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Title: Forecasting Performance:


1
Chapter 9
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  • Forecasting Performance
  • The Explicit Forecast Period

2
Session Overview
  • In this session, we focus on the mechanics of
    forecastingspecifically, how to develop an
    integrated set of financial forecasts that
    reflect the companys expected performance. This
    discussion covers
  • The appropriate level of detail. The typical
    forecast will be split into three time periods
    the explicit forecast, a forecast of key value
    drivers, and continuing value.
  • How to build a well-structured spreadsheet model.
    A valuation spreadsheet should separate raw
    inputs from computations, flow from one
    worksheet to the next, and be flexible enough to
    handle multiple scenarios.
  • The mechanics of the forecasting process. To
    arrive at future cash flow, forecast the income
    statement, balance sheet, and statement of
    retained earnings. The forecasted financial
    statements provide the information we need for
    computing ROIC and free cash flow.

3
1. The Length and Detail of the Forecast
  • Before you begin forecasting individual line
    items, determine how many years to explicitly
    forecast and how detailed your forecast should
    be. A good forecast model is broken into three
    time periods

Today
Years 1-5
Years 6-15
Years 16
Use a simplified forecast for the remaining
years, focusing on a few important variables,
such as revenue growth, margins, and capital
turnover.
Build a detailed five- to seven-year forecast
that develops complete balance sheets and income
statements with as many links to real variables
(e.g., unit volumes, cost per unit) as possible.
Value the remaining years by using a
perpetuity-based formula, such as the key value
driver formula.
4
The Length and Detail of the Forecast
  • The explicit forecast period must be long enough
    for the company to reach a steady state, defined
    by the following characteristics
  • The company grows at a constant rate and
    reinvests a constant proportion of its operating
    profits into the business each year.
  • The company earns a constant rate of return on
    new capital invested.
  • The company earns a constant return on its base
    level of invested capital.
  • In general, we recommend using an explicit
    forecast period of 10 to 15 yearsperhaps longer
    for cyclical companies or those experiencing very
    rapid growth.
  • Using a short explicit forecast period, such as
    five years, typically results in a significant
    undervaluation of a company or requires heroic
    long-term growth assumptions in the continuing
    value.

5
2. Components of a Good Model
  • A detailed valuation spreadsheet can easily
    become complex. Therefore, you need to carefully
    design and structure your model before starting
    to forecast.
  • Well-built valuation models have certain
    characteristics.
  • First, user input and market data are collected
    in only a few places.
  • Denote user input and market data each in a
    different color for easy spotting.
  • Unless specified as user input, numbers should
    never be hard-coded into a formula.

6
Components of a Good Model
  • Many spreadsheet designs are possible. In the
    valuation example from the preceding slide, the
    workbook contains seven worksheets
  1. Raw historical data from company financials.
  2. Integrated financials based on raw data.
  3. Historical analysis and forecast ratios.
  4. Market data and WACC analysis.
  5. Reorganized financial statements (into NOPLAT and
    invested capital).
  6. ROIC and free cash flow (FCF) using reorganized
    financials.
  7. Valuation summary, including enterprise
    discounted cash flow (DCF), economic profit, and
    equity valuation computations.

7
3. Overview of the Forecasting Process
Although the future is unknowable, careful
analysis can yield insights into how a company
may develop. We break the forecasting process
into six steps
  1. Prepare and analyze historical financials. Before
    forecasting future financials, you must build and
    analyze historical financials. In many cases,
    reported financials are overly simplistic. When
    this occurs, you have to rebuild financial
    statements with the right balance of detail.
  2. Build the revenue forecast. Almost every line
    item will rely directly or indirectly on revenue.
    You can estimate future revenue by using either a
    top-down (market-based) or a bottom-up
    (customer-based) approach. Forecasts should be
    consistent with historical evidence on growth.
  3. Forecast the income statement. Use the
    appropriate economic drivers to forecast
    operating expenses, depreciation, interest
    income, interest expense, and reported taxes.

