35.15 in cashflows 38.13
41.37
44.89
48.71
If you pay the current level of the index, you can expect to make a return of 7.87% on stocks (which is obtained by solving for r in the following equation)
1211.92 =
38.13 41.37 44.89 48.71 52.85 52.85(1.0422) + + + + + (1+ r) (1+ r) 2 (1+ r) 3 (1+ r) 4 (1+ r) 5 (r " .0422)(1+ r) 5
Implied Equity risk premium = Expected return on stocks - Treasury bond rate = 7.87% - 4.22% = 3.65%
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Assume that the index jumps 10% on January 2 and that nothing else changes. What will happen to the implied equity risk premium? Implied equity risk premium will increase Implied equity risk premium will decrease Assume that the earnings jump 10% on January 2 and that nothing else changes. What will happen to the implied equity risk premium? Implied equity risk premium will increase Implied equity risk premium will decrease Assume that the riskfree rate increases to 5% on January 2 and that nothing else changes. What will happen to the implied equity risk premium? Implied equity risk premium will increase Implied equity risk premium will decrease
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Implied Premiums: From Bubble to Bear Market January 2000 to January 2003
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Which equity risk premium should you use for the US?
Historical Risk Premium: When you use the historical risk premium, you are assuming that premiums will revert back to a historical norm and that the time period that you are using is the right norm. You are also more likely to nd stocks to be overvalued than undervalued (Why?) Current Implied Equity Risk premium: You are assuming that the market is correct in the aggregate but makes mistakes on individual stocks. If you are required to be market neutral, this is the premium you should use. (What types of valuations require market neutrality?) Average Implied Equity Risk premium: The average implied equity risk premium between 1960-2003 in the United States is about 4%. You are assuming that the market is correct on average but not necessarily at a point in time.
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Dividends on the Index = 3.51% of 1219 (Simple average is 2.75%) Other parameters
Riskfree Rate = 5.50% Expected Growth (in Rs)
Next 5 years = 18% (Used expected growth rate in Earnings) After year 5 = 5.5%
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We can use the information in stock prices to back out how risk averse the market is and how much of a risk premium it is demanding.
Dividends and stock buybacks were 2.67% of the index last year Source: Bloomberg
Analysts are estimating an expected growth rate of 11.36% in earnings over the next 5 years for stocks in the DAX (Source: IBES)
Expected dividends and stock buybacks over next 5 years 116.13 129.32 144.01 160.37 178.59
If you pay the current level of the index, you can expect to make a return of 7.78% on stocks (which is obtained by Buy r in the following equation) solving forthe index for 3905.65
Implied Equity risk premium = Expected return on stocks - Treasury bond rate = 7.78% - 3.95% = 3.83%
3905.65 = 116.13 129.32 144.01 160.37 178.59 178.59(1.0395) + + + + + (1 + r) (1 + r) 2 (1 + r) 3 (1 + r) 4 (1 + r) 5 (r " .0395)(1 + r) 5
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Estimating Beta
The standard procedure for estimating betas is to regress stock returns (Rj) against market returns (Rm) Rj = a + b Rm
where a is the intercept and b is the slope of the regression.
The slope of the regression corresponds to the beta of the stock, and measures the riskiness of the stock. This beta has three problems:
It has high standard error It reects the rms business mix over the period of the regression, not the current mix It reects the rms average nancial leverage over the period rather than the current leverage.
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Estimate the beta for the rm from the bottom up without employing the regression technique. This will require
understanding the business mix of the rm estimating the nancial leverage of the rm
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Aracruz vs Bovespa
Aracruz ADR
Aracruz
-10 0 10 20
60 40 20 0
20
-20 -20 -40 -20 -40 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
S&P
BOVESPA
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Determinants of Betas
Beta of Equity
Beta of Firm
Nature of product or service offered by company: Other things remaining equal, the more discretionary the product or service, the higher the beta. Operating Leverage (Fixed Costs as percent of total costs): Other things remaining equal the greater the proportion of the costs that are fixed, the higher the beta of the company.
Financial Leverage: Other things remaining equal, the greater the proportion of capital that a firm raises from debt,the higher its equity beta will be
Implciations Highly levered firms should have highe betas than firms with less debt.
Implications 1. Cyclical companies should have higher betas than noncyclical companies. 2. Luxury goods firms should have higher betas than basic goods. 3. High priced goods/service firms should have higher betas than low prices goods/services firms. 4. Growth firms should have higher betas.
Implications 1. Firms with high infrastructure needs and rigid cost structures shoudl have higher betas than firms with flexible cost structures. 2. Smaller firms should have higher betas than larger firms. 3. Young firms should have
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Adjust the business beta for the operating leverage of the firm to arrive at the unlevered beta for the firm.
Use the financial leverage of the firm to estimate the equity beta for the firm Levered Beta = Unlevered Beta ( 1 + (1- tax rate) (Debt/Equity))
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Within any business, rms with lower xed costs (as a percentage of total costs) should have lower unlevered betas. If you can compute xed and variable costs for each rm in a sector, you can break down the unlevered beta into business and operating leverage components.
Unlevered beta = Pure business beta * (1 + (Fixed costs/ Variable costs))
The biggest problem with doing this is informational. It is difcult to get information on xed and variable costs for individual rms. In practice, we tend to assume that the operating leverage of rms within a business are similar and use the same unlevered beta for every rm.
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Conventional approach: If we assume that debt carries no market risk (has a beta of zero), the beta of equity alone can be written as a function of the unlevered beta and the debt-equity ratio L = u (1+ ((1-t)D/E))
In some versions, the tax effect is ignored and there is no (1-t) in the equation.
Debt Adjusted Approach: If beta carries market risk and you can estimate the beta of debt, you can estimate the levered beta as follows: L = u (1+ ((1-t)D/E)) - debt (1-t) (D/E) While the latter is more realistic, estimating betas for debt can be difcult to do.
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Bottom-up Betas
Step 1: Find the business or businesses that your firm operates in.
Possible Refinements
Step 2: Find publicly traded firms in each of these businesses and obtain their regression betas. Compute the simple average across these regression betas to arrive at an average beta for these publicly traded firms. Unlever this average beta using the average debt to equity ratio across the publicly traded firms in the sample. Unlevered beta for business = Average beta across publicly traded firms/ (1 + (1- t) (Average D/E ratio across firms))
If you can, adjust this beta for differences between your firm and the comparable firms on operating leverage and product characteristics.
Step 3: Estimate how much value your firm derives from each of the different businesses it is in.
While revenues or operating income are often used as weights, it is better to try to estimate the value of each business.
Step 4: Compute a weighted average of the unlevered betas of the different businesses (from step 2) using the weights from step 3. Bottom-up Unlevered beta for your firm = Weighted average of the unlevered betas of the individual business
If you expect the business mix of your firm to change over time, you can change the weights on a year-to-year basis. If you expect your debt to equity ratio to change over time, the levered beta will change over time.
Step 5: Compute a levered beta (equity beta) for your firm, using the market debt to equity ratio for your firm. Levered bottom-up beta = Unlevered beta (1+ (1-t) (Debt/Equity))
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The bottom-up beta can be adjusted to reect changes in the rms business mix and nancial leverage. Regression betas reect the past. You can estimate bottom-up betas even when you do not have historical stock ! prices. This is the case with initial public offerings, private businesses or divisions of companies.
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Levered Beta = Unlevered Beta ( 1 + (1- tax rate) (D/E Ratio) = 0.95 ( 1 + (1-.34) (.1895)) = 1.07
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Comparable Firms?
Can an unlevered beta estimated using U.S. and European aerospace companies be used to estimate the beta for a Brazilian aerospace company? Yes No What concerns would you have in making this assumption?
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Gross Debt Ratio for Embraer = 1953/11,042 = 18.95% Levered Beta using Gross Debt ratio = 1.07 Net Debt Ratio for Embraer = (Debt - Cash)/ Market value of Equity = (1953-2320)/ 11,042 = -3.32% Levered Beta using Net Debt Ratio = 0.95 (1 + (1-.34) (-.0332)) = 0.93 The cost of Equity using net debt levered beta for Embraer will be much lower than with the gross debt approach. The cost of capital for Embraer, though, will even out since the debt ratio used in the cost of capital equation will now be a net debt ratio rather than a gross debt ratio.
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Preferably, a bottom-up beta, based upon other firms in the business, and firms own financial leverage Cost of Equity = Riskfree Rate + Beta * (Risk Premium)
Has to be in the same currency as cash flows, and defined in same terms (real or nominal) as the cash flows
Historical Premium 1. Mature Equity Market Premium: Average premium earned by stocks over T.Bonds in U.S. 2. Country risk premium = Country Default Spread* ( !Equity/!Country bond)
or
Implied Premium Based on how equity market is priced today and a simple valuation model
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The cost of debt is the rate at which you can borrow at currently, It will reect not only your default risk but also the level of interest rates in the market. The two most widely used approaches to estimating cost of debt are:
Looking up the yield to maturity on a straight bond outstanding from the rm. The limitation of this approach is that very few rms have long term straight bonds that are liquid and widely traded Looking up the rating for the rm and estimating a default spread based upon the rating. While this approach is more robust, different bonds from the same rm can have different ratings. You have to use a median rating for the rm
When in trouble (either because you have no ratings or multiple ratings for a rm), estimate a synthetic rating for your rm and the cost of debt based upon that rating.
