Title: A%20philosophical%20basis%20for%20Valuation
1A philosophical basis for Valuation
- Many investors believe that the pursuit of 'true
value' based upon financial fundamentals is a
fruitless one in markets where prices often seem
to have little to do with value. - There have always been investors in financial
markets who have argued that market prices are
determined by the perceptions (and
misperceptions) of buyers and sellers, and not by
anything as prosaic as cashflows or earnings. - Perceptions matter, but they cannot be all that
matter. - Asset prices cannot be justified by merely using
the bigger fool theory.
2Misconceptions about Valuation
- Myth 1 A valuation is an objective search for
true value - Truth 1.1 All valuations are biased. The only
questions are how much and in which direction. - Truth 1.2 The direction and magnitude of the
bias in your valuation is directly proportional
to who pays you and how much you are paid. - Myth 2. A good valuation provides a precise
estimate of value - Truth 2.1 There are no precise valuations
- Truth 2.2 The payoff to valuation is greatest
when valuation is least precise. - Myth 3 . The more quantitative a model, the
better the valuation - Truth 3.1 Ones understanding of a valuation
model is inversely proportional to the number of
inputs required for the model. - Truth 3.2 Simpler valuation models do much
better than complex ones.
3Approaches to Valuation
- Discounted cashflow valuation Relates the value
of an asset to the present value of expected
future cashflows on that asset. - Relative valuation Estimates the value of an
asset by looking at the pricing of 'comparable'
assets relative to a common variable like
earnings, cashflows, book value or sales. - Contingent claim valuation Uses option pricing
models to measure the value of assets that share
option characteristics.
4Basis for all valuation approaches
- The use of valuation models in investment
decisions (i.e., in decisions on which assets are
under valued and which are over valued) are based
upon - a perception that markets are inefficient and
make mistakes in assessing value - an assumption about how and when these
inefficiencies will get corrected - In an efficient market, the market price is the
best estimate of value. The purpose of any
valuation model is then the justification of this
value.
5Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)
- Definition 1 A market is said to be efficient
with respect to some information set, It, if it
is impossible to make economic profits on the
basis of information set It. - Economic profits Profits after adjusting for
risk and transaction costs (such as, brokerage
fees, investment advisory fees). - Economic profits Actual return - Expected
return - Transaction costs - Expected Return CAPM provides one estimate of
expected return. Other estimates Arbitrage
Pricing Theory, Historical Industry Returns.
6EMH continued
- Models of Expected Returns
- CAPM Expected return on stock i Riskfree rate
(Beta of i with respect to
Market)(Expected return on Market - Riskfree
rate) - APT Expected return on stock i Riskfree rate
(Beta of i with respect to Factor 1)(Expected
return on Factor 1 - Riskfree rate)
(Beta of i with respect to Factor
2)(Expected return on Factor 2 - Riskfree rate)
...
7EMH continued
- Models of Expected Returns
- Historical Industry Returns Expected Return on
stock i Average historical return of other
firms in the same industry as company i.
8EMH continued
- Information set
- Weak form of EMH Past history of prices of the
particular security. - Semistrong form of EMH All publicly available
information. - Strong form of EMH All public and private
information.
9Efficient Market Hypothesis
- Definition 2 If capital markets are efficient
then purchase or sale of any security at the
prevailing market price is a zero-NPV
transaction. - Definition 3 (Technical definition) The capital
market is efficient with respect to an
information set if and only if revealing that
information to all investors would change neither
equilibrium prices nor portfolios.
10Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
- What is it In discounted cash flow valuation,
the value of an asset is the present value of the
expected cash flows on the asset. - Philosophical Basis Every asset has an intrinsic
value that can be estimated, based upon its
characteristics in terms of cash flows, growth
and risk. - Information Needed To use discounted cash flow
valuation, you need - to estimate the life of the asset
- to estimate the cash flows during the life of the
asset - to estimate the discount rate to apply to these
cash flows to get present value
11Discounted Cashflow Valuation Basis for Approach
- where,
- n Life of the asset
- CFt Cashflow in period t
- r Discount rate reflecting the riskiness of
the estimated cashflows
12Advantages of DCF Valuation
- Since DCF valuation, done right, is based upon an
assets fundamentals, it should be less exposed
to market moods and perceptions. - If good investors buy businesses, rather than
stocks (the Warren Buffett adage), discounted
cash flow valuation is the right way to think
about what you are getting when you buy an asset. - DCF valuation forces you to think about the
underlying characteristics of the firm, and
understand its business. If nothing else, it
brings you face to face with the assumptions you
are making when you pay a given price for an
asset.