8
Overview of the Forecasting Process
We break the forecasting process into six steps
  • Forecast the balance sheet invested capital and
    nonoperating assets. On the balance sheet,
    forecast operating working capital net property,
    plant, and equipment (PPE) goodwill and
    nonoperating assets.
  • Forecast the balance sheet investor funds.
    Complete the balance sheet by computing retained
    earnings and forecasting other equity accounts.
    Use cash and/or debt accounts to balance the cash
    flows and balance sheet.
  • Calculate ROIC and FCF. Calculate ROIC to ensure
    forecasts are consistent with economic
    principles, industry dynamics, and the companys
    competitive advantage. To complete the forecast,
    calculate free cash flow as the basis for
    valuation. Future FCF should be calculated the
    same way as historical FCF.

Lets examine each step in detail
9
Step 1 Prepare Historical Financials
  • To start the forecasting process, collect raw
    historical data and build the financial
    statements in a spreadsheet.
  • Be sure to analyze and scrub historical data.
    You dont want more detail than necessary, and
    you should not unwittingly aggregate operating
    and nonoperating items.

Boeing Company Current Liabilities in Balance
Sheet
Boeings balance sheet reports what appears to be
an operating line item, but it is actually a
mixture of operating, nonoperating, and financing!
10
Step 2 Build the Revenue Forecast
  • Creating a good revenue forecast is critical
    because most forecast ratios are directly or
    indirectly driven by revenue. The revenue
    forecast should be dynamic constantly reevaluate
    as new information becomes available.
  • To build a revenue forecast, use a top-down
    forecast, in which you start with the total
    market, or use a bottom-up approach, which starts
    with the companys own forecasts.

1. Estimate quantity and pricing of aggregate
worldwide market.
Revenue Forecast
3. Extend short-term revenue forecasts to
long-term.
2. Estimate market share and pricing strength
based on competition and competitive advantage.
BOTTOM UP
TOP DOWN
2. Estimate new customer wins and turnover.
Revenue Forecast
1. Project demand from existing customers.
11
Step 3 Forecast the Income Statement
  • With a revenue forecast in place, next forecast
    individual line items related to the income
    statement. To forecast a line item, use a
    three-step process
  • Decide what economically drives the line item.
    For most line items, forecasts will be tied
    directly to revenues.
  • Estimate the forecast ratio. Since cost of goods
    sold (COGS) is tied to revenue, estimate COGS as
    a percentage of revenues.
  • Multiply the forecast ratio by an estimate of its
    driver. For instance, since most line items are
    driven by revenue, most forecast ratios, such as
    COGS to revenues, should be applied to estimates
    of future revenues.

12
Step 3 Forecast the Income Statement
  • Multiply the forecast ratio by an estimate of its
    driver.
  • For instance, since most line items are driven by
    revenue, most forecast ratios, such as COGS to
    revenues, should be applied to estimates of
    future revenues.
  • This is why a good revenue forecast is critical.
    Any error in the revenue forecast will be carried
    through the entire model.

13
Step 3 Forecast the Income Statement
  • The appropriate choice for a forecast driver
    depends on the company and the industry in which
    it competes. Below is some guidance on typical
    forecast drivers and forecast ratios for the most
    common financial statement line items.

Typical Forecast Drivers for the Income Statement
14
Step 3 Forecast the Income Statement
  • To forecast depreciation, you have three options.
    You can forecast depreciation as a percentage of
    revenues or as a percentage of property, plant,
    and equipment.
  • For simplicity, lets forecast next years
    depreciation using an as-is percentage of
    revenues.

Example 1 Forecast Depreciation
15
Step 3 Forecast the Income Statement
Example 2 Interest Expense
Example 3 Interest Income
16
Step 4 Forecast the Balance Sheet
  • To forecast the balance sheet, start with
    invested capital and nonoperating assets. Excess
    cash and sources of financing, such as debt, will
    be handled in the next step.
  • When forecasting balance sheet items, use the
    stock method. The relationship between balance
    sheet accounts and revenues (the stock method) is
    more stable than the change in accounts versus
    revenues (the flow method).