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The rating for a rm can be estimated using the nancial characteristics of the rm. In its simplest form, the rating can be estimated from the interest coverage ratio Interest Coverage Ratio = EBIT / Interest Expenses For Embraers interest coverage ratio, we used the interest expenses from 2003 and the average EBIT from 2001 to 2003. (The aircraft business was badly affected by 9/11 and its aftermath. In 2002 and 2003, Embraer reported signicant drops in operating income)
Interest Coverage Ratio = 462.1 /129.70 = 3.56
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Companies in countries with low bond ratings and high default risk might bear the burden of country default risk, especially if they are smaller or have all of their revenues within the country. Larger companies that derive a signicant portion of their revenues in global markets may be less exposed to country default risk. In other words, they may be able to borrow at a rate lower than the government.
The synthetic rating for Embraer is A-. Using the 2004 default spread of 1.00%, we estimate a cost of debt of 9.29% (using a riskfree rate of 4.29% and adding in two thirds of the country default spread of 6.01%): Cost of debt = Riskfree rate + 2/3(Brazil country default spread) + Company default spread =4.29% + 4.00%+ 1.00% = 9.29%
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The relationship between interest coverage ratios and ratings, developed using US companies, tends to travel well, as long as we are analyzing large manufacturing rms in markets with interest rates close to the US interest rate They are more problematic when looking at smaller companies in markets with higher interest rates than the US.
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The weights used to compute the cost of capital should be the market value weights for debt and equity. There is an element of circularity that is introduced into every valuation by doing this, since the values that we attach to the rm and equity at the end of the analysis are different from the values we gave them at the beginning. As a general rule, the debt that you should subtract from rm value to arrive at the value of equity should be the same debt that you used to compute the cost of capital.
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Equity
Cost of Equity = 4.29% + 1.07 (4%) + 0.27 (7.89%) = 10.70% Market Value of Equity =11,042 million BR ($ 3,781 million) Cost of debt = 4.29% + 4.00% +1.00%= 9.29% Market Value of Debt = 2,083 million BR ($713 million)
Debt
Cost of Capital Cost of Capital = 10.70 % (.84) + 9.29% (1- .34) (0.16)) = 9.97% The book value of equity at Embraer is 3,350 million BR. The book value of debt at Embraer is 1,953 million BR; Interest expense is 222 mil BR; Average maturity of debt = 4 years Estimated market value of debt = 222 million (PV of annuity, 4 years, 9.29%) + $1,953 million/1.09294 = 2,083 million BR
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If you had to do it.Converting a Dollar Cost of Capital to a Nominal Real Cost of Capital
Approach 1: Use a BR riskfree rate in all of the calculations above. For instance, if the BR riskfree rate was 12%, the cost of capital would be computed as follows:
Cost of Equity = 12% + 1.07(4%) + 0.27 (7.89%) = 18.41% Cost of Debt = 12% + 1% = 13% (This assumes the riskfree rate has no country risk premium embedded in it.)
Approach 2: Use the differential ination rate to estimate the cost of capital. For instance, if the ination rate in BR is 8% and the ination rate in the U.S. is 2% Cost of capital=
" 1+ Inflation % BR (1+ Cost of Capital$ )$ ' = 1.0997 (1.08/1.02)-1 =$ & 1+ Inflation 0.1644 or 16.44% #
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When dealing with hybrids (convertible bonds, for instance), break the security down into debt and equity and allocate the amounts accordingly. Thus, if a rm has $ 125 million in convertible debt outstanding, break the $125 million into straight debt and conversion option components. The conversion option is equity. When dealing with preferred stock, it is better to keep it as a separate component. The cost of preferred stock is the preferred dividend yield. (As a rule of thumb, if the preferred stock is less than 5% of the outstanding market value of the rm, lumping it in with debt will make no signicant impact on your valuation).
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Assume that the rm that you are analyzing has $125 million in face value of convertible debt with a stated interest rate of 4%, a 10 year maturity and a market value of $140 million. If the rm has a bond rating of A and the interest rate on A-rated straight bond is 8%, you can break down the value of the convertible bond into straight debt and equity portions.
Straight debt = (4% of $125 million) (PV of annuity, 10 years, 8%) + 125 million/1.0810 = $91.45 million Equity portion = $140 million - $91.45 million = $48.55 million
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Cost of borrowing should be based upon (1) synthetic or actual bond rating (2) default spread Cost of Borrowing = Riskfree rate + Default spread Cost of Capital = Cost of Equity (Equity/(Debt + Equity)) + Cost of Borrowing (1-t)
(Debt/(Debt + Equity))
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DCF Valuation
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If looking at cash ows to equity, consider the cash ows from net debt issues (debt issued - debt repaid)
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Net Income - (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) - Change in non-cash Working Capital - (Principal Repaid - New Debt Issues) - Preferred Dividend
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EBIT ( 1 - tax rate) - (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) - Change in Working Capital = Cash ow to the rm Where are the tax savings from interest payments in this cash ow?
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Firms history
Comparable Firms
Normalize Earnings
Measuring Earnings
Update - Trailing Earnings - Unofficial numbers
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I. Update Earnings
When valuing companies, we often depend upon nancial statements for inputs on earnings and assets. Annual reports are often outdated and can be updated by using Trailing 12-month data, constructed from quarterly earnings reports. Informal and unofcial news reports, if quarterly reports are unavailable.
Updating makes the most difference for smaller and more volatile rms, as well as for rms that have undergone signicant restructuring. Time saver: To get a trailing 12-month number, all you need is one 10K and one 10Q (example third quarter). Use the Year to date numbers from the 10Q:
Trailing 12-month Revenue = Revenues (in last 10K) - Revenues from rst 3 quarters of last year + Revenues from rst 3 quarters of this year.
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Make sure that there are no nancial expenses mixed in with operating expenses
Financial expense: Any commitment that is tax deductible that you have to meet no matter what your operating results: Failure to meet it leads to loss of control of the business. Example: Operating Leases: While accounting convention treats operating leases as operating expenses, they are really nancial expenses and need to be reclassied as such. This has no effect on equity earnings but does change the operating earnings
Make sure that there are no capital expenses mixed in with the operating expenses
Capital expense: Any expense that is expected to generate benets over multiple periods. R & D Adjustment: Since R&D is a capital expenditure (rather than an operating expense), the operating income has to be adjusted to reect its treatment.
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Operating Lease Expenses are treated as operating expenses in computing operating income. In reality, operating lease expenses should be treated as nancing expenses, with the following adjustments to earnings and capital: Debt Value of Operating Leases = Present value of Operating Lease Commitments at the pre-tax cost of debt When you convert operating leases into debt, you also create an asset to counter it of exactly the same value. Adjusted Operating Earnings
Adjusted Operating Earnings = Operating Earnings + Operating Lease Expenses Depreciation on Leased Asset As an approximation, this works: Adjusted Operating Earnings = Operating Earnings + Pre-tax cost of Debt * PV of Operating Leases.
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The Gap has conventional debt of about $ 1.97 billion on its balance sheet and its pre-tax cost of debt is about 6%. Its operating lease payments in the 2003 were $978 million and its commitments for the future are below:
Present Value (at 6%) $848.11 $752.94 $619.64 $473.67 $356.44 $1,346.04 $4,396.85 (Also value of leased asset)
Year Commitment (millions) 1 $899.00 2 $846.00 3 $738.00 4 $598.00 5 $477.00 6&7 $982.50 each year Debt Value of leases =
Debt outstanding at The Gap = $1,970 m + $4,397 m = $6,367 m Adjusted Operating Income = Stated OI + OL exp this year - Deprecn = $1,012 m + 978 m - 4397 m /7 = $1,362 million (7 year life for assets) Approximate OI = $1,012 m + $ 4397 m (.06) = $1,276 m
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Balance Sheet Off balance sheet (Not shown as debt or as an asset). Only the conventional debt of $1,970 million shows up on balance sheet Cost of capital = 8.20%(7350/9320) + 4% (1970/9320) = 7.31% Cost of equity for The Gap = 8.20% After-tax cost of debt = 4% Market value of equity = 7350 Return on capital = 1012 (1-.35)/(3130+1970) = 12.90%
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Accounting standards require us to consider R&D as an operating expense even though it is designed to generate future growth. It is more logical to treat it as capital expenditures. To capitalize R&D,
Specify an amortizable life for R&D (2 - 10 years) Collect past R&D expenses for as long as the amortizable life Sum up the unamortized R&D over the period. (Thus, if the amortizable life is 5 years, the research asset can be obtained by adding up 1/5th of the R&D expense from ve years ago, 2/5th of the R&D expense from four years ago...:
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Year R&D Expense Unamortized portion Amortization this year 1999 (current) 1594.00 1.00 1594.00 1998 1026.00 0.80 820.80 $205.20 1997 698.00 0.60 418.80 $139.60 1996 399.00 0.40 159.60 $79.80 1995 211.00 0.20 42.20 $42.20 1994 89.00 0.00 0.00 $17.80 Total $ 3,035.40 $ 484.60 Value of research asset = $ 3,035.4 million Amortization of research asset in 1998 = $ 484.6 million Adjustment to Operating Income = $ 1,594 million - 484.6 million = 1,109.4 million
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Balance Sheet Off balance sheet asset. Book value of equity at $11,722 million is understated because biggest asset is off the books. Capital Expenditures Conventional net cap ex of $98 million Cash Flows EBIT (1-t) = 2246 - Net Cap Ex = 98 FCFF = 2148 Return on capital = 2246/11722 (no debt) = 19.16%
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Though all rms may be governed by the same accounting standards, the delity that they show to these standards can vary. More aggressive rms will show higher earnings than more conservative rms. While you will not be able to catch outright fraud, you should look for warning signals in nancial statements and correct for them:
Income from unspecied sources - holdings in other businesses that are not revealed or from special purpose entities. Income from asset sales or nancial transactions (for a non-nancial rm) Sudden changes in standard expense items - a big drop in S,G &A or R&D expenses as a percent of revenues, for instance. Frequent accounting restatements
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Temporary Problems
Life Cycle related reasons: Young firms and firms with infrastructure problems
Leverage Problems: Eg. An otherwise healthy firm with too much debt.
