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where the asset has an n-year life, E(CFt) is the expected cash flow in
period t and r is a discount rate that reflects the risk of the cash flows.
§ Alternatively, we can replace the expected cash flows with the
guaranteed cash flows we would have accepted as an alternative
(certainty equivalents) and discount these at the riskfree rate:
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§ The “IT” proposition: If IT does not affect the expected cash flows
or the riskiness of the cash flows, IT cannot affect value.
§ The “DON’T BE A WUSS” proposition: Valuation requires that you
make estimates of expected cash flows in the future, not that you be
right about those cashflows. So, uncertainty is not an excuse for not
making estimates.
§ The “DUH” proposition: For an asset to have value, the expected
cash flows have to be positive some time over the life of the asset.
§ The “DON’T FREAK OUT” proposition: A business with negative
cash flows in the early years can still be valuable if it has more than
proportionate positive cash flows in the later years.
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Assets Liabilities
Existing Investments Fixed Claim on cash flows
Generate cashflows today Assets in Place Debt Little or No role in management
Includes long lived (fixed) and Fixed Maturity
short-lived(working Tax Deductible
capital) assets
Expected Value that will be Growth Assets Equity Residual Claim on cash flows
created by future investments Significant Role in management
Perpetual Lives
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Present value is value of the entire firm, and reflects the value of
all claims on the firm.
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§ Doing so, will give you a value for the equity which is
a. greater than the value you would have got in an equity valuation
b. lesser than the value you would have got in an equity valuation
c. equal to the value you would have got in an equity valuation
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Expected Growth
Cash flows Firm: Growth in
Firm: Pre-debt cash Operating Earnings
flow Equity: Growth in
Net Income/EPS Firm is in stable growth:
Equity: After debt
cash flows Grows at constant rate
forever
Terminal Value
CF1 CF2 CF3 CF4 CF5 CFn
Value .........
Firm: Value of Firm Forever
Equity: Value of Equity
Length of Period of High Growth
Discount Rate
Firm:Cost of Capital
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Equity reinvestment
Expected growth in needed to sustain
net income growth
Free Cashflow to Equity
Non-cash Net Income
- (Cap Ex - Depreciation) Expected FCFE = Expected net income *
- Change in non-cash WC (1- Equity Reinvestment rate)
- (Debt repaid - Debt issued)
= Free Cashflow to equity
Cost of equity
Rate of return
demanded by equity
investors
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Reinvestment
Expected growth in needed to sustain
operating ncome growth
Value of Operatng Assets Length of high growth period: PV of FCFF during high
+ Cash & non-operating assets growth Stable Growth
- Debt When operating income and
= Value of equity FCFF grow at constant rate
forever.
Cost of capital
Weighted average of
costs of equity and
debt
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1. Get a handle on the past and the cross-section: While the past
is the past (and should have little relevance in determining value),
you can get clues about the future by looking at what your firm has
done in the past, and what other companies in the business are
doing now.
2. Risk and Discount Rates: Traditional financial theory
(unfortunately) has put too much of a focus on risk and discount
rates, but they do remain ingredients in valuing a company.
3. Estimate growth and future cash flows: This is where the
rubber meets the road in valuation. Estimating future cash flows is
never easy, should not be mechanical and should be built around
your story.
4. Apply Closure to cash flows: Since you cannot estimate cash
flows forever, you need to find a way to bring your valuation to
closure.
5. Tie up loose ends: Check to see what else in your business needs
to be valued or adjusted for to get to value per share.
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§ Not all risk counts: While the notion that the cost of equity
should be higher for riskier investments and lower for safer
investments is intuitive, what risk should be built into the cost of
equity is the question.
§ Risk through whose eyes? While risk is usually defined in terms
of the variance of actual returns around an expected return, risk
and return models in finance 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
§ The diversification effect: Most risk and return models in
finance also assume that the marginal investor is well diversified,
and that the only risk that he or she perceives in an investment is
risk that cannot be diversified away (i.e, market or non-
diversifiable risk). In effect, it is primarily economic, macro,
continuous risk that should be incorporated into the cost of equity.
