Corporate Valuation
Corporate Valuation
Corporate Valuation
Aswath Damodaran
2
The two faces of discounted cash flow valuation
3
where the asset has an n-year life, E(CFt) is the expected cash flow in period t
and r is a discount rate that reflects the risk of the cash flows.
Alternatively, we can replace the expected cash flows with the
guaranteed cash flows we would have accepted as an alternative
(certainty equivalents) and discount these at the riskfree rate:
where CE(CFt) is the certainty equivalent of E(CFt) and rf is the riskfree rate.
Aswath Damodaran
3
Risk Adjusted Value: Two Basic Propositions
4
The value of an asset is the risk-adjusted present value of the cash flows:
1. The IT proposition: If IT does not affect the expected cash flows or the riskiness
of the cash flows, IT cannot affect value.
2. The DUH proposition: For an asset to have value, the expected cash flows have
to be positive some time over the life of the asset.
3. The DONT FREAK OUT proposition: Assets that generate cash flows early in
their life will be worth more than assets that generate cash flows later; the latter
may however have greater growth and higher cash flows to compensate.
Aswath Damodaran
4
DCF Choices: Equity Valuation versus Firm
Valuation
5
Assets Liabilities
Existing Investments Fixed Claim on cash flows
Generate cashflows today Assets in Place Debt Little or No role in management
Includes long lived (fixed) and Fixed Maturity
short-lived(working Tax Deductible
capital) assets
Expected Value that will be Growth Assets Equity Residual Claim on cash flows
created by future investments Significant Role in management
Perpetual Lives
Aswath Damodaran
5
Equity Valuation
6
Aswath Damodaran
6
Firm Valuation
7
Present value is value of the entire firm, and reflects the value of
all claims on the firm.
Aswath Damodaran
7
Firm Value and Equity Value
8
Aswath Damodaran
8
Cash Flows and Discount Rates
9
Aswath Damodaran
9
Equity versus Firm Valuation
10
Aswath Damodaran
10
First Principle of Valuation
11
Aswath Damodaran
11
The Effects of Mismatching Cash Flows and
Discount Rates
12
Aswath Damodaran
12
Aswath Damodaran 13
Aswath Damodaran
14
Generic DCF Valuation Model
15
Expected Growth
Cash flows Firm: Growth in
Firm: Pre-debt cash Operating Earnings
flow Equity: Growth in
Equity: After debt Net Income/EPS Firm is in stable growth:
cash flows Grows at constant rate
forever
Terminal Value
CF1 CF2 CF3 CF4 CF5 CFn
Value .........
Firm: Value of Firm Forever
Equity: Value of Equity
Length of Period of High Growth
Discount Rate
Firm:Cost of Capital
Aswath Damodaran
15
Same ingredients, different approaches
16
Aswath Damodaran
17
Moving on up: The potential dividends or FCFE
model
18
Equity reinvestment
Expected growth in needed to sustain
net income growth
Free Cashflow to Equity
Non-cash Net Income
- (Cap Ex - Depreciation) Expected FCFE = Expected net income *
- Change in non-cash WC (1- Equity Reinvestment rate)
- (Debt repaid - Debt issued)
= Free Cashflow to equity
Cost of equity
Rate of return
demanded by equity
investors
Aswath Damodaran
18
To valuing the entire business: The FCFF model
19
Reinvestment
Expected growth in needed to sustain
operating ncome growth
Value of Operatng Assets Length of high growth period: PV of FCFF during high
+ Cash & non-operating assets growth Stable Growth
- Debt When operating income and
= Value of equity FCFF grow at constant rate
forever.
Cost of capital
Weighted average of
costs of equity and
debt
Aswath Damodaran
19
Aswath Damodaran 20
DISCOUNT RATES
The D in the DCF..