Long-term Operating Problems: Eg. A firm with significant production or cost problems.
Normalize Earnings
Average Dollar Earnings (Net Income if Equity and EBIT if Firm made by the firm over time
Use firms average ROE (if valuing equity) or average ROC (if valuing firm) on current BV of equity (if ROE) or current BV of capital (if ROC)
Value the firm by doing detailed cash flow forecasts starting with revenues and reduce or eliminate the problem over time.: (a) If problem is structural: Target for operating margins of stable firms in the sector. (b) If problem is leverage: Target for a debt ratio that the firm will be comfortable with by end of period, which could be its own optimal or the industry average. (c) If problem is operating: Target for an industry-average operating margin.
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The tax rate that you should use in computing the after-tax operating income should be The effective tax rate in the nancial statements (taxes paid/Taxable income) The tax rate based upon taxes paid and EBIT (taxes paid/EBIT) The marginal tax rate for the country in which the company operates The weighted average marginal tax rate across the countries in which the company operates None of the above Any of the above, as long as you compute your after-tax cost of debt using the same tax rate
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The choice really is between the effective and the marginal tax rate. In doing projections, it is far safer to use the marginal tax rate since the effective tax rate is really a reection of the difference between the accounting and the tax books. By using the marginal tax rate, we tend to understate the after-tax operating income in the earlier years, but the after-tax tax operating income is more accurate in later years If you choose to use the effective tax rate, adjust the tax rate towards the marginal tax rate over time.
While an argument can be made for using a weighted average marginal tax rate, it is safest to use the marginal tax rate of the country
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Net capital expenditures represent the difference between capital expenditures and depreciation. Depreciation is a cash inow that pays for some or a lot (or sometimes all of) the capital expenditures. In general, the net capital expenditures will be a function of how fast a rm is growing or expecting to grow. High growth rms will have much higher net capital expenditures than low growth rms. Assumptions about net capital expenditures can therefore never be made independently of assumptions about growth in the future.
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Research and development expenses, once they have been re-categorized as capital expenses. The adjusted net cap ex will be
Adjusted Net Capital Expenditures = Net Capital Expenditures + Current years R&D expenses - Amortization of Research Asset
Acquisitions of other rms, since these are like capital expenditures. The adjusted net cap ex will be
Adjusted Net Cap Ex = Net Capital Expenditures + Acquisitions of other rms Amortization of such acquisitions Two caveats: 1. Most rms do not do acquisitions every year. Hence, a normalized measure of acquisitions (looking at an average over time) should be used 2. The best place to nd acquisitions is in the statement of cash ows, usually categorized under other investment activities
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In accounting terms, the working capital is the difference between current assets (inventory, cash and accounts receivable) and current liabilities (accounts payables, short term debt and debt due within the next year) A cleaner denition of working capital from a cash ow perspective is the difference between non-cash current assets (inventory and accounts receivable) and non-debt current liabilities (accounts payable) Any investment in this measure of working capital ties up cash. Therefore, any increases (decreases) in working capital will reduce (increase) cash ows in that period. When forecasting future growth, it is important to forecast the effects of such growth on working capital needs, and building these effects into the cash ows.
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Changes in non-cash working capital from year to year tend to be volatile. A far better estimate of non-cash working capital needs, looking forward, can be estimated by looking at non-cash working capital as a proportion of revenues Some rms have negative non-cash working capital. Assuming that this will continue into the future will generate positive cash ows for the rm. While this is indeed feasible for a period of time, it is not forever. Thus, it is better that non-cash working capital needs be set to zero, when it is negative.
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Revenues Non-cash WC % of Revenues Change from last year Average: last 3 years Average: industry Assumption in Valuation WC as % of Revenue 3.00%
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In the strictest sense, the only cash ow that an investor will receive from an equity investment in a publicly traded rm is the dividend that will be paid on the stock. Actual dividends, however, are set by the managers of the rm and may be much lower than the potential dividends (that could have been paid out)
managers are conservative and try to smooth out dividends managers like to hold on to cash to meet unforeseen future contingencies and investment opportunities
When actual dividends are less than potential dividends, using a model that focuses only on dividends will under state the true value of the equity in a rm.
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Some analysts assume that the earnings of a rm represent its potential dividends. This cannot be true for several reasons:
Earnings are not cash ows, since there are both non-cash revenues and expenses in the earnings calculation Even if earnings were cash ows, a rm that paid its earnings out as dividends would not be investing in new assets and thus could not grow Valuation models, where earnings are discounted back to the present, will over estimate the value of the equity in the rm
The potential dividends of a rm are the cash ows left over after the rm has made any investments it needs to make to create future growth and net debt repayments (debt repayments - new debt issues)
The common categorization of capital expenditures into discretionary and nondiscretionary loses its basis when there is future growth built into the valuation.
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Net Income - (1- ) (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) - (1- ) Working Capital Needs = Free Cash ow to Equity = Debt/Capital Ratio For this rm,
Proceeds from new debt issues = Principal Repayments + (Capital Expenditures Depreciation + Working Capital Needs)
In computing FCFE, the book value debt to capital ratio should be used when looking back in time but can be replaced with the market value debt to capital ratio, looking forward.
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Net Income=$ 1533 Million Capital spending = $ 1,746 Million Depreciation per Share = $ 1,134 Million Increase in non-cash working capital = $ 477 Million Debt to Capital Ratio = 23.83% Estimating FCFE (1997):
Net Income - (Cap. Exp - Depr)*(1-DR) Chg. Working Capital*(1-DR) = Free CF to Equity Dividends Paid $1,533 Mil $465.90 [(1746-1134)(1-.2383)] $363.33 [477(1-.2383)] $ 704 Million $ 345 Million
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In a discounted cash ow model, increasing the debt/equity ratio will generally increase the expected free cash ows to equity investors over future time periods and also the cost of equity applied in discounting these cash ows. Which of the following statements relating leverage to value would you subscribe to? Increasing leverage will increase value because the cash ow effects will dominate the discount rate effects Increasing leverage will decrease value because the risk effect will be greater than the cash ow effects Increasing leverage will not affect value because the risk effect will exactly offset the cash ow effect Any of the above, depending upon what company you are looking at and where it is in terms of current leverage
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DCF Valuation
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Look at fundamentals
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Year 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
EPS $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $
ln(EPS) -4.6052 -3.9120 -3.2189 -2.6593 -2.5257 -1.8326 -1.7148 -1.3863 -1.1394
EPS = -.066 + 0.0383 ( t): EPS grows by $0.0383 a year Growth Rate = $0.0383/$0.13 = 30.5% ($0.13: Average EPS from 91-99) ln(EPS) = -4.66 + 0.4212 (t): Growth rate approximately 42.12%
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A Test
You are trying to estimate the growth rate in earnings per share at Time Warner from 1996 to 1997. In 1996, the earnings per share was a decit of $0.05. In 1997, the expected earnings per share is $ 0.25. What is the growth rate? -600% +600% +120% Cannot be estimated
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When the earnings in the starting period are negative, the growth rate cannot be estimated. (0.30/-0.05 = -600%) There are three solutions:
Use the higher of the two numbers as the denominator (0.30/0.25 = 120%) Use the absolute value of earnings in the starting period as the denominator (0.30/0.05=600%) Use a linear regression model and divide the coefcient by the average earnings.
When earnings are negative, the growth rate is meaningless. Thus, while the growth rate can be estimated, it does not tell you much about the future.
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Year Net Prot Growth Rate 1990 1.80 1991 6.40 255.56% 1992 19.30 201.56% 1993 41.20 113.47% 1994 78.00 89.32% 1995 97.70 25.26% 1996 122.30 25.18% Geometric Average Growth Rate = 102%
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Year Net Prot 1996 $ 122.30 1997 $ 247.05 1998 $ 499.03 1999 $ 1,008.05 2000 $ 2,036.25 2001 $ 4,113.23 If net prot continues to grow at the same rate as it has in the past 6 years, the expected net income in 5 years will be $ 4.113 billion.
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While the job of an analyst is to nd under and over valued stocks in the sectors that they follow, a signicant proportion of an analysts time (outside of selling) is spent forecasting earnings per share.
Most of this time, in turn, is spent forecasting earnings per share in the next earnings report While many analysts forecast expected growth in earnings per share over the next 5 years, the analysis and information (generally) that goes into this estimate is far more limited.
Analyst forecasts of earnings per share and expected growth are widely disseminated by services such as Zacks and IBES, at least for U.S companies.
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Analysts forecasts of EPS tend to be closer to the actual EPS than simple time series models, but the differences tend to be small
Time Period Value Line Forecasts Value Line Forecasts Earnings Forecaster Analyst Forecast Error 31.7% 28.4% 16.4% Time Series Model 34.1% 32.2% 19.8%
Study Collins & Hopwood Brown & Rozeff Fried & Givoly
Forecasts of growth (and revisions thereof) tend to be highly correlated across analysts.
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Tunnel Vision: Becoming so focused on the sector and valuations within the sector that you lose sight of the bigger picture. Lemmingitis:Strong urge felt to change recommendations & revise earnings estimates when other analysts do the same. Stockholm Syndrome: Refers to analysts who start identifying with the managers of the rms that they are supposed to follow. Factophobia (generally is coupled with delusions of being a famous story teller): Tendency to base a recommendation on a story coupled with a refusal to face the facts. Dr. Jekyll/Mr.Hyde: Analyst who thinks his primary job is to bring in investment banking business to the rm.