13Disadvantages of DCF valuation
- Since it is an attempt to estimate intrinsic
value, it requires far more inputs and
information than other valuation approaches - These inputs and information are not only noisy
(and difficult to estimate), but can be
manipulated by the savvy analyst to provide the
conclusion he or she wants. - For example
- An entrepreneur can get a high valuation by
overestimating cashflows and/or underestimating
discount rates. - A venture capitalist can buy equity from an
entrepreneur at a lower price by underestimating
cashflows. - An entrepreneur and venture capitalist can get a
higher price for their IPO by overestimating
cashflows and/or underestimating discount rates.
14Disadvantages of DCF valuation
- In an intrinsic valuation model, there is no
guarantee that anything will emerge as under- or
over-valued. Thus, it is possible in a DCF
valuation model, to find every stock in a market
to be over-valued. This can be a problem for - equity research analysts, whose job it is to
follow sectors and make recommendations on the
most under- and over-valued stocks in that sector - equity portfolio managers, who have to be fully
(or close to fully) invested in equities
15When DCF Valuation works best
- This approach is easiest to use for assets
(firms) whose - cashflows are currently positive and
- can be estimated with some reliability for future
periods, and - where a proxy for risk that can be used to obtain
discount rates is available. - It works best for investors who either
- have a long time horizon, allowing the market
time to correct its valuation mistakes and for
price to revert to true value or - are capable of providing the catalyst needed to
move price to value, as would be the case if you
were an activist investor or a potential acquirer
of the whole firm
16Relative Valuation
- What is it? The value of any asset can be
estimated by looking at how the market prices
similar or comparable assets. - Philosophical Basis The intrinsic value of an
asset is impossible (or close to impossible) to
estimate. The value of an asset is whatever the
market is willing to pay for it (based upon its
characteristics) - Information Needed To do a relative valuation,
you need - an identical asset, or a group of comparable or
similar assets - a standardized measure of value (in equity, this
is obtained by dividing the price by a common
variable, such as earnings or book value) - and if the assets are not perfectly comparable,
variables to control for the differences - Market Inefficiency Pricing errors made across
similar or comparable assets are easier to spot,
easier to exploit and are much more quickly
corrected.
17Advantages of Relative Valuation
- Relative valuation is much more likely to reflect
market perceptions and moods than discounted cash
flow valuation. This can be an advantage when it
is important that the price reflect these
perceptions as is the case when - the objective is to sell a security at that price
today (as in the case of an IPO) - With relative valuation, there will always be a
significant proportion of securities that are
under- valued and over-valued. - Since portfolio managers are judged based upon
how they perform on a relative basis (to the
market and other money managers), relative
valuation is more tailored to their needs - Relative valuation generally requires less
information than discounted cash flow valuation
(especially when multiples are used as screens)
18Disadvantages of Relative Valuation
- A portfolio that is composed of stocks which are
undervalued on a relative basis may still be
overvalued, even if the analysts judgments are
right. It is just less overvalued than other
securities in the market. - Relative valuation is built on the assumption
that markets are correct in the aggregate, but
make mistakes on individual securities. To the
degree that markets can be over or under valued
in the aggregate, relative valuation will fail - Relative valuation may require less information
in the way in which most analysts and portfolio
managers use it. However, this is because
implicit assumptions are made about other
variables (that would have been required in a
discounted cash flow valuation). To the extent
that these implicit assumptions are wrong the
relative valuation will also be wrong.