Estimating Inputs: Discount Rates
21
Aswath Damodaran
21
Risk in the DCF Model
22
Aswath Damodaran
22
Not all risk is created equal
23
Aswath Damodaran
23
Risk and Cost of Equity: The role of the marginal
investor
24
Not all risk counts: While the notion that the cost of equity should
be higher for riskier investments and lower for safer investments is
intuitive, what risk should be built into the cost of equity is the
question.
Risk through whose eyes? While risk is usually defined in terms of
the variance of actual returns around an expected return, risk and
return models in finance assume that the risk that should be
rewarded (and thus built into the discount rate) in valuation should
be the risk perceived by the marginal investor in the investment
The diversification effect: Most risk and return models in finance
also assume that the marginal investor is well diversified, and that
the only risk that he or she perceives in an investment is risk that
cannot be diversified away (i.e, market or non-diversifiable risk). In
effect, it is primarily economic, macro, continuous risk that should
be incorporated into the cost of equity.
Aswath Damodaran
24
The Cost of Equity: Competing Market Risk Models
25
Aswath Damodaran
25
Classic Risk & Return: Cost of Equity
26
Aswath Damodaran
The Risk Free Rate: Laying the Foundations
28
Aswath Damodaran
28
Test 1: A riskfree rate in US dollars!
29
Aswath Damodaran
29
Test 2: A Riskfree Rate in Euros
30
10.00%
9.00%
8.00%
7.00%
6.00%
5.00%
4.00%
3.00%
2.00%
1.00%
0.00%
Aswath Damodaran
30
Test 3: A Riskfree Rate in Indian Rupees
31
Aswath Damodaran
31
Sovereign Default Spread: Three paths to
the same destination
32
Aswath Damodaran
32
Local Currency Government Bond Rates January
2017
33
Currency Govt Bond Rate 12/31/16 Currency Govt Bond Rate 12/31/16
Australian $ 2.76% Malyasian Ringgit 4.24%
Brazilian Reai 11.37% Mexican Peso 7.63%
British Pound 1.35% Nigerian Naira 15.97%
Bulgarian Lev 2.04% Norwegian Krone 1.61%
Canadian $ 1.70% NZ $ 3.25%
Chilean Peso 4.12% Pakistani Rupee 8.03%
Chinese Yuan 3.25% Peruvian Sol 6.43%
Colombian Peso 6.76% Phillipine Peso 4.75%
Croatian Kuna 3.13% Polish Zloty 3.67%
Czech Koruna 0.49% Romanian Leu 3.44%
Danish Krone 0.42% Russian Ruble 8.38%
Euro 0.29% Singapore $ 2.45%
HK $ 1.69% South African Rand 8.80%
Hungarian Forint 3.41% Swedish Krona 0.62%
Iceland Krona 5.06% Swiss Franc -0.19%
Indian Rupee 6.40% Taiwanese $ 1.17%
Indonesian Rupiah 7.60% Thai Baht 2.70%
Israeli Shekel 2.06% Turkish Lira 11.00%
Japanese Yen 0.06% US $ 2.45%
Kenyan Shilling 14.02% Venezuelan Bolivar 20.43%
Korean Won 2.08% Vietnamese Dong 6.10%
Aswath Damodaran
33
Approach 1: Default spread from Government
Bonds
34
Approach 2: CDS Spreads January 2017
35
Aswath Damodaran
35
Approach 3: Typical Default Spreads: January
2017
36
Aswath Damodaran
37
Test 4: A Real Riskfree Rate
38
Aswath Damodaran
38
No default free entity: Choices with riskfree rates.
39
Aswath Damodaran
39
Risk free Rate: Dont have or trust the
government bond rate?
1. Build up approach: The risk free rate in any currency can be
written as the sum of two variables:
Risk free rate = Expected Inflation in currency + Expected real interest rate
The expected real interest rate can be computed in one of two ways: from
the US TIPs rate or set equal to real growth in the economy. Thus, if the
expected inflation rate in a country is expected to be 15% and the TIPs rate
is 1%, the risk free rate is 16%.
