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Firm Valuation and Analysis. Company Analysis and Stock Selection. Good companies are not necessarily good investments In the end, we want to compare the intrinsic value of a stock to its market value Stock of a great company may be overpriced
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Company Analysis and Stock Selection • Good companies are not necessarily good investments • In the end, we want to compare the intrinsic value of a stock to its market value • Stock of a great company may be overpriced • Stock of a lesser company may be a superior investment since it is undervalued
Defensive Companies and Stocks • Defensive companies’ future earnings are more likely to withstand an economic downturn • Low business risk • Not excessive financial risk • Defensive stocks’ returns are not as susceptible to changes in the market • Stocks with low systematic risk
Cyclical Companies and Stocks • Sales and earnings heavily influenced by aggregate business activity • High business risk • Sometimes high financial risk as well • Cyclical stocks experience high returns is up markets, low returns in down markets • Stocks with high betas
Speculative Companies and Stocks • Speculative companies invest in assets involving great risk, but with the possibility of great gain • Very high business risk, likely no current cash flows • Example: biotech • Speculative stocks have the potential for great percentage gains and losses • Often characterized by high P/E ratios
Value versus Growth Investing • Growth stocks will have positive earnings surprises and above-average risk adjusted rates of return • So long as they continue to grow and surprise to the upside) • Value stocks appear to be undervalued, may have disappointed investors in the past and are now forgotten, left for dead, despised • Value stocks usually have low P/E ratio or low ratios of price to book value • Are housing stocks value stocks or value traps?
Theory of Valuation • The value of a financial asset is the present value of its expected future cash flows • Required inputs: • The stream of expected future returns, or cash flows • The required rate of return on the investment
Required Rate of Return • Determined by the risk of an investment and available returns in the market • Determined by: • The real risk-free rate of return, plus • The expected rate of inflation, plus • A risk premium to compensate for the uncertainty of returns • Sources of uncertainty, and therefore risk premiums, vary by the type of investment
Investment Decision Process • Once expected (intrinsic) value is calculated, the investment decision is rather straightforward and intuitive: • If Estimated Value > Market Price, buy • If Estimated Value < Market Price, do not buy • The particulars of the valuation process vary by type of investment
Approaches to Common Stock Valuation • Discounted Cash Flow Techniques • Present value of Dividends (DDM) • Present value of Free Cash Flow • Relative valuation techniques • Price-earnings ratio (P/E) • Price-cash flow ratios (P/CF) • Price-book value ratios (P/BV) • Used most often for banks and other capital-intensive businesses • Not appropriate for many “asset-light” businesses
Dividend Discount Models • Constant Growth Model: • Assumes dividends started at D0 (current year’s dividend) and will grow at a constant growth rate • Growth will continue for an infinite period of time • The required return (k) is greater than the constant rate of growth (g) V = D1/(k-g) where D1= D0(1+g)
Dividend Discount Models Example 10.1 Consider a situation in which we are valuing a share of common stock that we plan to hold for only one year. What will be the value of the stock today if it pays a dividend of $2.00, is expected to have a price of $75 and the investor’s required rate of return is 12%? FIN3000, Liuren Wu
Dividend Discount Models Value of Common stock = Present Value of future cash flows = Present Value of (dividend + expected selling price) = ($2+$75) ÷ (1.12)1 = $68.75 FIN3000, Liuren Wu
Dividend Discount Models Example 10.2 Continue example 10.1. What will be the value of common stock if you hold the stock for two years and sell it for $82? Assume the dividend payment is fixed at $2 per year. • Value of Common stock = Present Value of future cash flows = Present Value of (dividends + expected selling price) = {($2) ÷ (1.12)1 } + {($2+$82) ÷ (1.12)2 } = $71.14 FIN3000, Liuren Wu
Determinants of Growth Rate of Future Dividends • Firm’s growth opportunities relate to: • The rate of return the firm expects to earn when they reinvest earnings (the return on equity, ROE), and • The proportion of firm’s earnings that they reinvest. This is known as the retention ratio, b, = 1- dividend payout ratio. • The growth rate can be formally expressed as follows: • g = the expected rate of growth of dividends • D1/E1 = the dividend payout ratio • ROE = the return on equity earned when the firm reinvests a portion of its earning back into the firm. FIN3000, Liuren Wu
Discounted Cash Flow Model • Also called the free cash flow method. Suggests the value of the entire firm equals the present value of the firm’s free cash flows. • A firm generates free cash flows for its stock holders and debt holders, so: • Market value of a firm=Market value of stocks + market value of debt
DCF Continued • Find the Enterprise Value (EV) of the firm. • PV of firm’s future FCFs • FCF = cash providing by operating activities, less capital expenditures (capex) • Subtract market value of firm’s debt (and preferred stock, if any) to get total value of common stock (equity). • Value of equity = EV of firm – MV of debt • Divide value of equity by the number of shares outstanding. • Value per share = value of equity / # of shares of common stock
DCF Continued The value of a business is usually computed as the discounted value of FCF out to a valuation horizon (H). • The value after H is sometimes called the terminal value or horizon value.