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3.50%
3.00%
2.50%
2.00%
1.50%
1.00%
0.50%
0.00%
Germany Netherlands Ireland Finland Austria Portugal Spain Greece France Italy
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Country $ Bond Rate Riskfree Rate Default Spread
$ Bonds
Peru 6.15% 4.58% 1.57%
Brazil 7.75% 4.58% 3.17%
Colombia 6.95% 4.58% 2.37%
Poland 5.35% 4.58% 0.77%
Turkey 13.55% 4.58% 8.97%
Mexico 5.46% 4.58% 0.88%
Euro Bonds
Bulgaria 2.86% 2.43% 0.43%
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S&P Sovereign Rating Moody's Sovereign Rating Default Spread
AAA Aaa 0.00%
AA+ Aa1 0.38%
AA Aa2 0.46%
AA- Aa3 0.56%
A+ A1 0.66%
A A2 0.80%
A- A3 1.13%
BBB+ Baa1 1.50%
BBB Baa2 1.79%
BBB- Baa3 2.07%
BB+ Ba1 2.36%
BB Ba2 2.83%
BB Ba3 3.38%
B+ B1 4.24%
B B2 5.18%
B- B3 6.12%
CCC+ Caa1 7.06%
CCC Caa2 8.47%
CCC- Caa3 9.41%
CC+ Ca1 10.50%
CC Ca2 11.29%
CC- Ca3 13.00%
C+ C1 14.50%
C C2 16.00% 37
C- C3 18.00%
38
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§ In some cases, you may want a riskfree rate in real terms (in real
terms) rather than nominal terms.
§ To get a real riskfree rate, you would like a security with no default
risk and a guaranteed real return. Treasury indexed securities
offer this combination.
§ In January 2025, the yield on a 10-year indexed treasury bond
was 2.23%. Which of the following statements would you
subscribe to?
a. This (2.23%) is the real riskfree rate to use, if you are valuing US
companies in real terms.
b. This (2.23%) is the real riskfree rate to use, anywhere in the world
c. Explain.
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§ You can scale up the riskfree rate in a base currency
($, Euros) by the differential inflation between the base
currency and the currency in question. In US $:
§ Risk free rateCurrency=
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§ Noisy estimates: Even with long time periods of history, the risk
premium that you derive will have substantial standard error. For
instance, if you go back to 1928 (about 90 years of history) and
you assume a standard deviation of 20% in annual stock returns,
you arrive at a standard error of greater than 2%:
Standard Error in Premium = 20%/√90 = 2.1%
§ Survivorship Bias: Using historical data from the U.S. equity
markets over the twentieth century does create a sampling bias.
After all, the US economy and equity markets were among the
most successful of the global economies that you could have
invested in early in the century.
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ERP : January 1, 2025
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Blue: Moody’s Rating
Red: Added Country Risk
Green #: Total ERP
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§ The factor “l” measures the relative exposure of a firm to country
risk. One simplistic solution would be to do the following:
§ l = % of revenues domesticallyfirm / % of revenues domesticallyaverage
firm
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80
20
60
40
Return on Embrat el
Return on Embraer
0
20
0
-20
-20
-40 -40
-60
-60 -80
-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20
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§ Assume that the beta for Embraer is 1.07, and that the US $ riskfree
rate used is 4%. Also assume that the risk premium for the US is 5%
and the country risk premium for Brazil is 7.89%. Finally, assume that
Embraer gets 3% of its revenues in Brazil & the rest in the US.
§ There are five estimates of $ cost of equity for Embraer:
§ Approach 1: Constant exposure to CRP, Location CRP
§ E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + 7.89% = 17.24%
§ Approach 2: Constant exposure to CRP, Operation CRP
§ E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + (0.03*7.89% +0.97*0%)= 9.59%
§ Approach 3: Beta exposure to CRP, Location CRP
§ E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5% + 7.89%)= 17.79%
§ Approach 4: Beta exposure to CRP, Operation CRP
§ E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5% +( 0.03*7.89%+0.97*0%)) = 9.60%
§ Approach 5: Lambda exposure to CRP
§ E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + 0.27(7.89%) = 11.48%
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§ For a start: If you know the price paid for an asset and have
estimates of the expected cash flows on the asset, you can
estimate the IRR of these cash flows. If you paid the price, this is
your expected return.