19Disadvantages of Relative Valuation
Introduction DCF Valuation Relative Valuation
Real Option Valuation Conclusion
- Relative valuation may require less information
in the way in which most analysts and portfolio
managers use it. However, this is because
implicit assumptions are made about other
variables (that would have been required in a
discounted cash flow valuation). To the extent
that these implicit assumptions are wrong the
relative valuation will also be wrong.
20Introduction DCF Valuation Relative Valuation
Real Option Valuation Conclusion
- Value of Firm
- FCFF1 expected free cash flow to the firm
- k firms cost of capital
- g growth in the expected free cash flow to the
firm - Dividing both sides by FCFF1 yields the
Value/FCFF multiple for a stable growth firm -
21Introduction DCF Valuation Relative Valuation
Real Option Valuation Conclusion
- The Value/FCFF multiple for a stable growth firm
-
- Value/FCFF increases as g increases.
- Value/FCFF decreases as k increases.
- k is a function of the firms line of business.
22Introduction DCF Valuation Relative Valuation
Real Option Valuation Conclusion
- The Value/FCFF multiple for a stable growth firm
-
- Hence, picking a certain number for the
Value/FCFF ratio implies certain assumptions
about k and g. - Similarly, for
- Price/Earnings,
- Price/Sales,
- Price/EBITDA, etc.
23When relative valuation works best..
- This approach is easiest to use when
- there are a large number of assets comparable to
the one being valued - these assets are priced in a market
- there exists some common variable that can be
used to standardize the price - This approach tends to work best for investors
- who have relatively short time horizons
- are judged based upon a relative benchmark (the
market, other portfolio managers following the
same investment style etc.) - can take actions that can take advantage of the
relative mispricing for instance, a portfolio
manager specializing in technology stocks can buy
the under valued and sell the over valued assets
24Financial Data about Companies
- Go to http//libraries.colorado.edu/
- Type hoovers
- Go to this resource
25(No Transcript)
26- Price/Cash Flow Ratio for different k (in bold)
and g (in italics)
27Contingent Claim (Option) Valuation
- Options have several features
- They derive their value from an underlying asset,
which has value - The payoff on a call (put) option occurs only if
the value of the underlying asset is greater
(lesser) than an exercise price that is specified
at the time the option is created. If this
contingency does not occur, the option is
worthless. - They have a fixed life
- Any security or project that shares these
features can be valued as an option.
28Direct Examples of Options
- Listed options, which are options on traded
assets, that are issued by, listed on and traded
on an option exchange. - Warrants, which are call options on traded
stocks, that are issued by the company. The
proceeds from the warrant issue go to the
company, and the warrants are often traded on the
market.
29Indirect Examples of Options
- Equity in a deeply troubled firm - a firm with
negative earnings and high leverage - can be
viewed as an option to liquidate that is held by
the stockholders of the firm. Viewed as such, it
is a call option on the assets of the firm. - The reserves owned by natural resource firms can
be viewed as call options on the underlying
resource, since the firm can decide whether and
how much of the resource to extract from the
reserve, - The patent owned by a firm or an exclusive
license issued to a firm can be viewed as an
option on the underlying product (project). The
firm owns this option for the duration of the
patent.
30Advantages of Using Option Pricing Models
- Option pricing models allow us to value assets
that we otherwise would not be able to value. For
instance, equity in deeply troubled firms and the
stock of a small, bio-technology firm (with no
revenues and profits) are difficult to value
using discounted cash flow approaches or with
multiples. They can be valued using option
pricing. - Option pricing models provide us fresh insights
into the drivers of value. In cases where an
asset is deriving its value from its option
characteristics, for instance, more risk or
variability can increase value rather than
decrease it.
31Disadvantages of Option Pricing Models
- When real options (which includes the natural
resource options and the product patents) are
valued, many of the inputs for the option pricing
model are difficult to obtain. For instance,
projects do not trade and thus getting a current
value for a project or a variance may be a
daunting task. - The option pricing models derive their value from
an underlying asset. Thus, to do option pricing,
you first need to value the assets. It is
therefore an approach that is an addendum to
another valuation approach.
32Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
33Discounted Cashflow Valuation Basis for Approach
- where,
- n Life of the asset
- CFt Cashflow in period t
- r Discount rate reflecting the riskiness of
the estimated cashflows
34Equity Valuation versus Firm Valuation
- Value just the equity stake in the business
- Value the entire business, which includes,
besides equity, the other claimholders in the
firm
35I.Equity Valuation
- The value of equity is obtained by discounting
expected cashflows to equity, i.e., the residual
cashflows after meeting all expenses, tax
obligations and interest and principal payments,
at the cost of equity, i.e., the rate of return
required by equity investors in the firm. - where,
- CF to Equityt Expected Cashflow to Equity in
period t - ke Cost of Equity
- The dividend discount model is a specialized case
of equity valuation, and the value of a stock is
the present value of expected future dividends.
36II. Firm Valuation
- The value of the firm is obtained by discounting
expected cashflows to the firm, i.e., the
residual cashflows after meeting all operating
expenses and taxes, but prior to debt payments,
at the weighted average cost of capital, which is
the cost of the different components of financing
used by the firm, weighted by their market value
proportions. - where,
- CF to Firmt Expected Cashflow to Firm in
period t - WACC Weighted Average Cost of Capital
37Cash Flows and Discount Rates
- Assume that you are analyzing a company with the
following cashflows for the next five years. - Year CF to Equity Int Exp (1-t) 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 1603.008 2363.008
- Assume also that the cost of equity is 13.625
and the firm can borrow long term at 10. (The
tax rate for the firm is 50.) - The current market value of equity is 1,073 and
the value of debt outstanding is 800.
38Equity versus Firm Valuation
- Method 1 Discount CF to Equity at Cost of Equity
to get value of equity - Cost of Equity 13.625
- PV of Equity 50/1.13625 60/1.136252
68/1.136253 76.2/1.136254 (83.491603)/1.13625
5 1073 - Method 2 Discount CF to Firm at Cost of Capital
to get value of firm - Cost of Debt Pre-tax rate (1- tax rate) 10
(1-.5) 5 - WACC 13.625 (1073/1873) 5 (800/1873)
9.94 - PV of Firm 90/1.0994 100/1.09942
108/1.09943 116.2/1.09944 (123.492363)/1.0994
5 1873 - PV of Equity PV of Firm - Market Value of Debt
- 1873 - 800 1073
39First Principle of Valuation
- Never mix and match cash flows and discount
rates. - The key error to avoid is mismatching cashflows
and discount rates, since discounting cashflows
to equity at the weighted average cost of capital
will lead to an upwardly biased estimate of the
value of equity, while discounting cashflows to
the firm at the cost of equity will yield a
downward biased estimate of the value of the firm.
40Discounted Cash Flow Valuation The Steps
- Estimate the discount rate or rates to use in the
valuation - Discount rate can be either a cost of equity (if
doing equity valuation) or a cost of capital (if
valuing the firm) - Discount rate can be in nominal terms or real
terms, depending upon whether the cash flows are
nominal or real - Discount rate can vary across time.
- Estimate the current earnings and cash flows on
the asset, to either equity investors (CF to
Equity) or to all claimholders (CF to Firm) - Estimate the future earnings and cash flows on
the asset being valued, generally by estimating
an expected growth rate in earnings. - Estimate when the firm will reach stable growth
and what characteristics (risk cash flow) it
will have when it does. - Choose the right DCF model for this asset and
value it.