Stock vs. Flow Example
17
Step 4 Forecast the Balance Sheet
  • To forecast the balance sheet, start with items
    related to invested capital and nonoperating
    assets. Below, we present forecast drivers and
    forecast ratios for the most common line items.

Typical Forecast Drivers and Ratios for the
Balance Sheet
18
Step 4 Forecast the Balance Sheet
Example 1 Forecasting Working Cash
Example 2 Forecasting Net PPE
19
Step 5 Forecast Required Financing
  • To complete the balance sheet, forecast the
    companys sources of financing. To do this, first
    rely on the rules of accounting. Use the
    principle of clean surplus accounting REt1
    REt Net Income Dividends.

Statement of Retained Earnings
To forecast retained earnings, you must generate
a forecast of dividend payout.
These are driven by other forecasts, and should
not be reestimated.
  • Increasing the dividend payout ratio should keep
    excess cash at reasonable levels. Altering the
    payout policy, however, should not affect the
    value of operations in an enterprise DCF
    valuation. If it does, your model is
    inconsistent with the principles of enterprise
    DCF.

20
Step 5 Forecast Required Financing
  • At this point, five line items remain excess
    cash, short-term debt, long-term debt, a new
    account titled newly issued debt, and common
    stock. Some combination of these line items must
    make the balance sheet balance. For this reason,
    these items are often referred to as the plug.
  • Simple models use newly issued debt as the plug.
  • Advanced models use excess cash or newly issued
    debt, to prevent debt from becoming negative.

Balance Sheet
The Plug (use IF/THEN statement for advanced
models)
The Plug (for simple models)
Excess Cash
Newly Issued Debt
Remaining Liabilities and Shareholders Equity
Remaining Assets
21
Step 5 Forecast Required Financing
Step 1 Determine retained earnings using the
clean surplus relationship, forecast existing
debt using contractual terms, and keep common
stock constant. Step 2 Test which is higher,
assets excluding excess cash or liabilities and
equity excluding newly issued debt. Step 3 If
assets excluding excess cash are higher, set
excess cash equal to zero, and plug the
difference with the newly issued debt. Otherwise,
plug with excess cash.
22
Step 6 Calculate ROIC and FCF
Home Depot NOPLAT and Invested Capital
Home Depot Free Cash Flow
Historical
Forecast
Historical
Forecast
23
Other Issues in Forecasting
  1. Nonfinancial operating drivers. In industries
    where prices or technologies are changing
    dramatically, your forecast should incorporate
    operating drivers like volume and productivity.
  2. Fixed versus variable costs. The distinction
    between fixed and variable costs at the company
    level is usually unimportant because most costs
    are variable. For individual production
    facilities or retail stores, this is not the
    case most of their costs are fixed.
  3. Inflation. Often, the cost of capital is
    estimated using nominal terms. If this is the
    case, forecast in nominal terms. Be careful,
    however, as high inflation will distort
    historical analyses.

24
Closing Thoughts
  • To value a companys operations using enterprise
    DCF, we discount each years forecast of free
    cash flow for time and risk. In this
    presentation, we analyzed a six-step process for
    forecasting a companys financials, and
    subsequently its free cash flow.
  • While you are building a forecast, it is easy to
    become engrossed in the details of individual
    line items. But we stress, once again, that you
    must place your aggregate results in the proper
    context.
  • Always check your resulting revenue growth and
    ROIC against industry-wide historical data. If
    required forecasts exceed other companies
    historical performance, make sure the company has
    a specific and robust competitive advantage.
  • Finally, do not make your model more complicated
    than it needs to be. Extraneous details can
    cloud the drivers that really matter. Create
    detailed line item forecasts only when they
    increase the accuracy of the companys key value
    drivers.
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