§ Stock Price & Risk: If you assume that stocks are correctly
priced in the aggregate and you can estimate the expected
cashflows from buying stocks, you can estimate the expected rate
of return on stocks by finding that discount rate that makes the
present value equal to the price paid.
§ Implied ERP: 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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During 2019 and 2020, GME was an extraordinarily volatile stock, as
short sellers and long only investors fought out a battle.
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§ Proxy Models
§ Look at historical returns on all stocks and look for variables that explain
differences in returns.
§ You are, in effect, running multiple regressions with returns on individual
stocks as the dependent variable and fundamentals about these stocks as
independent variables.
§ This approach started with market cap (the small cap effect) and over the
last two decades has added other variables (momentum, liquidity etc.)
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Implications Implications
1. Cyclical companies should 1. Firms with high infrastructure
have higher betas than non- needs and rigid cost structures
cyclical companies. should have higher betas than
2. Luxury goods firms should firms with flexible cost structures.
have higher betas than basic 2. Smaller firms should have higher
goods. betas than larger firms.
3. High priced goods/service 3. Young firms should have higher
firms should have higher betas betas than more mature firms.
than low prices goods/services
firms.
4. Growth firms should have
higher betas.
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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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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 If you can, adjust this beta for differences
traded firms. Unlever this average beta using the average debt to between your firm and the comparable
equity ratio across the publicly traded firms in the sample. firms on operating leverage and product
Unlevered beta for business = Average beta across publicly traded characteristics.
firms/ (1 + (1- t) (Average D/E ratio across firms))
Step 4: Compute a weighted average of the unlevered betas of the If you expect the business mix of your
different businesses (from step 2) using the weights from step 3. firm to change over time, you can
Bottom-up Unlevered beta for your firm = Weighted average of the change the weights on a year-to-year
unlevered betas of the individual business basis.
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Sample' Unlevered'beta' Peer'Group' Value'of' Proportion'of'
Business' Sample' size' of'business' Revenues' EV/Sales' Business' Vale'
Global'firms'in'metals'&'
Metals'&' mining,'Market'cap>$1'
Mining' billion' 48' 0.86' $9,013' 1.97' $17,739' 16.65%'
Global'specialty'
Fertilizers' chemical'firms' 693' 0.99' $3,777' 1.52' $5,741' 5.39%'
Global'transportation'
Logistics' firms' 223' 0.75' $1,644' 1.14' $1,874' 1.76%'
Vale'
Operations' '' '' 0.8440' $47,151' '' $106,543' 100.00%'
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§ 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 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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Mopping up
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§ The cost of debt is the rate at which you can borrow money,
long term right now, It will reflect not only your default risk but also
the level of interest rates in the market.
§ The cost of debt is not the rate at which you have borrowed money in
the past or a current book interest rate (interest expense/debt).
§ 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 firm. The limitation of this approach is that very few firms have long
term straight bonds that are liquid and widely traded
§ Looking up the rating for the firm and estimating a default spread based
upon the rating. While this approach is more robust, different bonds from
the same firm can have different ratings. You have to use a median rating
for the firm
§ When in trouble (either because you have no ratings or multiple
ratings for a firm), estimate a synthetic rating for your firm and the
cost of debt based upon that rating.
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20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Aaa/A Aa2/A Baa2/B Ba1/BB Caa/C Ca2/C
A1/A+ A2/A A3/A- Ba2/BB B1/B+ B2/B B3/B- C2/C D2/D
AA A BB + CC C
Spread 2025 0.45% 0.60% 0.77% 0.85% 0.95% 1.20% 1.55% 1.83% 2.61% 3.00% 4.42% 7.28% 10.10% 15.50% 19.00%
Spread 2024 0.59% 0.70% 0.92% 1.07% 1.21% 1.47% 1.74% 2.21% 3.14% 3.61% 5.24% 8.51% 11.78% 17.00% 20.00%
Spread 2023 0.69% 0.85% 1.23% 1.42% 1.62% 2.00% 2.42% 3.13% 4.55% 5.26% 7.37% 11.57% 15.78% 17.50% 20.00%
Spread 2022 0.67% 0.82% 1.03% 1.14% 1.29% 1.59% 1.93% 2.15% 3.15% 3.78% 4.62% 7.78% 8.80% 10.76% 14.34%
Spread 2021 0.69% 0.85% 1.07% 1.18% 1.33% 1.71% 2.31% 2.77% 4.05% 4.86% 5.94% 9.46% 9.97% 13.09% 17.44%
Spread 2025 Spread 2024 Spread 2023 Spread 2022 Spread 2021
§ 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)
§ Debt
§ Cost of debt = 4.29% + 4.00% +1.00%= 9.29%
§ Market Value of Debt = 2,083 million BR ($713 million)
€
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§ Assume that the firm 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 firm
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
§ The debt portion ($91.45 million) gets added to debt and the
option portion ($48.55 million) gets added to the market
capitalization to get to the debt and equity weights in the cost of
capital.