41Discounted Cash Flow Valuation The Inputs
42The Key Inputs in DCF Valuation
- Discount Rate
- Cost of Equity, in valuing equity
- Cost of Capital, in valuing the firm
- Cash Flows
- Cash Flows to Equity
- Cash Flows to Firm
- Growth (to get future cash flows)
- Growth in Equity Earnings
- Growth in Firm Earnings (Operating Income)
43I. Estimating Discount Rates
44Estimating Inputs Discount Rates
- Critical ingredient in discounted cashflow
valuation. Errors in estimating the discount rate
or mismatching cashflows 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 cashflow being discounted. - Equity versus Firm If the cash flows being
discounted are cash flows to equity, the
appropriate discount rate is a cost of equity. If
the cash flows are cash flows to the firm, the
appropriate discount rate is the cost of capital. - Currency The currency in which the cash flows
are estimated should also be the currency in
which the discount rate is estimated. - Nominal versus Real If the cash flows being
discounted are nominal cash flows (i.e., reflect
expected inflation), the discount rate should be
nominal
45Estimating Inputs Discount Rates or Cost of
Capital (WACC)
- It will depend upon
- (a) the components of financing Debt, Equity
- (b) the cost of each component
- The cost of capital is the cost of each component
weighted by its relative market value. - WACC ke (E/(DE)) kd (D/(DE))
- where ke is cost of equity
- kd is cost of debt,
- E is market value of equity, D is typically book
value of debt.
46I. Cost of Equity
- The cost of equity is the rate of return that
investors require to make an equity investment in
a firm. There are three approaches to estimating
the cost of equity - a dividend-growth model,
- a risk and return model (e.g., CAPM),
- industry average model (Historical Industry
Returns).
47I. Cost of Equity
- The dividend growth model (which specifies the
cost of equity to be the sum of the dividend
yield and the expected growth in earnings) is
based upon the premise that the current price is
equal to the value. It cannot be used in
valuation, if the objective is to find out if an
asset is correctly valued. - P Present value of a stream of cash flows, D,
growing at a rate of g. - r Discount rate that reflects the riskiness of
the cash flows D. - P D / (r-g)
- r-g D/P
r D/P g
48I. Cost of Equity
- The dividend growth model (which specifies the
cost of equity to be the sum of the dividend
yield and the expected growth in earnings) is
based upon the premise that the current price is
equal to the value. It cannot be used in
valuation, if the objective is to find out if an
asset is correctly valued. - A risk and return model, on the other hand, tries
to answer two questions - How do you measure risk?
- How do you translate this risk measure into a
risk premium? - Industry Average Returns
- Assumes future returns of the company will be
similar to the past returns of firms in that
industry. - Needs no estimate of risk, or risk and return
model.
49Measuring Cost of Capital
- It will depend upon
- (a) the components of financing Debt, Equity
- (b) the cost of each component
- The cost of capital is the cost of each component
weighted by its relative market value. - WACC ke (E/(DE)) kd (D/(DE))
50The Cost of Debt
- The cost of debt is the market interest rate that
the firm has to pay on its borrowing. It will
depend upon three components- - (a) The general level of interest rates
- (b) The default premium
- (c) The firm's tax rate
51What the cost of debt is and is not..
- The cost of debt is
- the rate at which the company can borrow at today
- corrected for the tax benefit it gets for
interest payments. - Cost of debt kd Interest Rate on Debt (1 -
Tax rate) - The cost of debt is not
- the interest rate at which the company obtained
the debt it has on its books.
52Estimating the Cost of Debt
- If the firm has bonds outstanding, and the bonds
are traded, the yield to maturity on a long-term,
straight (no special features) bond can be used
as the interest rate. - If the firm is rated, use the rating and a
typical default spread on bonds with that rating
to estimate the cost of debt. - If the firm is not rated,
- and it has recently borrowed long term from a
bank, use the interest rate on the borrowing or - estimate a synthetic rating for the company, and
use the synthetic rating to arrive at a default
spread and a cost of debt - The cost of debt has to be estimated in the same
currency as the cost of equity and the cash flows
in the valuation.
53Calculate the weights of each component
- Use target/average debt weights rather than
project-specific weights. - Use market value weights for debt and equity.
- The cost of capital is a measure of how much it
would cost you to go out and raise the financing
to acquire the business you are valuing today.
Since you have to pay market prices for debt and
equity, the cost of capital is better estimated
using market value weights. - Book values are often misleading and outdated.