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Proposition 1: There if far less private information and far more public information in most analyst forecasts than is generally claimed. Proposition 2: The biggest source of private information for analysts remains the company itself which might explain
why there are more buy recommendations than sell recommendations (information bias and the need to preserve sources) why there is such a high correlation across analysts forecasts and revisions why All-America analysts become better forecasters than other analysts after they are chosen to be part of the team.
Proposition 3: There is value to knowing what analysts are forecasting as earnings growth for a rm. There is, however, danger when they agree too much (lemmingitis) and when they agree to little (in which case the information that they have is so noisy as to be useless).
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= $ 12
Change in Earnings
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When looking at growth in earnings per share, these inputs can be cast as follows: Reinvestment Rate = Retained Earnings/ Current Earnings = Retention Ratio Return on Investment = ROE = Net Income/Book Value of Equity In the special case where the current ROE is expected to remain unchanged
gEPS
= Retained Earningst-1/ NIt-1 * ROE = Retention Ratio * ROE = b * ROE Proposition 1: The expected growth rate in earnings for a company cannot exceed its return on equity in the long term.
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Current Return on Equity = 15.79% Current Retention Ratio = 1 - DPS/EPS = 1 - 1.13/2.45 = 53.88% If ABN Amro can maintain its current ROE and retention ratio, its expected growth in EPS will be: Expected Growth Rate = 0.5388 (15.79%) = 8.51%
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Assume now that ABN Amros ROE next year is expected to increase to 17%, while its retention ratio remains at 53.88%. What is the new expected long term growth rate in earnings per share?
Will the expected growth rate in earnings per share next year be greater than, less than or equal to this estimate? greater than less than equal to
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When the ROE is expected to change, gEPS= b *ROEt+1 +(ROEt+1 ROEt)/ ROEt Proposition 2: Small changes in ROE translate into large changes in the expected growth rate.
The lower the current ROE, the greater the effect on growth of changes in the ROE.
Proposition 3: No rm can, in the long term, sustain growth in earnings per share from improvement in ROE.
Corollary: The higher the existing ROE of the company (relative to the business in which it operates) and the more competitive the business in which it operates, the smaller the scope for improvement in ROE.
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Assume now that ABNs expansion into Asia will push up the ROE to 17%, while the retention ratio will remain 53.88%. The expected growth rate in that year will be: gEPS = b *ROEt+1 + (ROEt+1 ROEt)/ ROEt =(.5388)(.17)+(.17-.1579)/(.1579) = 16.83% Note that 1.21% improvement in ROE translates into almost a doubling of the growth rate from 8.51% to 16.83%.
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ROE = ROC + D/E (ROC - i (1-t)) where, ROC = EBITt (1 - tax rate) / Book value of Capitalt-1 D/E = BV of Debt/ BV of Equity i = Interest Expense on Debt / BV of Debt t = Tax rate on ordinary income Note that Book value of capital = Book Value of Debt + Book value of Equity.
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Debt/Equity Ratio = (542+478)/1326 = 0.77 After-tax Cost of Debt = 8.25% (1-.32) = 5.61% (Real BR) Return on Equity = ROC + D/E (ROC - i(1-t))
19.91% + 0.77 (19.91% - 5.61%) = 30.92%
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Return on Capital = 713 (1-.25)/(1925+2378+1303) = 9.54% Debt/Equity Ratio = (2378 + 1303)/1925 = 1.91 After-tax Cost of Debt = 13.5% (1-.25) = 10.125% Return on Equity = ROC + D/E (ROC - i(1-t))
9.54% + 1.91 (9.54% - 10.125%) = 8.42%
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The limitation of the EPS fundamental growth equation is that it focuses on per share earnings and assumes that reinvested earnings are invested in projects earning the return on equity. A more general version of expected growth in earnings can be obtained by substituting in the equity reinvestment into real investments (net capital expenditures and working capital):
Equity Reinvestment Rate = (Net Capital Expenditures + Change in Working Capital) (1 - Debt Ratio)/ Net Income Expected GrowthNet Income = Equity Reinvestment Rate * ROE
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III. Expected Growth in EBIT And Fundamentals: Stable ROC and Reinvestment Rate
When looking at growth in operating income, the denitions are
Reinvestment Rate = (Net Capital Expenditures + Change in WC)/EBIT(1-t) Return on Investment = ROC = EBIT(1-t)/(BV of Debt + BV of Equity)
Reinvestment Rate and Return on Capital gEBIT = (Net Capital Expenditures + Change in WC)/EBIT(1-t) * ROC Reinvestment Rate * ROC Proposition: The net capital expenditure needs of a rm, for a given growth rate, should be inversely proportional to the quality of its investments.
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You are looking at a valuation, where the terminal value is based upon the assumption that operating income will grow 3% a year forever, but there are no net cap ex or working capital investments being made after the terminal year. When you confront the analyst, he contends that this is still feasible because the company is becoming more efcient with its existing assets and can be expected to increase its return on capital over time. Is this a reasonable explanation? Yes No Explain.
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Ciscos Fundamentals Reinvestment Rate = 106.81% Return on Capital =34.07% Expected Growth in EBIT =(1.0681)(.3407) = 36.39% Motorolas Fundamentals Reinvestment Rate = 52.99% Return on Capital = 12.18% Expected Growth in EBIT = (.5299)(.1218) = 6.45%
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When operating income is negative or margins are expected to change over time, we use a three step process to estimate growth:
Estimate growth rates in revenues over time
Use historical revenue growth to get estimates of revenue growth in the near future Decrease the growth rate as the rm becomes larger Keep track of absolute revenues to make sure that the growth is feasible
Estimate the capital that needs to be invested to generate revenue growth and expected margins
Estimate a sales to capital ratio that you will use to generate reinvestment needs each year.
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Industry average =
15%
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A publicly traded rm potentially has an innite life. The value is therefore the present value of cash ows forever.
t = ! CFt Value = " t t = 1 (1+ r)
Since we cannot estimate cash ows forever, we estimate cash ows for a growth period and then estimate a terminal value, to capture the value at the end of the period:
t = N CFt Terminal Value Value = ! + t (1 + r)N t = 1 (1 + r)
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When a rms cash ows grow at a constant rate forever, the present value of those cash ows can be written as:
Value = Expected Cash Flow Next Period / (r - g) where, r = Discount rate (Cost of Equity or Cost of Capital) g = Expected growth rate
This constant growth rate is called a stable growth rate and cannot be higher than the growth rate of the economy in which the rm operates. While companies can maintain high growth rates for extended periods, they will all approach stable growth at some point in time. When they do approach stable growth, the valuation formula above can be used to estimate the terminal value of all cash ows beyond.
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The stable growth rate cannot exceed the growth rate of the economy but it can be set lower.
If you assume that the economy is composed of high growth and stable growth rms, the growth rate of the latter will probably be lower than the growth rate of the economy. The stable growth rate can be negative. The terminal value will be lower and you are assuming that your rm will disappear over time. If you use nominal cashows and discount rates, the growth rate should be nominal in the currency in which the valuation is denominated.
One simple proxy for the nominal growth rate of the economy is the riskfree rate.
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Growth Patterns
A key assumption in all discounted cash ow models is the period of high growth, and the pattern of growth during that period. In general, we can make one of three assumptions:
there is no high growth, in which case the rm is already in stable growth there will be high growth for a period, at the end of which the growth rate will drop to the stable growth rate (2-stage) there will be high growth for a period, at the end of which the growth rate will decline gradually to a stable growth rate(3-stage) Each year will have different margins and different growth rates (n stage)
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Size of the rm
Success usually makes a rm larger. As rms become larger, it becomes much more difcult for them to maintain high growth rates While past growth is not always a reliable indicator of future growth, there is a correlation between current growth and future growth. Thus, a rm growing at 30% currently probably has higher growth and a longer expected growth period than one growing 10% a year now. Ultimately, high growth comes from high project returns, which, in turn, comes from barriers to entry and differential advantages. The question of how long growth will last and how high it will be can therefore be framed as a question about what the barriers to entry are, how long they will stay up and how strong they will remain.
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The growth rate of a rm is driven by its fundamentals - how much it reinvests and how high project returns are. As growth rates approach stability, the rm should be given the characteristics of a stable growth rm. Model High Growth Firms usually Stable growth rms usually DDM 1. Pay no or low dividends 1. Pay high dividends 2. Have high risk 2. Have average risk 3. Earn high ROC 3. Earn ROC closer to WACC FCFE/ 1. Have high net cap ex 1. Have lower net cap ex FCFF 2. Have high risk 2. Have average risk 3. Earn high ROC 3. Earn ROC closer to WACC 4. Have low leverage 4. Have leverage closer to industry average
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The soundest way of estimating reinvestment rates in stable growth is to relate them to expected growth and returns on capital: Reinvestment Rate = Growth in Operating Income/ROC For instance, Cisco is expected to be in stable growth 13 years from now, growing at 5% a year and earning a return on capital of 16.52% (which is the industry average). The reinvestment rate in year 13 can be estimated as follows: Reinvestment Rate = 5%/16.52% = 30.27% If you are consistent about estimating reinvestment rates, you will nd that it is not the stable growth rate that drives your value but your excess returns. If your return on capital is equal to your cost of capital, your terminal value will be unaffected by your stable growth assumption.
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(a) For rms which pay dividends (and repurchase stock) which are close to the Free Cash Flow to Equity (over a extended period) (b)For rms where FCFE are difcult to estimate (Example: Banks and Financial Service companies) (a) For rms which pay dividends which are signicantly higher or lower than the Free Cash Flow to Equity. (What is signicant? ... As a rule of thumb, if dividends are less than 80% of FCFE or dividends are greater than 110% of FCFE over a 5year period, use the FCFE model) (b) For rms where dividends are not available (Example: Private Companies, IPOs)
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What currency should the discount rate (risk free rate) be in?
