Title: Corporate Value and ValueBased Management
1Corporate Value and Value-Based Management
2Mini Case
- You have been hired as a consultant to Kulpa
Fishing Supplies (KFS), a company that is seeking
to increase its value. KFS has asked you to
estimate the value of two privately held
companies that KFS is thinking about acquiring.
But first, KFS would like for you to explain how
to value companies that dont pay dividends.
3Overview of Corporate Valuation
- What model?
- Dividend Growth?
- Start-up company?
- Not paying dividend?
- Internal management?
- Assumes firm is one asset
- Corporate Valuation Model
- More general
- Corporate decisions affect stockholders
- Who makes decisions?
- S/h wealth max. not the same as mgt satisfaction
- Need rules/procedures
- Corporate governance
4Corporate Valuation Model
- Assets that company owns
- Assets-in-place nonoperating
- Assets-in-place
- Tangible, such as ________________
- Expected to grow and generate free cashflows
- PV of their expected FCFs, discounted at WACC, is
value of operations - Value of Operations
5Corporate Valuation Model
- Nonoperating assets (financial)
- Marketable securities
- Non-controlling interest in another company
- Value is usually close to value on B/S
- Total Corporate Value
- Value of Operations value of nonoperating
assets - Claims against
- Debtholders
- Preferred
- Then, common
6Corporate Valuation Model
- Applied to
- Company w/o dividends, private company, division
- Example
- KFS first acquisition target is a privately held
company in a mature industry. The company
currently has FCF of 20 m and it is expected to
grow at a constant rate of 5. Its WACC is 10.
It has mkt secur of 100 m. It is financed with
200 m debt, 50 m preferred, 210 m of book
equity.
7Corporate Valuation Model
So,
8Corporate Valuation Model
Then,
Look familiar????? Better or not? Example
9Corporate Valuation Model
- Total corporate value Vop Mkt Sec
- Value of equity Total corp value Debt - Pref
10Market Value Added
- MVA Total corporate value total book value
- Total book value Book value of equity book
value of debt book value of preferred - MVA
11Nonconstant Growth
- The second acquisition target is a privately held
company in a growing industry. The target has
recently borrowed 40m to finance its expansion
it has no other debt or preferred stock. It pays
no dividends and currently has no marketable
securities. KFS expects the company to produce
FCF of -5 m in 1 year, 10m in 2 years, and 20m
in 3 years. After that, FCF will grow at a
constant rate of 6. Its WACC is 10 and it
currently has 10 m shares of stock. - Concept of horizon value
- FCFs are forecast for three years in this
example, so the forecast horizon is three years - Growth is constant after the horizon (3 years),
so we can modify the constant growth formula to
find the value of all FCFs beyond the horizon,
discounted back to the horizon - Horizon value is also called terminal value or
continuing value
12Horizon Value
Example
13Corporate Valuation Model
- Find value of operations.
- Find price per share.
14Value-Based Management
- Systematic application of the corporate valuation
model to all corporate decisions and strategic
initiatives - Goal Increase MVA
- Drivers of MVA
- Sales growth
- Operating profitability
- OP NOPAT/Sales
- Capital requirements
- CR Operating Capital/Sales
- WACC
15MVA for Constant Growth Firm
First term MVA of firm that keeps all of its
sales revenue (100operating profit margin) and
never has to make any additionalinvestments in
operating capital. Second term Operating profit
the firm keeps LESS the return thatinvestors
require for using their capital.
16More on MVA
- Improve by
- Increasing or decreasing WACC?
- Increasing or decreasing OP?
- Increasing or decreasing CR?
- Impact of growth
- Second term can be or -. Depends on relative
size of profitability, capital requirements and
required return of investors. - If negative, then growth ______ MVA.
- If positive, then growth ______ MVA.
17Expected Return on Invested Capital (EROIC)
Then,
If spread between EROIC and WACC is positive,
then MVA is _______ and growth makes MVA
________. The opposite istrue if spread is
negative.
18Impact of Growth on MVA
- KFS has two divisions. Both have current sales
of 1,000, current expected growth of 5, and a
WACC of 10. Division A has high profitability
(OP6) but high capital requirements (CR78).
Division B has low profitability (OP4) but low
capital requirements (CR27).
19Impact of Growth on MVA
- Find MVA if growth is 5 then 6 for each
division.
20Analysis of Growth Strategies
- EROIC for A is less than WACC, so A should
postpone growth until it improves EROIC by
reducing capital requirements (e.g., reducing
inventory) and/or improving profitability. - EROIC for B is greater than WACC, so B should
continue with growth plans.
21Who is Creating Wealth?
22Corporate Governance
- Rules and procedures that ensure that managers do
employ the principals of VBM. - Stick
- Threat of removal
- Board or takeover
- Carrot
- Compensation
23Corporate Governance
- Entrenched management
- Occurs when little chance poorly performing
managers will be replaced - Causes
- Manager owns controlling stake
- Anti-takeover provisions in charter
- Weak board
- Problems
- Consumption of perks
- Lavish offices, corporate jets, large staffs,
country club memberships, etc. - Accepts projects that make firm larger even if
MVA goes down - Makes bad acquisitions
24Corporate Governance
- Anti-takeover provisions
- Targeted share repurchases
- Greenmail
- Hostile bidder, who is planning to fire CEO, buys
5of stock at 20. Raider then makes offer to
purchase the rest at 30. The company might
offer to buy back bidders stock at 35. Raider
signs a document promising not to attempt
takeover again for a number of years. - Charter should ban
- Shareholder rights provisions
- Poison pills
- Give s/hs of target firms the right to buy a
specified number of shares in the company at a
very low price if takeover is attempted. This
dilutes holdings of raider. - Entrench!
25Corporate Governance
- Restricted voting rights plans
- Deprives a s/h of voting rights if s/h owns more
than a specified amount of stock. - Board of directors
- Weak
- Many insiders or quasi-insiders
- Enron consulting fees
- Interlocking boards
- CEO of A on Bs board, CEO of B on As board
26Corporate Governance
- Using compensation to align s/h and manager
interests - Stock options
- Gives owner the right to purchase a share of
company stock at a specified price (exercise
price). - Usually cant exercise for a number of years
(vesting) - Does have expiration period usually 10 years
- Restricted stock
- Grants shares to managers. Subject to vesting.