Cost of Capital = Cost of Equity (Equity/(Debt + Equity)) + Cost of Borrowing (1-t) (Debt/(Debt + Equity))
Cost of equity
based upon bottom-up Weights should be market value weights
beta
Cash is king…
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Measuring Earnings
Update
- Trailing Earnings
- Unofficial numbers
§ 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:
Year Commitment (millions) Present Value (at 6%)
1 $899.00 $848.11
2 $846.00 $752.94
3 $738.00 $619.64
4 $598.00 $473.67
5 $477.00 $356.44
6&7 $982.50 each year $1,346.04
§ Debt Value of leases = $4,396.85 (Also value of leased asset)
§ Debt outstanding at The Gap = $1,970 m + $4,397 m = $6,367 m
§ Adjusted Operating Income = Stated OI + OL exp this year - Deprec’n
§ = $1,012 m + 978 m - 4397 m /7 = $1,362 million (7-year life for assets)
! Conventional!Accounting! Operating!Leases!Treated!as!Debt!
Income!Statement! !Income!Statement!
EBIT&&Leases&=&1,990& EBIT&&Leases&=&1,990&
0&Op&Leases&&&&&&=&&&&978& 0&Deprecn:&OL=&&&&&&628&
EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1,012& EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1,362&
Interest&expense&will&rise&to&reflect&the&
conversion&of&operating&leases&as&debt.&Net&
income&should¬&change.&
Balance!Sheet! Balance!Sheet!
Off&balance&sheet&(Not&shown&as&debt&or&as&an& Asset&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&Liability&
asset).&Only&the&conventional&debt&of&$1,970& OL&Asset&&&&&&&4397&&&&&&&&&&&OL&Debt&&&&&4397&
million&shows&up&on&balance&sheet& Total&debt&=&4397&+&1970&=&$6,367&million&
&
Cost&of&capital&=&8.20%(7350/9320)&+&4%& Cost&of&capital&=&8.20%(7350/13717)&+&4%&
(1970/9320)&=&7.31%& (6367/13717)&=&6.25%&
Cost&of&equity&for&The&Gap&=&8.20%& &
After0tax&cost&of&debt&=&4%&
Market&value&of&equity&=&7350&
Return&on&capital&=&1012&(10.35)/(3130+1970)& Return&on&capital&=&1362&(10.35)/(3130+6367)&
&&&&&&&&&=&12.90%& &&&&&&&&&=&9.30%&
&
! Conventional!Accounting! R&D!treated!as!capital!expenditure!
Income!Statement! !Income!Statement!
EBIT&&R&D&&&=&&3045& EBIT&&R&D&=&&&3045&
.&R&D&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1020& .&Amort:&R&D&=&&&903&
EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&2025& EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&2142&(Increase&of&117&m)&
EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&=&&1285&m& EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&=&1359&m&
Ignored&tax&benefit&=&(1020.903)(.3654)&=&43&
Adjusted&EBIT&(1.t)&=&1359+43&=&1402&m&
(Increase&of&117&million)&
Net&Income&will&also&increase&by&117&million&&
Balance!Sheet! Balance!Sheet!
Off&balance&sheet&asset.&Book&value&of&equity&at& Asset&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&Liability&
3,768&million&Euros&is&understated&because& R&D&Asset&&&&2914&&&&&Book&Equity&&&+2914&
biggest&asset&is&off&the&books.& Total&Book&Equity&=&3768+2914=&6782&mil&&
Capital!Expenditures! Capital!Expenditures!
Conventional&net&cap&ex&of&2&million& Net&Cap&ex&=&2+&1020&–&903&=&119&mil&
Euros&
Cash!Flows! Cash!Flows!
EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&&&=&&1285&& EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&&&=&&&&&1402&&&
.&Net&Cap&Ex&&&&&&=&&&&&&&&2& .&Net&Cap&Ex&&&&&&=&&&&&&&119&
FCFF&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1283&&&&&& FCFF&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&&&&1283&m&
Return&on&capital&=&1285/(3768+530)& Return&on&capital&=&1402/(6782+530)&
§ Would your answer be any different if the firm had reported one-
time losses like these once every five years?
a. Yes
b. No
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§ The tax rate that you should use in computing the after-tax
operating income should be
a. The effective tax rate in the financial statements (taxes paid/Taxable
income)
b. The tax rate based upon taxes paid and EBIT (taxes paid/EBIT)
c. The marginal tax rate for the country in which the company operates
d. The weighted average marginal tax rate across the countries in
which the company operates
e. None of the above
f. Any of the above, as long as you compute your after-tax cost of debt
using the same tax rate.
§ The free cash flow to the firm starts with after-tax operating
income, where:
§ After-tax Operating Income = Operating Income (1- tax rate)
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Net Income
- (1- DR) (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation)
- (1- DR) Working Capital Needs
= Free Cash flow to Equity
§ DR = Debt/Capital Ratio
§ For this firm,
§ 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.
1600
1400
1200
1000
FCFE
800
600
400
200
0
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
Debt Ratio
8.00
7.00
6.00
5.00
Beta
4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
0.00
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
Debt Ratio
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Historical Growth
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§ 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 deficit of $0.05. In 1997, the expected earnings per share is
$ 0.25. What is the growth rate?
a. -600%
b. +600%
c. +120%
d. Cannot be estimated
§ 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 coefficient 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.
Analyst Estimates
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+
in Existing ROI from in New Investment on
Projects X current to next Projects X New Projects Change in Earnings
$1000 period: 0% $100 12% = $ 12
In the special case where ROI on existing projects remains unchanged and is equal to the ROI on new projects
in the more general case where ROI can change from period to period, this can be expanded as follows:
For instance, if the ROI increases from 12% to 13%, the expected growth rate can be written as follows:
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§ All of the fundamental growth equations assume that the firm has a
return on equity or return on capital it can sustain in the long term.
§ 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
§ Determine the total market (given your business model) and estimate the
market share that you think your company will earn.
§ Decrease the growth rate as the firm becomes larger
§ Keep track of absolute revenues to make sure that the growth is feasible
§ Estimate expected operating margins each year
§ Set a target margin that the firm will move towards
§ Adjust the current margin towards the target margin
§ 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.
In its prospectus, Airbnb has expanded its estimate of market potential to $3.4 trillion,
as evidenced in this excerpt from the prospectus:
We have a substantial market opportunity in the growing travel market and
experience economy. We estimate our serviceable addressable market (“SAM”)
today to be $1.5 trillion, including $1.2 trillion for short-term stays and $239 billion
for experiences. We estimate our total addressable market (“TAM”) to be $3.4
trillion, including $1.8 trillion for short-term stays, $210 billion for long-term stays,
and $1.4 trillion for experiences.
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194
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t=N CF
Value = ∑ t + Terminal Value
t (1+r) N
t=1 (1+r)
On September 1, 2019,
Cost of Equity
Heineken was trading at Weights
7.66% Cost of Debt
93.25 Euros/share E = 59.9% D = 40.1%
(-0.5%+2%)(1-.25) = 1.13%
§ Most growth firms have difficulty sustaining their growth for long
periods, especially while earning excess returns. Assuming long
growth periods for all firms is ignoring this reality.
§ Proposition 1: The larger the potential market for a company’s
products and services, the greater the likelihood that you can maintain
growth for longer.
§ Proposition 2: The smaller a company, relative to the market it
aspires to reach, the longer the potential growth period can be.
§ It is not growth per se that creates value but growth with excess
returns. For growth firms to continue to generate value-creating
growth, they have to be able to keep the competition at bay.
§ Proposition 3: The stronger and more sustainable the competitive
advantages, the longer a growth company can sustain “value
creating” growth.
§ Proposition 4: Growth companies with strong and sustainable
competitive advantages are rare.