54Estimating Market Value Weights
- Market Value of Equity should include the
following - Market Value of Shares outstanding
- Market Value of Warrants outstanding
- Market Value of Conversion Option in Convertible
Bonds - Market Value of Debt is more difficult to
estimate because few firms have only publicly
traded debt. There are two solutions - Assume book value of debt is equal to market
value - Estimate the market value of debt from the book
value
55II. Estimating Cash Flows
56Steps in Cash Flow Estimation
- Estimate the current earnings of the firm
- Cash flows to equity look at earnings after
interest expenses - i.e. net income - Cash flows to the firm look at operating
earnings after taxes - Consider how much the firm invested to create
future growth - If the investment is not expensed, it will be
categorized as capital expenditures. To the
extent that depreciation provides a cash flow, it
will cover some of these expenditures. - Increasing working capital needs are also
investments for future growth
57Earnings Checks
- When estimating cash flows, we invariably start
with accounting earnings. To the extent that we
start with accounting earnings in a base year, it
is worth considering the following questions - Are basic accounting standards being adhered to
in the calculation of the earnings? - Are the base year earnings skewed by
extraordinary items - profits or losses? (Look at
earnings prior to extraordinary items) - Are the base year earnings affected by any
accounting rule changes made during the period?
(Changes in inventory or depreciation methods can
have a material effect on earnings) - Are the base year earnings abnormally low or
high? (If so, it may be necessary to normalize
the earnings.) - How much of the accounting expenses are operating
expenses and how much are really expenses to
create future growth?
58Estimating Cashflows
- Free cashflow to Firm (FCFF) Cashflow to
- common shareholders,
- preferred shareholders, and
- debtholders.
- FCFF Free Cashflow to Equity
- Preferred dividends
- Interest expense (1 - tax rate)
Principal repayments - New debt issues.
59Estimating Cashflows
- 1. Revenues - Operating expenses
- Earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation, and amort. (EBITDA) - 2. EBITDA - Depreciation and Amortization
- Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT)
- 3. EBIT - Interest Expenses
- Earnings before taxes
- 4. Earnings before taxes Taxes Net Income
- 5. Net Income Depreciation and Amortization
- Cashflow from Operations
- 6. Cashflow from operations - Working Capital
change - Capital spending - Principal Repayments
Proceeds from New Debt Issues Free Cashflow
to Equity.
60Measuring Investment Expenditures
- Accounting rules categorize expenses into
operating and capital expenses. In theory,
operating expenses are expenses that create
earnings only in the current period, whereas
capital expenses are those that will create
earnings over future periods as well. Operating
expenses are netted against revenues to arrive at
operating income. - There are anomalies in the way in which this
principle is applied. Research and development
expenses are treated as operating expenses, when
they are in fact designed to create products in
future periods. - Capital expenditures, while not shown as
operating expenses in the period in which they
are made, are depreciated or amortized over their
estimated life. This depreciation and
amortization expense is a non-cash charge when it
does occur. - The net cash flow from capital expenditures can
be then be written as - Net Capital Expenditures Capital Expenditures -
Depreciation
61The Working Capital Effect
- 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 definition of working capital from a
cash flow 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 flows 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 flows.
62III. Estimating Growth
63Ways of Estimating Growth in Earnings
- Look at the past
- The historical growth in earnings per share is
usually a good starting point for growth
estimation - Look at what others are estimating
- Analysts estimate growth in earnings per share
for many firms. It is useful to know what their
estimates are. - Look at fundamentals
- Ultimately, all growth in earnings can be traced
to two fundamentals - how much the firm is
investing in new projects, and what returns these
projects are making for the firm.