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If your rm is
large and growing at a rate close to or less than growth rate of the economy, or constrained by regulation from growing at rate faster than the economy has the characteristics of a stable rm (average risk & reinvestment rates) Use a Stable Growth Model is large & growing at a moderate rate ( Overall growth rate + 10%) or has a single product & barriers to entry with a nite life (e.g. patents)
If your rm
If your rm
is small and growing at a very high rate (> Overall growth rate + 10%) or has signicant barriers to entry into the business has rm characteristics that are very different from the norm
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Choose a
Cash Flow Dividends Expected Dividends to Stockholders Cashflows to Equity Net Income Cashflows to Firm EBIT (1- tax rate) - (Capital Exp. - Deprecn) - Change in Work. Capital - (1- !) Change in Work. Capital = Free Cash flow to Equity (FCFE) = Free Cash flow to Firm (FCFF) - (1- !) (Capital Exp. - Deprecn) [! = Debt Ratio] & A Discount Rate Cost of Equity Cost of Capital WACC = ke ( E/ (D+E)) + kd ( D/(D+E)) kd = Current Borrowing Rate (1-t) E,D: Mkt Val of Equity and Debt
Three-Stage Growth g
Basis: The riskier the investment, the greater is the cost of equity. Models: CAPM: Riskfree Rate + Beta (Risk Premium) APM: Riskfree Rate + " Betaj (Risk Premiumj): n factors
Stable Growth g g Two-Stage Growth
| Transition Stable
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The simplest and most direct way of dealing with cash and marketable securities is to keep it out of the valuation - the cash ows should be before interest income from cash and securities, and the discount rate should not be contaminated by the inclusion of cash. (Use betas of the operating assets alone to estimate the cost of equity). Once the rm has been valued, add back the value of cash and marketable securities and subtract out gross debt. (This is also equivalent to subtracting out net debt)
If you have a particularly incompetent management, with a history of overpaying on acquisitions, markets may discount the value of this cash.
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Implicitly, we are assuming here that the market will value cash at face value. Assume now that you are buying a rm whose only asset is marketable securities worth $ 100 million. Can you ever consider a scenario where you would not be willing to pay $ 100 million for this rm? Yes No What is or are the scenario(s)?
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Closed end funds are mutual funds, with a xed number of shares. Unlike regular mutual funds, where the shares have to trade at net asset value (which is the value of the securities in the fund), closed end funds shares can and often do trade at prices which are different from the net asset value. The average closed end fund has always traded at a discount on net asset value (of between 10 and 20%) in the United States.
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0 Discount Discount: Discount: Discount: Discount: Discount: Premium: Premium: Premium: Premium: Premium: Premium > 15% 10-15% 7.5-10% 5-7.5% 2.5-5% 0-2.5% 0-2.5% 2.5-5% 5-7.5% 7.5-10% 10-15% > 15% Discount or Premium on NAV
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Assume that you have a closed-end fund that invests in average risk stocks. Assume also that you expect the market (average risk investments) to make 11.5% annually over the long term. If the closed end fund underperforms the market by 0.50%, estimate the discount on the fund.
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Some closed end funds trade at a premium on net asset value. For instance, the Thai closed end funds were trading at a premium of roughly 40% on net asset value and the Indonesian fund at a premium of 80%+ on NAV on December 31, 1997. Why might an investor be willing to pay a premium over the value of the marketable securities in the fund?
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Berkshire Hathaway
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Assume that you have valued Company A using consolidated nancials for $ 1 billion (using FCFF and cost of capital) and that the rm has $ 200 million in debt. How much is the equity in Company A worth? Now assume that you are told that Company A owns 10% of Company B and that the holdings are accounted for as passive holdings. If the market cap of company B is $ 500 million, how much is the equity in Company A worth? Now add on the assumption that Company A owns 60% of Company C and that the holdings are fully consolidated. The minority interest in company C is recorded at $ 40 million in Company As balance sheet. How much is the equity in Company A worth?
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Step 1: Value the parent company without any cross holdings. This will require using unconsolidated nancial statements rather than consolidated ones. Step 2: Value each of the cross holdings individually. (If you use the market values of the cross holdings, you will build in errors the market makes in valuing them into your valuation. Step 3: The nal value of the equity in the parent company with N cross holdings will be:
Value of un-consolidated parent company Debt of un-consolidated parent company +
j= N
Debt of Company j)
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For majority holdings, with full consolidation, convert the minority interest from book value to market value by applying a price to book ratio (based upon the sector average for the subsidiary) to the minority interest.
Estimated market value of minority interest = Minority interest on balance sheet * Price to Book ratio for sector (of subsidiary) Subtract this from the estimated value of the consolidated rm to get to value of the equity in the parent company.
For minority holdings in other companies, convert the book value of these holdings (which are reported on the balance sheet) into market value by multiplying by the price to book ratio of the sector(s). Add this value on to the value of the operating assets to arrive at total rm value.
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Any options issued by a rm, whether to management or employees or to investors (convertibles and warrants) create claims on the equity of the rm. By creating claims on the equity, they can affect the value of equity per share. Failing to fully take into account this claim on the equity in valuation will result in an overstatement of the value of equity per share.
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It is true that options can increase the number of shares outstanding but dilution per se is not the problem. Options affect equity value because
Shares are issued at below the prevailing market price. Options get exercised only when they are in the money. Alternatively, the company can use cashows that would have been available to equity investors to buy back shares which are then used to meet option exercise. The lower cashows reduce equity value.
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A simple example
XYZ company has $ 100 million in free cashows to the rm, growing 3% a year in perpetuity and a cost of capital of 8%. It has 100 million shares outstanding and $ 1 billion in debt. Its value can be written as follows:
Value of rm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000 - Debt = 1000 = Equity = 1000 Value per share = 1000/100 = $10
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XYZ decides to give 10 million options at the money (with a strike price of $10) to its CEO. What effect will this have on the value of equity per share?
a) None. The options are not in-the-money. b) Decrease by 10%, since the number of shares could increase by 10 million c) Decrease by less than 10%. The options will bring in cash into the rm but they have time value.
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The simplest way of dealing with options is to try to adjust the denominator for shares that will become outstanding if the options get exercised. In the example cited, this would imply the following:
Value of rm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000 - Debt = 1000 = Equity = 1000 Number of diluted shares = 110 Value per share = 1000/110 = $9.09
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The diluted approach fails to consider that exercising options will bring in cash into the rm. Consequently, they will overestimate the impact of options and understate the value of equity per share. The degree to which the approach will understate value will depend upon how high the exercise price is relative to the market price. In cases where the exercise price is a fraction of the prevailing market price, the diluted approach will give you a reasonable estimate of value per share.
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The treasury stock approach adds the proceeds from the exercise of options to the value of the equity before dividing by the diluted number of shares outstanding. In the example cited, this would imply the following:
Value of rm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000 - Debt = 1000 = Equity = 1000 Number of diluted shares = 110 Proceeds from option exercise = 10 * 10 = 100 (Exercise price = 10) Value per share = (1000+ 100)/110 = $ 10
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The treasury stock approach fails to consider the time premium on the options. In the example used, we are assuming that an at the money option is essentially worth nothing. The treasury stock approach also has problems with out-of-the-money options. If considered, they can increase the value of equity per share. If ignored, they are treated as non-existent.
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Step 1: Value the rm, using discounted cash ow or other valuation models. Step 2:Subtract out the value of the outstanding debt to arrive at the value of equity. Alternatively, skip step 1 and estimate the of equity directly. Step 3:Subtract out the market value (or estimated market value) of other equity claims:
Value of Warrants = Market Price per Warrant * Number of Warrants : Alternatively estimate the value using option pricing model Value of Conversion Option = Market Value of Convertible Bonds - Value of Straight Debt Portion of Convertible Bonds Value of employee Options: Value using the average exercise price and maturity.
Step 4:Divide the remaining value of equity by the number of shares outstanding to get value per share.
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Option pricing models can be used to value employee options with four caveats
Employee options are long term, making the assumptions about constant variance and constant dividend yields much shakier, Employee options result in stock dilution, and Employee options are often exercised before expiration, making it dangerous to use European option pricing models. Employee options cannot be exercised until the employee is vested.
These problems can be partially alleviated by using an option pricing model, allowing for shifts in variance and early exercise, and factoring in the dilution effect. The resulting value can be adjusted for the probability that the employee will not be vested.
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Stock Price = $ 10 Strike Price = $ 10 Maturity = 10 years Standard deviation in stock price = 40% Riskless Rate = 4%
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Using the value per call of $5.42, we can now estimate the value of equity per share after the option grant:
Value of rm = 100 / (.08-.03) - Debt = Equity - Value of options granted = Value of Equity in stock = $945.8 / Number of shares outstanding = Value per share = 2000 = 1000 = 1000 = $ 54.2 / 100 = $ 9.46
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In the example above, we have assumed that the options do not provide any tax advantages. To the extent that the exercise of the options creates tax advantages, the actual cost of the options will be lower by the tax savings. One simple adjustment is to multiply the value of the options by (1- tax rate) to get an after-tax option cost.
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Assume now that this rm intends to continue granting options each year to its top management as part of compensation. These expected option grants will also affect value. The simplest mechanism for bringing in future option grants into the analysis is to do the following:
Estimate the value of options granted each year over the last few years as a percent of revenues. Forecast out the value of option grants as a percent of revenues into future years, allowing for the fact that as revenues get larger, option grants as a percent of revenues will become smaller. Consider this line item as part of operating expenses each year. This will reduce the operating margin and cashow each year.
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The effect on value will be magnied if companies are allowed to revisit option grants and reset the exercise price if the stock price moves down.