§ There are some (McKinsey, for instance) who argue that the
return on capital should always be equal to cost of capital in
stable growth.
§ But excess returns seem to persist for very long time periods.
§ Risk and costs of equity and capital: Stable growth firms tend to
§ Have betas closer to one
§ Have debt ratios closer to industry averages (or mature company
averages)
§ Country risk premiums (especially in emerging markets should evolve
over time)
§ The excess returns at stable growth firms should approach (or
become) zero. ROC -> Cost of capital and ROE -> Cost of equity
§ The reinvestment needs and dividend payout ratios should reflect
the lower growth and excess returns:
§ Stable period payout ratio = 1 - g/ ROE
§ Stable period reinvestment rate = g/ ROC
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§ If your firm
§ is small and growing at a very high rate (> Overall growth rate + 10%) or
§ has significant barriers to entry into the business
§ has firm characteristics that are very different from the nor
Choose a
Cash Flow Dividends Cashflows to Equity Cashflows to Firm
Expected Dividends to
Net Income EBIT (1- tax rate)
Stockholders
- (1- δ) (Capital Exp. - Deprec’n) - (Capital Exp. - Deprec’n)
- (1- δ) Change in Work. Capital - Change in Work. Capital
= Free Cash flow to Equity (FCFE) = Free Cash flow to Firm (FCFF)
[δ = Debt Ratio]
& A Discount Rate Cost of Equity Cost of Capital
• Basis: The riskier the investment, the greater is the cost of equity. WACC = ke ( E/ (D+E))
• Models: + kd ( D/(D+E))
CAPM: Riskfree Rate + Beta (Risk Premium) kd = Current Borrowing Rate (1-t)
APM: Riskfree Rate + Σ Betaj (Risk Premiumj): n factors E,D: Mkt Val of Equity and Debt
& a growth pattern Stable Growth Two-Stage Growth Three-Stage Growth
g g g
| |
t High Growth Stable High Growth Transition Stable
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- Value of Equity Options What equity options should be valued here (vested versus non-vested)?
How do you value equity options?
/ Number of shares
§ The simplest and most direct way of dealing with cash and
marketable securities is to keep it out of the valuation - the cash
flows 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 operating assets have been valued, you should add
back the value of cash and marketable securities.
§ In many equity valuations, the interest income from cash is
included in the cashflows. The discount rate has to be adjusted
then for the presence of cash. (The beta used will be weighted
down by the cash holdings). Unless cash remains a fixed
percentage of overall value over time, these valuations will tend
to break down.
§
Company A Company B Company C
Trades in US US Argentina
In which of these companies is cash most likely to be
a. A Neutral Asset (worth $100 million)
b. A Wasting Asset (worth less than $100 million)
c. A Potential Value Creator (worth >$100 million)
§ There are some analysts who argue that companies with a lot of
cash on their balance sheets should be penalized by having the
excess cash discounted to reflect the fact that it earns a low
return.
§ Excess cash is usually defined as holding cash that is greater than
what the firm needs for operations.
§ A low return is defined as a return lower than what the firm earns on
its non-cash investments.
§ This is the wrong reason for discounting cash. If the cash is
invested in riskless securities, it should earn a low rate of return.
As long as the return is high enough, given the riskless nature of
the investment, cash does not destroy value.
§ There is a right reason, though, that may apply to some
companies… Managers can do stupid things with cash
(overpriced acquisitions, pie-in-the-sky projects….) and you have
to discount for this possibility.
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224
Company A Company B
Operating Income $ 1 billion $ 1 billion
Tax rate 40% 40%
ROIC 10% 10%
Expected Growth 5% 5%
Cost of capital 8% 8%
Business Mix Single Multiple
Holdings Simple Complex
Accounting Transparent Opaque
§ Which firm would you value more highly?