DCF Continued PV (free cash flows) PV (terminal value)
0 1 2 3 4 r = 10% ... g = 6% -5 10 20 21.20 -4.545 8.264 15.026 21.20 398.197 530 = = TV3 0.10 - 0.06 416.942 Given the long-run gFCF = 6%, and firm discount rate of 10%, use the corporate value model to find the firm’s value.
If the firm has $40 million in debt and has 10 million shares of stock, what is the firm’s stock value per share? • MV of equity = MV of firm – MV of debt = $416.94m - $40m = $376.94 million • Value per share = MV of equity / # of shares = $376.94m / 10m = $37.69
When to use the DCF vs. DDM • When firms don’t pay dividends or when dividends are hard to forecast, use the DCF model if possible • Projecting free cash flows might give us more accurate estimates of a firm’s value • A lot of accounting information to predict free cash flow (FCF).
P/E Ratio Valuation Model • Price/Earnings ratio (P/E ratio) is a popular measure of stock valuation. • P/E ratio is a relative value model because it tells the investor how many dollars investors are willing to pay for each dollar of the company’s earnings. • Vcs = the value of common stock of the firm. • P/E1 = the price earnings ratio for the firm based on the current price per share divided by earnings for end of year 1. • E1 = estimated earnings per share of common stock for the end of year 1. FIN3000, Liuren Wu
P/E Ratio Factors • The ratio is the earnings multiplier, and is a measure of the prevailing attitude of investors regarding a stock’s value • P/E is determined by CASH FLOW, not vice versa • What causes the growth rate in dividends (and earnings) and the investor’s required rate of return to go up and down? These are the real determinants of the P/E ratio. • Firm factors impacting the investor’s required rate of return(increase in perceived risk) • Economic or macro factors impacting the investor’s required rate of return(growth outlook, interest rates/inflation) • Firm factors impacting the earnings/dividend growth rate – dividend policy and firm investment opportunities.
Price-Earnings Ratio • Using the P/E approach to valuation: • Estimate earnings for next year • Estimate the P/E ratio (Earnings Multiplier) • Multiply expected earnings by the expected P/E ratio to get expected price V =E1x(P/E)
Price-Cash Flow Ratio • Cash flows can also be used in this approach, and are often considered less susceptible to manipulation by management. • The steps are similar to using the P/E ratio V =CF1x(P/CF)
Company Analysis: Examining Influences • Company analysis is the final step in the top-down approach to investing • Macroeconomic analysis identifies industries expected to offer attractive returns in the expected future environment • Analysis of firms in selected industries concentrates on a stock’s intrinsic value based on growth and risk
Economic and Industry Influences • If trends are favorable for an industry, the company analysis should focus on firms in that industry that are positioned to benefit from the economic trends • Firms with sales or earnings particularly sensitive to macroeconomic variables should also be considered • Research analysts need to be familiar with the cash flow and risk of the firms
Structural Influences • Social trends, technology, political, and regulatory influences can have significant influence on firms • Early stages in an industry’s life cycle see changes in technology which followers may imitate and benefit from • Politics and regulatory events can create opportunities even when economic influences are weak
Company Analysis • Competitive forces necessitate competitive strategies. • Competitive Forces: • Current rivalry • Threat of new entrants • Potential substitutes • Bargaining power of suppliers • Bargaining power of buyers • SWOT analysis is another useful tool
Firm Competitive Strategies • Defensive or offensive • Defensive strategy deflects competitive forces in the industry • Offensive competitive strategy affects competitive force in the industry to improve the firm’s relative position • Porter suggests two major strategies: low-cost leadership and differentiation
Low-Cost Strategy • Seeks to be the low cost leader in its industry • Must still command prices near industry average, so still must differentiate • Discounting too much erodes superior rates of return
Differentiation Strategy • Seeks to be identified as unique in its industry in an area that is important to buyers • Above average rate of return only comes if the price premium exceeds the extra cost of being unique
Focusing a Strategy • Firms with focused strategies: • Select segments in the industry • Tailor the strategy to serve those specific groups • Determine which strategy a firm is pursuing and its success • Evaluate the firm’s competitive strategy over time
SWOT Analysis • Examination of a firm’s: • Strengths • Competitive advantages in the marketplace • Weaknesses • Competitors have exploitable advantages of some kind • Opportunities • External factors that make favor firm growth over time • Threats • External factors that hinder the firm’s success
Favorable Attributes of Firms • Peter Lynch’s list of favorable attributes: • Firm’s product is not faddish • Company has competitive advantage over rivals • Industry or product has potential for market stability • Firm can benefit from cost reductions • Firm is buying back its own shares or managers (insiders) are buying
Categorizing Companies • Lynch further recommends the following categorization of firms: • Slow growers • Stalwart • Fast growers • Cyclicals • Turnarounds • Asset plays
When to Sell • Hold on or move on? • If stocks decline right after purchase, is that a further buying opportunity or a signal of a mistaken investment? • Continuously monitor key assumptions that led to the purchase of the investment • Know why you bought, and see if conditions have changed • Evaluate when market value approaches estimated intrinsic value