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The Volatility Effect: Options increase in value as volatility increases, while rm value and stock price may decrease. Managers who are compensated primarily with options may have an incentive to take on far more risk than warranted. The Price Effect: Managers will avoid any action (even ones that make sense) that reduce the stock price. For example, dividends will be viewed with disfavor since the stock price drops on the ex-dividend day. The Short-term Effect: To the extent that options can be exercised quickly and prots cashed in, there can be a temptation to manipulate information for short term price gain (Earnings announcements)
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The accounting treatment of options has been abysmal and has led to the misuse of options by corporate boards. Accountants have treated the granting of options to be a non-issue and kept the focus on the exercise. Thus, there is no expense recorded at the time of the option grant (though the footnotes reveal the details of the grant). Even when the options are exercised, there is no uniformity in the way that they are are accounted for. Some rms show the difference between the stock price and the exercise price as an expense whereas others reduce the book value of equity.
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In 2005, the accounting rules governing options will change dramatically. Firms will be required to value options when granted and show them as expenses when granted. They will be allowed to revisit these expenses and adjust them for subsequent non-exercise of the options.
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The managers of technology rms, who happen to be the prime beneciaries of these options, have greeted these rule changes with the predictable complaints which include:
These options cannot be valued precisely until they are exercised. Forcing rms to value options and expense them will just result in in imprecise earnings. Firms will have to go back and restate earnings when options are exercised or expire. Firms may be unwilling to use options as liberally as they have in the past because they will affect earnings.
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A key test of whether markets are already incorporating the effect of options into the stock price will occur when all rms expense options. If markets are blind to the option overhang, you can expect the stock prices of companies that grant options to drop when options are expensed. The more likely scenario is that the market is already incorporating options into the market value but is not discriminating very well across companies. Consequently, companies that use options disproportionately, relative to their peer groups, should see stock prices decline.
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Valuations
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Companies Valued
Company Con Ed ABN Amro S&P 500 Nestle Tsingtao DaimlerChrysler Tube Investments Embraer Global Crossing Amazon.com Model Used Stable DDM 2-Stage DDM 2-Stage DDM 2-Stage FCFE 3-Stage FCFE Stable FCFF 2-stage FCFF 2-stage FCFF 2-stage FCFF n-stage FCFF Remarks Dividends=FCFE, Stable D/E, Low g FCFE=?, Regulated D/E, g>Stable Collectively, market is an investment DividendsFCFE, Stable D/E, High g DividendsFCFE, Stable D/E,High g Normalized Earnings; Stable Sector The value of growth? Emerging Market company (not) Dealing with Distress Varying margins over time
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General Information
The risk premium that I will be using in the latest valuations for mature equity markets is 4%. This is the average implied equity risk premium from 1960 to 2003 as well as the average historical premium across the top 15 equity markets in the twentieth century. For the valuations from 1998 and earlier, I use a risk premium of 5.5%.
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The rm is in stable growth; based upon size and the area that it serves. Its rates are also regulated; It is unlikely that the regulators will allow prots to grow at extraordinary rates. Firm Characteristics are consistent with stable, DDM model rm
The beta is 0.80 and has been stable over time. The rm is in stable leverage. The rm pays out dividends that are roughly equal to FCFE.
Average Annual FCFE between 1999 and 2004 = $635 million Average Annual Dividends between 1999 and 2004 = $ 624 million Dividends as % of FCFE = 98%
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Earnings per share for 2004 = $ 2.72 (Fourth quarter estimate used) Dividend Payout Ratio over 2004 = 83.06% Dividends per share for 2004 = $2.26 Expected Growth Rate in Earnings and Dividends =2% Con Ed Beta = 0.80 (Bottom-up beta estimate) Cost of Equity = 4.22% + 0.80*4% = 7.42% Value of Equity per Share = $2.26*1.02 / (.0742 -.02) = $ 42.53 The stock was trading at $ 43.42 on December 31, 2004
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To estimate the implied growth rate in Con Eds current stock price, we set the market price equal to the value, and solve for the growth rate:
Price per share = $ 43.42 = $2.26*(1+g) / (.0742 -g) Implied growth rate = 2.11%
Given its retention ratio of 16.94% and its return on equity in 2003 of 10%, the fundamental growth rate for Con Ed is: Fundamental growth rate = (.1694*.10) = 1.69% You could also frame the question in terms of a break-even return on equity.
Break even Return on equity = g/ Retention ratio = .0211/.1694 = 12.45%
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When you do any valuation, there are three possibilities. The rst is that you are right and the market is wrong. The second is that the market is right and that you are wrong. The third is that you are both wrong. In an efcient market, which is the most likely scenario?
Assume that you invest in a misvalued rm, and that you are right and the market is wrong. Will you denitely prot from your investment? Yes No
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As a nancial service institution, estimating FCFE or FCFF is very difcult. The expected growth rate based upon the current return on equity of 16% and a retention ratio of 51% is 8.2%. This is higher than what would be a stable growth rate (roughly 4% in Euros)
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Market Inputs
Long Term Riskfree Rate (in Euros) = 4.35% Risk Premium = 4% (U.S. premium : Netherlands is AAA rated)
Current Earnings Per Share = 1.85 Eur; Current DPS = 0.90 Eur; Variable High Growth Phase Stable Growth Phase Length 5 years Forever after yr 5 Return on Equity 16.00% 8.35% (Set = Cost of equity) Payout Ratio 48.65% 52.10% (1 - 4/8.35) Retention Ratio 51.35% 47.90% (b=g/ROE=4/8.35) Expected growth .16*.5135=..0822 4% (Assumed) Beta 0.95 1.00 Cost of Equity 4.35%+0.95(4%) 4.35%+1.00(4%) =8.15% = 8.35%
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ROE = 16%
g =4%: ROE = 8.35%(=Cost of equity) Beta = 1.00 Payout = (1- 4/8.35) = .521
Terminal Value= EPS6*Payout/(r-g) = (2.86*.521)/(.0835-.04) = 34.20 2.17 Eur 1.05 Eur 2.34Eur 1.14 Eur 2.54 Eur 1.23 Eur 2.75 Eur 1.34 Eur ......... Forever Discount at Cost of Equity
Beta 0.95
Risk Premium 4%
Mature Market 4%
Country Risk 0%
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In any valuation model, it is possible to extract the portion of the value that can be attributed to growth, and to break this down further into that portion attributable to high growth and the portion attributable to stable growth. In the case of the 2-stage DDM, this can be accomplished as follows:
t=n t=1
P0 =
DPS0 r
Value of Stable Growth Place DPSt = Expected dividends per share in year t r = Cost of Equity Pn = Price at the end of year n gn = Growth rate forever after year n
Assets in
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While markets overall generally do not grow faster than the economies in which they operate, there is reason to believe that the earnings at U.S. companies (which have outpaced nominal GNP growth over the last 5 years) will continue to do so in the next 5 years. The consensus estimate of growth in earnings (from Zacks) is roughly 8% (with top-down estimates) Though it is possible to estimate FCFE for many of the rms in the S&P 500, it is not feasible for several (nancial service rms). The dividends during the year should provide a reasonable (albeit conservative) estimate of the cash ows to equity investors from buying the index.
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General Inputs
Long Term Government Bond Rate = 4.22% Risk Premium for U.S. Equities = 4% Current level of the Index = 1211.92
Inputs for the Valuation High Growth Phase 5 years 1.60% 8.5% 1.00 Stable Growth Phase Forever after year 5 1.60% 4.22% (Nominal g) 1.00
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Expected Dividends = Expected Terminal Value = Present Value = Intrinsic Value of Index =
Cost of Equity = 4.22% + 1(4%) = 8.22% Terminal Value = 29.18*1.0422/(.0822 -.0422) = 760.28
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The index is at 1212, while the model valuation comes in at 610. This indicates that one or more of the following has to be true.
The dividend discount model understates the value because dividends are less than FCFE. The expected growth in earnings over the next 5 years will be much higher than 8%. The risk premium used in the valuation (4%) is too high The market is overvalued.
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estimated the free cashows to equity for each rm in the index and averaged the free cashow to equity as a percent of market cap. The average FCFE yield for the index was about 2.90% in 2004. With these inputs in the model:
Expected Dividends & Buybacks = Expected Terminal Value = Present Value = Intrinsic Value of Index = 1 $38.14 $35.24 $1,104.80 2 $41.38 $35.33 3 $44.89 $35.42 4 $48.71 $35.51 5 $52.85 $1,377.02 $963.29
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Earnings per share at the rm has grown about 5% a year for the last 5 years, but the fundamentals at the rm suggest growth in EPS of about 11%. (Analysts are also forecasting a growth rate of 12% a year for the next 5 years) Nestle has a debt to capital ratio of about 37.6% and is unlikely to change that leverage materially. (How do I know? I do not. I am just making an assumption.) Like many large European rms, Nestle has paid less in dividends than it has available in FCFE.