64I. Historical Growth in EPS
- Historical growth rates can be estimated in a
number of different ways - Arithmetic versus Geometric Averages
- Simple versus Regression Models
- Historical growth rates can be sensitive to
- the period used in the estimation
- In using historical growth rates, the following
factors have to be considered - how to deal with negative earnings
- the effect of changing size
65Arithmetic versus Geometric Growth Rates
- Year EPS Growth Rate
- 2000 1.50
- 2001 1.20 -20.00
- 2002 1.52 26.67
- 2003 1.63 7.24
- 2004 2.04 25.15
- 2005 2.53 24.02
- 2006 2.23 -11.86
- Arithmetic Average 8.54
- Geometric Average (2.23/1.50) (1/6) 1 6.83
- The arithmetic average will be higher than the
geometric average rate - The difference will increase with the standard
deviation in earnings
66The Effects of Altering Estimation Periods
- Year EPS Growth Rate
- 2001 1.20
- 2002 1.52 26.67
- 2003 1.63 7.24
- 2004 2.04 25.15
- 2005 2.53 24.02
- 2006 2.23 -11.86
- Taking out 2000 from our sample, changes the
growth rates materially - Arithmetic Average from 2001 to 2006 14.24
- Geometric Average (2.23/1.20)(1/5) 13.19
67Dealing with Negative Earnings
- When the earnings in the starting period are
negative, the growth rate cannot be estimated.
(0.30/-0.05 -600) - 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.
68The Effect of Size on Growth
- Year Net Profit Growth Rate
- 2000 1.80
- 2001 6.40 255.56
- 2002 19.30 201.56
- 2003 41.20 113.47
- 2004 78.00 89.32
- 2005 97.70 25.26
- 2006 122.30 25.18
- Geometric Average Growth Rate 102
69Extrapolation and its Dangers
- Year Net Profit ( million)
- 2006 122.30
- 2007 247.05
- 2008 499.03
- 2009 1,008.05
- 2010 2,036.25
- 2011 4,113.23
- If net profit continues to grow at the same rate
as it has in the past 6 years (2000-2006), the
expected net income in 5 years (2011) will be
4.113 billion!
70Propositions about Historical Growth
- Proposition 1 And in today already walks
tomorrow. - Coleridge
- Proposition 2 You cannot plan the future by the
past - Burke
- Proposition 3 Past growth carries the most
information for firms whose size and business mix
have not changed during the estimation period,
and are not expected to change during the
forecasting period. - Proposition 4 Past growth carries the least
information for firms in transition (from small
to large, from one business to another..)
71II. Analyst Forecasts of Growth
- While the job of an analyst is to find under and
over valued stocks in the sectors that they
follow, a significant 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.
72How good are analysts at forecasting growth?
- Analysts forecasts of EPS tend to be closer to
the actual EPS than simple time series models,
but the differences tend to be small - The advantage that analysts have over time series
models - tends to decrease with the forecast period (next
quarter versus 5 years) - tends to be greater for larger firms than for
smaller firms - tends to be greater at the industry level than at
the company level - Forecasts of growth (and revisions thereof) tend
to be highly correlated across analysts.
73Are some analysts more equal than others?
- A study of All-America Analysts (chosen by
Institutional Investor) found that - There is no evidence that analysts who are chosen
for the All-America Analyst team were chosen
because they were better forecasters of earnings.
(Their median forecast error in the quarter prior
to being chosen was 30 the median forecast
error of other analysts was 28) - However, in the calendar year following being
chosen as All-America analysts, these analysts
become slightly better forecasters than their
less fortunate brethren. (The median forecast
error for All-America analysts is 2 lower than
the median forecast error for other analysts.) - Earnings revisions made by All-America analysts
tend to have a much greater impact on the stock
price than revisions from other analysts - The recommendations made by the All America
analysts have a greater impact on stock prices
(3 on buys 4.7 on sells). For these
recommendations the price changes are sustained,
and they continue to rise in the following period
(2.4 for buys 13.8 for the sells).
74The Five Deadly Sins of an Analyst
- Tunnel Vision Becoming so focused on the sector
and valuations within the sector that they lose
sight of the bigger picture. - LemmingitisStrong urge felt by analysts to
change recommendations and revise earnings
estimates when other analysts do the same. - Stockholm Syndrome Refers to analysts who start
identifying with the managers of the firms 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 her
primary job is to bring in investment banking
business to the firm.
75Propositions about Analyst Growth Rates
- Proposition 1 There is 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
firm. There is, however, danger when they agree
too much (lemmingitis) and when they agree too
little (in which case the information that they
have is so noisy as to be useless).
76IV. Growth Patterns
- Discounted Cashflow Valuation
77Stable Growth and Terminal Value
- When a firms cash flows grow at a constant
rate forever, the present value of those cash
flows 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 firm 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 flows beyond.