§ In relative valuation
§ In a relative valuation, you may be able to assess the price that the
market is charging for complexity:
§ With the hundred largest market cap firms, for instance:
PBV = 0.65 + 15.31 ROE – 0.55 Beta + 3.04 Expected growth rate – 0.003 #
Pages in 10K
§ 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 firm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000
Debt = 1000
= Equity = 1000
Number of diluted shares = 110
Proceeds from option exercise = 10 * 10 = 100
Value per share = (1000+ 100)/110 = $ 10
§ The treasury stock approach fails to consider the time
premium on the options. 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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247
§ To value employee options, you need the following inputs into the
option valuation model:
§ Stock Price = $ 10, Adjusted for dilution = $9.58
§ Strike Price = $ 10
§ Maturity = 10 years (Can reduce to reflect early exercise)
§ Standard deviation in stock price = 40%
§ Riskless Rate = 4%
§ Using the value per call of $5.42, we can now estimate the value
of equity per share after the option grant:
§ Value of firm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000
§ Debt = 1000
§ = Equity = 1000
§ Value of options granted = $ 54.2
§ = Value of Equity in stock = $945.8
§ / Number of shares outstanding / 100
§ = Value per share = $ 9.46
§ Note that this approach yields a higher value than the diluted
share count approach (which ignores exercise proceeds)
and a lower value than the treasury stock approach (which
ignores the time premium on the options)
Aswath Damodaran
Number Crunchers Story Tellers
+ +
+ Money
-
Uber will maintain its current model of keeping 20%
Operating Expenses of car service payments, even in the face of
competition, because of its first mover advantages. It
= will maintain its current low-infrastructure cost model,
allowing it to earn high margins.
Operating Income Target pre-tax operating margin is 40%.
-
Taxes
After-tax Operating Income Uber has a low capital intensity model, since it
does not own cars or other infrastructure,
- allowing it to maintain a high sales to capital
ratio for the sector (5.00)
Reinvestment
After-tax Cash Flow The company is young and still trying to establish
a business model, leading to a high cost of
Adjust for time value & risk capital (12%) up front. As it grows, it will become
safer and its cost of capital will drop to 8%.
Adjusted for operating risk
with a discount rate and
VALUE OF
for failure with a
OPERATING
probability of failure.
ASSETS
§ Not just car service company.: Uber is a car company, not just a
car service company, and there may be a day when consumers
will subscribe to a Uber service, rather than own their own cars. It
could also expand into logistics, i.e., moving and transportation
businesses.
§ Not just urban: Uber can create new demands for car service in
parts of the country where taxis are not used (suburbia, small
towns).
§ Global networking benefits: By linking with technology and credit
card companies, Uber can have global networking benefits.
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274
§ The equity risk premiums that I have used in the valuations that
follow reflect my thinking (and how it has evolved) on the issue.
§ Pre-1998 valuations: In the valuations prior to 1998, I use a risk
premium of 5.5% for mature markets (close to both the historical
and the implied premiums then)
§ Between 1998 and Sept 2008: In the valuations between 1998 and
September 2008, I used a risk premium of 4% for mature markets,
reflecting my belief that risk premiums in mature markets do not
change much and revert back to historical norms (at least for implied
premiums).
§ Valuations done in 2009: After the 2008 crisis and the jump in equity
risk premiums to 6.43% in January 2008, I have used a higher equity
risk premium (5-6%) for the next 5 years and will assume a reversion
back to historical norms (4%) only after year 5.
§ After 2009: I have used updated implied equity risk premiums, as
of the time that I did the valuations.
§ With each company that I value in this next section, I will try to
start with a story about the company and use that story to
construct a valuation.
§ With each valuation, rather than focus on all of the details (which
will follow the blueprint already laid out), I will focus on a specific
component of the valuation that is unique or different.
§ Finally, while the valuations are scattered over time, they all
represent valuations done in real time, with decisions that
followed, and without the benefit of hindsight.
Aswath Damodaran
Test 1: Is the firm paying Training Wheels valuation: Test 2: Is the stable growth rate
dividends like a stable growth Con Ed in August 2008 consistent with fundamentals?
firm? Retention Ratio = 27%
Dividend payout ratio is 73% ROE =Cost of equity = 7.7%
In trailing 12 months, through June Expected growth = 2.1%
2008
Earnings per share = $3.17 Growth rate forever = 2.1%
Dividends per share = $2.32
Value per share today= Expected Dividends per share next year / (Cost of equity - Growth rate)
= 2.32 (1.021)/ (.077 - ,021) = $42.30
§ If you bought the stock today at $40.76, what return can you
expect to make over the next year (assuming again that the
market corrects its mistake)?