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General Inputs
Long Term Government Bond Rate (Sfr) = 4% Current EPS = 108.88 Sfr; Current Revenue/share =1,820 Sfr Capital Expenditures/Share=114.2 Sfr; Depreciation/Share=73.8 Sfr High Growth Stable Growth Length 5 years Forever after yr 5 Beta 0.85 0.85 Return on Equity 23.63% 16% Retention Ratio 65.10% (Current) NA Expected Growth 23.63%*.651= 15.38% 4.00% WC/Revenues 9.30% (Existing) 9.30% (Grow with earnings) Debt Ratio 37.60% 37.60% Cap Ex/Deprecn Current Ratio 150%
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Nestle: Valuation
1 $125.63 $29.07 $16.25 $80.31 $74.04 2 $144.95 $33.54 $18.75 $92.67 $78.76 3 $167.25 $38.70 $21.63 $106.92 $83.78 4 $192.98 $44.65 $24.96 $123.37 $89.12 5 $222.66 $51.52 $28.79 $142.35 $94.7
Earnings per Share in year 6 = 222.66(1.04) = 231.57 Net Capital Ex 6 = Deprecnn6 * 0.50 =73.8(1.1538)5(1.04)(.5)= 78.5 Sfr Chg in WC6 =( Rev6 - Rev5 )(.093) = 1820(1.1538)5(.04)(.093)=13.85 Sfr FCFE6 = 231.57 - 78.5(1-.376) - 13.85(1-.376)= 173.93 Sfr Terminal Value per Share = 173.93/(.0847-.04) = 3890.16 Sfr Value=$74.04 + $78.76 + $83.78 + $89.12 + $94.7 + 3890/(1.0847)5=3011Sf
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Cashflow to Equity Net Income 108.88 - (Cap Ex - Depr) (1- DR) 25.19 - Change in WC (!-DR) 4.41 = FCFE 79.28
Firm is in stable growth: g=4%; Beta=0.85; Cap Ex/Deprec=150% Debt ratio stays 37.6%
80.31 Sfr
92.67 Sfr
Beta 0.85
Market D/E=11%
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No valuation is timeless. Each of the inputs to the model are susceptible to change as new information comes out about the rm, its competitors and the overall economy.
Market Wide Information
Interest Rates Risk Premiums Economic Growth
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Assume that Nestle makes an earnings announcement which includes two pieces of news:
The earnings per share come in lower than expected. The base year earnings per share will be 105.5 Sfr instead of 108.8 Sfr. Increased competition in its markets is putting downward pressure on the net prot margin. The after-tax margin, which was 5.98% in the previous analysis, is expected to shrink to 5.79%. The drop in earnings will make the projected earnings and cash ows lower, even if the growth rate remains the same The drop in net margin will make the return on equity lower (assuming turnover ratios remain unchanged). This will reduce expected growth.
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Cashflow to Equity Net Income 105.50 - (Cap Ex - Depr) (1- DR) 25.19 - Change in WC (!-DR) 4.41 = FCFE 75.90
Firm is in stable growth: g=4%; Beta=0.85; Cap Ex/Deprec=150% Debt ratio stays 37.6%
76.48 Sfr
88.04 Sfr
Beta 0.85
Market D/E=11%
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Why three stage? Tsingtao is a small rm serving a huge and growing market China, in particular, and the rest of Asia, in general. The rms current return on equity is low, and we anticipate that it will improve over the next 5 years. As it increases, earnings growth will be pushed up. Why FCFE? Corporate governance in China tends to be weak and dividends are unlikely to reect free cash ow to equity. In addition, the rm consistently funds a portion of its reinvestment needs with new debt issues.
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Background Information
In 2000, Tsingtao Breweries earned 72.36 million CY(Chinese Yuan) in net income on a book value of equity of 2,588 million CY, giving it a return on equity of 2.80%. The rm had capital expenditures of 335 million CY and depreciation of 204 million CY during the year. The working capital changes over the last 4 years have been volatile, and we normalize the change using non-cash working capital as a percent of revenues in 2000:
Normalized change in non-cash working capital = (Non-cash working capital2000/ Revenues 2000) (Revenuess 2000 Revenues1999) = (180/2253)*( 2253-1598) = 52.3 million CY Normalized Reinvestment = Capital expenditures Depreciation + Normalized Change in non-cash working capital = 335 - 204 + 52.3= 183.3 million CY
As with working capital, debt issues have been volatile. We estimate the rms book debt to capital ratio of 40.94% at the end of 1999 and use it to estimate the normalized equity reinvestment in 2000.
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Length Beta 0.75 Risk Premium ROE Equity Reinv. Expected Growth We wil asssume that
Transition Phase 5 years 0.80 --> 12%->20% Moves to 50% Moves to 10%
Equity Reinvestment Ratio= Reinvestment (1- Debt Ratio) / Net Income = = 183.3 (1-.4094) / 72.36 = 149.97% Expected growth rate- next 5 years = Equity reinvestment rate * ROENew+ [1+ (ROE5-ROEtoday)/ROEtoday]1/5-1 = 1.4997 *.12 + [(1+ (.12-.028)/.028)1/5-1] = 44.91%
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Equity Year Expected Growth Net Income Reinvestment Rate Current 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 44.91% 44.91% 44.91% 44.91% 44.91% 37.93% 30.94% 23.96% 16.98% 10.00% CY72.36 CY104.85 CY151.93 CY220.16 CY319.03 CY462.29 CY637.61 CY834.92 CY1,034.98 CY1,210.74 CY1,331.81 149.97% 149.97% 149.97% 149.97% 149.97% 149.97% 129.98% 109.98% 89.99% 69.99% 50.00% (CY52.40) (CY75.92) (CY110.02) (CY159.43) (CY231.02) (CY191.14) (CY83.35) CY103.61 CY363.29 CY665.91 14.71% 14.71% 14.71% 14.71% 14.71% 14.56% 14.41% 14.26% 14.11% 13.96% (CY45.68) (CY57.70) (CY72.89) (CY92.08) (CY116.32) (CY84.01) (CY32.02) CY34.83 CY107.04 CY172.16 ($186.65) FCFE Cost of Equity Present Value
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Expected stable growth rate =10% Equity reinvestment rate in stable growth = 50% Cost of equity in stable growth = 13.96% Expected FCFE in year 11 = Net Income11*(1- Stable period equity reinvestment rate) = CY 1331.81 (1.10)(1-.5) = CY 732.50 million Terminal Value of equity in Tsingtao Breweries = FCFE11/(Stable period cost of equity Stable growth rate) = 732.5/(.1396-.10) = CY 18,497 million
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Tsingtao: Valuation
Value of Equity
= PV of FCFE during the high growth period + PV of terminal value =-CY186.65+CY18,497/(1.14715*1.1456*1.1441*1.1426*1.1411*1.1396) = CY 4,596 million
Value of Equity per share = Value of Equity/ Number of Shares = CY 4,596/653.15 = CY 7.04 per share The stock was trading at 10.10 Yuan per share, which would make it overvalued, based upon this valuation.
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Aswath Damodaran
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In 1999, Daimler Chrysler had earnings before interest and taxes of 9,324 million DM and had an effective tax rate of 46.94%. Based upon this operating income and the book values of debt and equity as of 1998, DaimlerChrysler had an after-tax return on capital of 7.15%. The market value of equity is 62.3 billion DM, while the estimated market value of debt is 64.5 billion The bottom-up unlevered beta for automobile rms is 0.61, and Daimler is AAA rated. The long term German bond rate is 4.87% (in DM) and the mature market premium of 4% is used. We will assume that the rm will maintain a long term growth rate of 3%.
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Estimating FCFF
Expected EBIT (1-t) = 9324 (1.03) (1-.4694) = Expected Reinvestment needs = 5,096(.42) = Expected FCFF next year = 5,096 mil DM 2,139 mil DM 2,957 mil DM 112,847 mil DM 18,068 mil DM 130,915 mil DM 64,488 mil DM 66,427 mil DM
Valuation of Firm
Value of operating assets = 2957 / (.056-.03) = + Cash + Marketable Securities = Value of Firm = - Debt Outstanding = Value of Equity =
Value per Share = 72.7 DM per share Stock was trading at 62.2 DM per share on June 1, 2000
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In discounting FCFF, we use the cost of capital, which is calculated using the market values of equity and debt. We then use the present value of the FCFF as our value for the rm and derive an estimated value for equity. Is there circular reasoning here? Yes No If there is, can you think of a way around this problem?
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Tube Investment: Rationale for Using 2-Stage FCFF Model June 2000
Tube Investments is a diversied manufacturing rm in India. While its growth rate has been anemic, there is potential for high growth over the next 5 years. The rms nancing policy is also in a state of ux as the family running the rm reassesses its policy of funding the rm.
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Beta 1.17
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In estimating terminal value for Tube Investments, I used a stable growth rate of 5%. If I used a 7% stable growth rate instead, what would my terminal value be? (Assume that the cost of capital and return on capital remain unchanged.)
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The rm is considering changes in the way in which it invests, which management believes will increase the return on capital to 12.20% on just new investments (and not on existing investments) over the next 5 years. The value of the rm will be higher, because of higher expected growth.
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Beta 1.17
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If Tube Investments is also able to increase the return on capital on existing assets to 12.20% from 9.20%, its value will increase even more. The expected growth rate over the next 5 years will then have a second component arising from improving returns on existing assets: Expected Growth Rate = .122*.60 +{ (1+(.122-.092)/.092)1/5-1} =.1313 or 13.13%
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Improvement on existing assets { (1+(.122-.092)/.092) 1/5-1} Stable Growth g = 5%; Beta = 1.00; Debt ratio = 44.2% Country Premium= 3% ROC=12.22% Reinvestment Rate= 40.98%
Terminal Value 5= 5081/(.1478-.05) = 51,956 Firm Value: + Cash: - Debt: =Equity -Options Value/Share 31,829 13,653 18,073 27,409 0 111.3 Term Yr 8,610 3,529 5,081
Beta 1.17
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We will use a 2-stage FCFF model to value Embraer to allow for maximum exibility. High Growth Stable Growth
Beta Lambda Counry risk premium Debt Ratio Return on Capital Cost of Capital Expected Growth Rate Reinvestment Rate 1.07 0.27 7.67% 15.93% 21.85% 9.81% 5.48% 25.04% 1.00 0.27 5.00% 15.93% 8.76% 8.76% 4.17% 4.17%/8.76% = 47.62%
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Avg Reinvestment rate = 25.08% Current Cashflow to Firm EBIT(1-t) : $ 404 - Nt CpX 23 - Chg WC 9 = FCFF $ 372 Reinvestment Rate = 32/404= 7.9%
Return on Capital 21.85% Stable Growth g = 4.17%; Beta = 1.00; Country Premium= 5% Cost of capital = 8.76% ROC= 8.76%; Tax rate=34% Reinvestment Rate=g/ROC =4.17/8.76= 47.62% Terminal Value5= 288/(.0876-.0417) = 6272
$ Cashflows Op. Assets $ 5,272 + Cash: 795 - Debt 717 - Minor. Int. 12 =Equity 5,349 -Options 28 Value/Share $7.47 R$ 21.75 Year EBIT(1-t) - Reinvestment = FCFF 1 426 107 319 2 449 113 336 3 474 119 355
Beta 1.07
Lambda 0.27
Country Equity Risk Premium 7.67% Rel Equity Mkt Vol 1.28
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Aswath Damodaran
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A DCF valuation values a rm as a going concern. If there is a signicant likelihood of the rm failing before it reaches stable growth and if the assets will then be sold for a value less than the present value of the expected cashows (a distress sale value), DCF valuations will understate the value of the rm. Value of Equity= DCF value of equity (1 - Probability of distress) + Distress sale value of equity (Probability of distress) There are three ways in which we can estimate the probability of distress:
Use the bond rating to estimate the cumulative probability of distress over 10 years Estimate the probability of distress with a probit Estimate the probability of distress by looking at market value of bonds..