78Growth Patterns
- A key assumption in all discounted cash flow
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 firm
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)
Stable Growth
2-Stage Growth
3-Stage Growth
79Determinants of Growth Patterns
- Size of the firm
- Success usually makes a firm larger. As firms
become larger, it becomes much more difficult for
them to maintain high growth rates - Current growth rate
- While past growth is not always a reliable
indicator of future growth, there is a
correlation between current growth and future
growth. Thus, a firm growing at 30 currently
probably has higher growth and a longer expected
growth period than one growing 10 a year now. - Barriers to entry and differential advantages
- 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.
80Stable Growth and Fundamentals
- The growth rate of a firm is driven by its
fundamentals - how much it reinvests and how high
project returns are. As growth rates approach
stability, the firm should be given the
characteristics of a stable growth firm. - Model High Growth Firms Stable growth firms
- 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
81V. Beyond Inputs Choosing and Using the Right
Model
- Discounted Cashflow Valuation
82Summarizing the Inputs
- In summary, at this stage in the process, we
should have an estimate of the - the current cash flows on the investment, either
to equity investors (dividends or free cash flows
to equity) or to the firm (cash flow to the firm) - the current cost of equity and/or capital on the
investment - the expected growth rate in earnings, based upon
historical growth, analysts forecasts and/or
fundamentals. - The next step in the process is deciding
- which cash flow to discount, which should
indicate - which discount rate needs to be estimated and
- what pattern we will assume growth to follow.
83Which cash flow should I discount?
- Use Equity Valuation
- (a) for firms which have stable leverage, whether
high or not, and - (b) if equity (stock) is being valued
- Use Firm Valuation
- (a) for firms which have leverage which is too
high or too low, and expect to change the
leverage over time, because debt payments and
issues do not have to be factored in the cash
flows and the discount rate (cost of capital)
does not change dramatically over time. - (b) for firms for which you have partial
information on leverage (eg interest expenses
are missing..) - (c) in all other cases, where you are more
interested in valuing the firm than the equity.
(Value Consulting?)
84Given cash flows to equity, should I discount
dividends or FCFE?
- Use the Dividend Discount Model
- (a) For firms which pay dividends (and repurchase
stock) which are close to the Free Cash Flow to
Equity (over a extended period) - (b)For firms where FCFE are difficult to estimate
(Example Banks and Financial Service companies) - Use the FCFE Model
- (a) For firms which pay dividends which are
significantly higher or lower than the Free Cash
Flow to Equity. (What is significant? ... As a
rule of thumb, if dividends are less than 80 of
FCFE or dividends are greater than 110 of FCFE
over a 5-year period, use the FCFE model) - (b) For firms where dividends are not available
(Example Private Companies, IPOs)
85What discount rate should I use?
- Cost of Equity versus Cost of Capital
- If discounting cash flows to equity -gt Cost of
Equity - If discounting cash flows to the firm-gt Cost of
Capital - What currency should the discount rate (risk free
rate) be in? - Match the currency in which you estimate the risk
free rate to the currency of your cash flows - Should I use real or nominal cash flows?
- If discounting real cash flows-gt real cost of
capital - If nominal cash flows -gt nominal cost of capital
- If inflation is low (lt10), stick with nominal
cash flows since taxes are based upon nominal
income - If inflation is high (gt10) switch to real cash
flows
86Which Growth Pattern Should I use?
- Use a Stable Growth Model If your firm is
- large and already growing at a rate close to or
lower than the overall growth rate of the
economy, or - constrained by regulation from growing at rate
faster than the economy - has the characteristics of a stable firm (average
risk reinvestment rates) - Use a 2-Stage Growth Model If your firm
- is large growing at a moderate rate (Overall
growth rate 10) or - has a single product barriers to entry with a
finite life (e.g. patents) - Use a 3-Stage Model If your firm
- is small and growing at a very high rate (gt
Overall growth rate 10) or - has significant barriers to entry into the
business - has firm characteristics that are very different
from the norm
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