Value/Share $ 83.55
Cost of capital = 8.32% (0.92) + 2.91% (0.08) = 7.88%
On September 12,
Cost of Equity Cost of Debt 2008, 3M was
8.32% (3.72%+.75%)(1-.35) Weights trading at $70/share
= 2.91% E = 92% D = 8%
Value/Share $ 60.53
Cost of capital = 10.86% (0.92) + 3.55% (0.08) = 10.27%
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$90.00
$80.00
$70.00
$60.00
$50.00
$30.00
$20.00
$10.00
$0.00
2000 2001 2002 2003
Time of analysis
Aswath Damodaran
30
6
307
Current Cost
of Capital Optimal: Cost of
capital lowest
between 20 and
30%.
Historial data often Growth can be negative, as firm sheds assets and
reflects flat or declining shrinks. As less profitable assets are shed, the firm’s
revenues and falling remaining assets may improve in quality.
margins. Investments
often earn less than the What is the value added by growth
cost of capital. assets?
When will the firm
What are the cashflows become a mature
from existing assets? fiirm, and what are
How risky are the cash flows from both the potential
Underfunded pension existing assets and growth assets? roadblocks?
obligations and
litigation claims can
lower value of equity. Depending upon the risk of the There is a real chance,
Liquidation assets being divested and the use of especially with high financial
preferences can affect the proceeds from the divestuture (to leverage, that the firm will not
value of equity pay dividends or retire debt), the risk make it. If it is expected to
in both the firm and its equity can survive as a going concern, it
What is the value of change. will be as a much smaller
equity in the firm? entity.
Term. Year
Revenues $4,434 $4,523 $5,427 $6,513 $7,815 $8,206 $8,616 $9,047 $9,499 $9,974 $10,273
Oper margin 5.81% 6.86% 7.90% 8.95% 10% 11.40% 12.80% 14.20% 15.60% 17% 17%
EBIT $258 $310 $429 $583 $782 $935 $1,103 $1,285 $1,482 $1,696 $ 1,746
Tax rate 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 28.4% 30.8% 33.2% 35.6% 38.00% 38%
EBIT * (1 - t) $191 $229 $317 $431 $578 $670 $763 $858 $954 $1,051 $1,083
- Reinvestment -$19 -$11 $0 $22 $58 $67 $153 $215 $286 $350 $ 325
Value of Op Assets $ 9,793 FCFF $210 $241 $317 $410 $520 $603 $611 $644 $668 $701 $758
+ Cash & Non-op $ 3,040 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
= Value of Firm $12,833 Forever
- Value of Debt $ 7,565 Beta 3.14 3.14 3.14 3.14 3.14 2.75 2.36 1.97 1.59 1.20
= Value of Equity $ 5,268 Cost of equity 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 19.50% 17.17% 14.85% 12.52% 10.20%
Cost of debt 9% 9% 9% 9% 9% 8.70% 8.40% 8.10% 7.80% 7.50%
Value per share $ 8.12 Debtl ratio 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 68.80% 64.10% 59.40% 54.70% 50.00%
Cost of capital 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.79% 9.50% 9.01% 8.32% 7.43%
Riskfree Rate:
T. Bond rate = 3% Risk Premium
Las Vegas Sands
Beta 6% Feburary 2009
+ 3.14-> 1.20 X Trading @ $4.25
§ You can value any company in any currency. Thus, you can value
a Brazilian company in nominal reais, US dollars or Swiss Francs.
§ For your valuation to stay invariant and consistent, your cash
flows and discount rates have to be in the same currency. Thus, if
you are using a high inflation currency, both your growth rates
and discount rates will be much higher.
§ For your cash flows to be consistent, you have to use expected
exchange rates that reflect purchasing power parity (the higher
inflation currency has to depreciate by the inflation differential
each year).
Aswath Damodaran
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9
320
80.00% 36.62%
47.45%
47.06%
60.41%
47.62% 50.94%
20.00%
0.00%
Tata Chemicals Tata Steel Tata Motors TCS
336
338
339
450,000.0
$100.00
400,000.0 Revenues = 39,992.77 + 4,039.39 * Average Oil
Price R squared = 96.44%
350,000.0
$80.00
300,000.0
250,000.0 $60.00
200,000.0
$40.00
150,000.0
100,000.0
$20.00
50,000.0
0 $-
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Revenue Oil price
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