The distress sale value of equity is usually best estimated as a percent of book value (and this value will be lower if the economy is doing badly and there are other rms in the same business also in distress).
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Stable Growth
Cap ex growth slows and net cap ex decreases Revenue Growth: 13.33% EBITDA/Sales -> 30% Stable Stable Revenue EBITDA/ Growth: 5% Sales 30% Stable ROC=7.36% Reinvest 67.93%
NOL: 2,076m
Revenues EBITDA EBIT EBIT (1-t) + Depreciation - Cap Ex - Chg WC FCFF Beta Cost of Equity Cost of Debt Debt Ratio Cost of Capital
Value of Op Assets $ + Cash & Non-op $ = Value of Firm $ - Value of Debt $ = Value of Equity $ - Equity Options $ Value per share $
Forever
Risk Premium 4%
Internet/ Retail
Operating Leverage
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Probability of distress
Price of 8 year, 12% bond issued by Global Crossing = $ 653 t= 8 t 8
653 = $
Probability of distress = 13.53% a year Cumulative probability of survival over 10 years = (1- .1353)10 = 23.37% Book value of capital = $14,531 million Distress sale value = 15% of book value = .15*14531 = $2,180 million Book value of debt = $7,647 million Distress sale value of equity = $ 0 Value of Global Crossing = $3.22 (.2337) + $0.00 (.7663) = $0.75
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We often substitute one type of information for another; for instance, in valuing Ford, we have 70 years+ of historical data, but not too many comparable rms; in valuing a software rm, we might not have too much historical data but we have lots of comparable rms.
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Stable Growth
Sales Turnover Ratio Revenue Growth Competitive Advantages Expected Operating Margin Stable Revenue Growth Stable Stable Operating Reinvestment Margin
FCFF = Revenue* Op Margin (1-t) - Reinvestment Value of Operating Assets + Cash & Non-op Assets = Value of Firm - Value of Debt = Value of Equity - Equity Options = Value of Equity in Stock FCFF1 FCFF2 FCFF3 FCFF4
Forever Discount at WACC= Cost of Equity (Equity/(Debt + Equity)) + Cost of Debt (Debt/(Debt+ Equity))
Cost of Equity
Riskfree Rate : - No default risk - No reinvestment risk - In same currency and in same terms (real or nominal as cash flows
Type of Business
Operating Leverage
Financial Leverage
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Unlevered beta for rms in internet retailing = Unlevered beta for rms in specialty retailing =
1.60 1.00
Amazon is a specialty retailer, but its risk currently seems to be determined by the fact that it is an online retailer. Hence we will use the beta of internet companies to begin the valuation but move the beta, after the rst ve years, towards the beta of the retailing business.
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The rating for a rm can be estimated using the nancial characteristics of the rm. In its simplest form, the rating can be estimated from the interest coverage ratio Interest Coverage Ratio = EBIT / Interest Expenses Amazon.com has negative operating income; this yields a negative interest coverage ratio, which should suggest a low rating. We computed an average interest coverage ratio of 2.82 over the next 5 years. This yields an average rating of BBB for Amazon.com for the rst 5 years. (In effect, the rating will be lower in the earlier years and higher in the later years than BBB)
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The synthetic rating for Amazon.com is BBB. The default spread for BBB rated bonds is 1.50% Pre-tax cost of debt = Riskfree Rate + Default spread = 6.50% + 1.50% = 8.00% After-tax cost of debt right now = 8.00% (1- 0) = 8.00%: The rm is paying no taxes currently. As the rms tax rate changes and its cost of debt changes, the after tax cost of debt will change as well.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 7.80% 7.75% 7.67% 7.50% 7.00% 0% 0% 0% 16.1% 35% 35% 35% 35% 35% 35% 5.07% 5.04% 4.98% 4.88% 4.55%
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Equity
Cost of Equity = 6.50% + 1.60 (4.00%) = 12.90% Market Value of Equity = $ 84/share* 340.79 mil shs = $ 28,626 mil (98.8%) Cost of debt = 6.50% + 1.50% (default spread) = 8.00% Market Value of Debt = $ 349 mil (1.2%)
Debt
Cost of Capital Cost of Capital = 12.9 % (.988) + 8.00% (1- 0) (.012)) = 12.84%
Amazon.com has a book value of equity of $ 138 million and a book value of debt of $ 349 million. Shows you how irrelevant book value is in this process.
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Many internet companies are arguing that selling and G&A expenses are the equivalent of R&D expenses for a high-technology rms and should be treated as capital expenditures. If we adopt this rationale, we should be computing earnings before these expenses, which will make many of these rms protable. It will also mean that they are reinvesting far more than we think they are. It will, however, make not their cash ows less negative. Should Amazon.coms selling expenses be treated as cap ex?
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EBIT (Trailing 1999) = -$ 410 million Tax rate used = 0% (Assumed Effective = Marginal) Capital spending (Trailing 1999) = $ 243 million (includes acquisitions) Depreciation (Trailing 1999) = $ 31 million Non-cash Working capital Change (1999) = - 80 million Estimating FCFF (1999)
Current EBIT * (1 - tax rate) = - 410 (1-0) = - $410 million - (Capital Spending - Depreciation) = $212 million - Change in Working Capital = -$ 80 million Current FCFF = - $542 million
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Growth 150.00% 100.00% 75.00% 50.00% 30.00% 25.20% 20.40% 15.60% 10.80%
Revenue Investment $1,676 $559 $2,793 $931 $4,189 $1,396 $4,887 $1,629 $4,398 $1,466 $4,803 $1,601 $4,868 $1,623 $4,482 $1,494 $3,587 $1,196
10 6.00% $2,208 $736 3.00 20.39% The sales/capital ratio of 3.00 was based on what Amazon accomplished last year and the averages for the industry.
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Stable Growth
1.00 15% 20% 6% 6%/20% = 30%
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Value of Op Assets $ 14,910 + Cash $ 26 = Value of Firm $14,936 - Value of Debt $ 349 = Value of Equity $14,587 - Equity Options $ 2,892 Value per share $ 34.32
Forever
Risk Premium 4%
Internet/ Retail
Operating Leverage
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$ $ $ $ $ $ $
$ $ $ $ $ $ $
$ $ $ $ $ $ $
$ $ $ $ $ $ $
$ $ $ $ $ $ $
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Value of Op Assets $ 7,967 + Cash & Non-op $ 1,263 = Value of Firm $ 9,230 - Value of Debt $ 1,890 = Value of Equity $ 7,340 - Equity Options $ 748 Value per share $ 18.74
1 Debt Ratio Beta Cost of Equity AT cost of debt Cost of Capital 27.27% 2.18 13.81% 10.00% 12.77%
Forever
Risk Premium 4%
Internet/ Retail
Operating Leverage
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Reinvestment: Current Revenue $ 3,122 EBIT -202m NOL: 2183 m Current Margin: -6.48%
Cap ex includes acquisitions Working capital is 3% of revenues
Value of Op Assets $ 10,669 + Cash $ 1007 = Value of Firm $11,676 - Value of Debt $ 2,220 = Value of Equity $ 9,456 - Equity Options $ 827 Value per share $ 23.01
$6,790 $268 $268 $698 -$430 2 2.15 13.30% 9.45% 9.45% 12.22%
$9,506 $588 $588 $899 -$312 3 2.15 13.30% 9.45% 9.45% 12.22%
$12,358 $926 $926 $944 -$19 4 2.15 13.30% 9.45% 9.45% 12.22%
$14,830 $1,224 $935 $818 $116 5 2.15 13.30% 9.45% 7.22% 11.60%
$17,351 $1,509 $981 $835 $146 6 1.94 12.46% 8.96% 5.82% 10.78%
$19,780 $1,772 $1,152 $804 $347 7 1.73 11.62% 8.84% 5.74% 10.17%
$21,956 $2,000 $1,300 $720 $579 8 1.52 10.78% 8.63% 5.61% 9.56%
$23,713 $2,181 $1,417 $582 $836 9 1.31 9.94% 8.23% 5.35% 8.95%
$24,898 $2,303 $1,497 $393 $1,104 10 1.10 9.10% 7.00% 4.55% 8.42%
Forever
Risk Premium 4%
Aswath Damodaran
Internet/ Retail
Operating Leverage
271
$90.00 $80.00
$70.00
$60.00
$40.00
$30.00 $20.00
$10.00
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