Stock Valuation Problems
Stock Valuation Problems
Stock Valuation Problems
Liebenberg
1. Thomas Brothers is expected to pay a $0.50 per share dividend at the end of the year. The dividend is expected to grow at a constant rate of 7% a year. The required rate of return on the stock is 15%. What is the stocks value per share? 2. Hart Enterprises recently paid a dividend of $1.25. It expects to have nonconstant growth of 20% for 2 years followed by a constant rate of 5% thereafter. The firms required return is 10%. What is the firms intrinsic value today? 3. Smith Technologies is expected to generate $150 million in free cash flow next year, and FCF is expected to grow at a constant rate of 5% per year indefinitely. Smith has no debt or preferred stock, and its WACC is 10%. If Smith has 50 million shares of stock outstanding, what is the stocks value per share? 4. Fee Founders has perpetual preferred stock outstanding that sells for $60 a share and pays a dividend of $5 at the end of each year. What is the required rate of return? 5. You are considering an investment in Keller Corporations stock, which is expected to pay a dividend of $2 a share at the end of the year and has a beta of 0.9. The risk-free rate is 5.6%, and the market risk premium is 6%. If the dividends are expected to grow at a rate of 3% indefinitely, what is the firms intrinsic value today? 6. Microtech Corporation is expanding rapidly and currently needs to retain all of its earnings; hence it does not pay dividends. However, investors expect Microtech to begin paying dividends, beginning with a dividend of $1.00 coming 3 years from today. The dividend should grow rapidly- at a rate of 50% per year- during years 4 and 5, but after year 5 growth should be a constant 8% per year. If the required return on Microtech is 15%, what is the value of the stock today? 7. Assume that today is December 31, 2009, and the following information applies to Vermeil Airlines: - After-tax operating income, also called NOPAT for 2010 is expected to be $500 million. - The depreciation expense for 2010 is expected to be $100 million. - The capital expenditures for 2010 are expected to be $200 million. - No change is expected in net operating working capital. - The free cash flow is expected to grow at a constant rate of 6% per year. - The required return on equity is 14%. - The WACC is 10%. - The market value of the companys debt is $3 billion. - 200 million shares of stock are outstanding. Using the free cash flow approach, what should the companys stock price be today?