2. US $ rate & Differential Inflation: Alternatively, you can scale up
the US $ risk free rate by the differential inflation between the US
$ and the currency in question:
Risk free rateCurrency=
Thus, if the US $ risk free rate is 2.00%, the inflation rate in the foreign
currency is 15% and the inflation rate in US $ is 1.5%, the foreign currency risk
free rate is as follows:
Risk free rate = 1.02 !.!"#
!.!"
1 = 15.57%
40
41
-5.00%
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
Japanese Yen
Czech Koruna
Croatian Kuna
Bulgarian Lev
Swiss Franc
Aswath Damodaran
Euro
Danish Krone
Taiwanese $
Pakistani Rupee
Swedish Krona
Hungarian Forint
British Pound
Thai Baht
Vietnamese Dong
Romanian Leu
Israeli Shekel
HK $
Singapore $
Polish Zloty
Risk free Rates - January 2017
Australian $
Default Spread based on rating Malyasian Ringgit
NZ $
Chilean Peso
Iceland Krona
Indian Rupee
Colombian Peso
Peruvian Sol
Indonesian Rupiah
Russian Ruble
Mexican Peso
South African Rand
Venezuelan Bolivar
Brazilian Reai
Why do risk free rates vary across currencies?
Turkish Lira
Kenyan Shilling
Nigerian Naira
41
One more test on riskfree rates
42
Aswath Damodaran
42
43
-5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
0.00%
5.00%
1954
Aswath Damodaran
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
Inflation rate
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
2007
2008
2009
Some perspective on risk free rates
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
43
Negative Interest Rates?
44
Aswath Damodaran
The ubiquitous historical risk premium
46
Default spread for country: In this approach, the country equity risk
premium is set equal to the default spread for the country,
estimated in one of three ways:
The default spread on a dollar denominated bond issued by the country.
(In January 2017, that spread was 3.64% for the Brazilian $ bond)
The sovereign CDS spread for the country. In January 2017, the ten year
CDS spread for Brazil, adjusted for the US CDS, was 3.21%.
The default spread based on the local currency rating for the country.
Brazils sovereign local currency rating is Ba2 and the default spread for a
Ba2 rated sovereign was about 3.47% in January 2017.
Add the default spread to a mature market premium: This default
spread is added on to the mature market premium to arrive at the
total equity risk premium for Brazil, assuming a mature market
premium of 5.69%.
Country Risk Premium for Brazil = 3.47%
Total ERP for Brazil = 5.69% + 3.47% = 9.16%
Aswath Damodaran
49
An equity volatility based approach to
estimating the country total ERP
50
Aswath Damodaran
50
A melded approach to estimating the additional
country risk premium
51
Aswath Damodaran
51
A Template for Estimating the ERP
Aswath Damodaran
52
ERP : Jan 2017
Aswath Damodaran
54
Approaches 1 & 2: Estimating country risk
premium exposure
55
Aswath Damodaran
56
Extending to a multinational: Regional breakdown
Coca Colas revenue breakdown and ERP in 2012
57
Aswath Damodaran
58
A Production-based ERP: Royal Dutch Shell
in 2015
59
Aswath Damodaran
59
Approach 3: Estimate a lambda for country risk
60
Aswath Damodaran
60
A Revenue-based Lambda
61
A Price/Return based Lambda
62
80
20
60
40
Return on Embrat el
Return on Embraer
0
20
0
-20
-20
-40 -40
-60
-60 -80
-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20
Aswath Damodaran
62
Estimating a US Dollar Cost of Equity for
Embraer - September 2004
63
Assume that the beta for Embraer is 1.07, and that the US $ riskfree rate
used is 4%. Also assume that the risk premium for the US is 5% and the
country risk premium for Brazil is 7.89%. Finally, assume that Embraer
gets 3% of its revenues in Brazil & the rest in the US.
There are five estimates of $ cost of equity for Embraer:
Approach 1: Constant exposure to CRP, Location CRP
n E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + 7.89% = 17.24%
Approach 2: Constant exposure to CRP, Operation CRP
n E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + (0.03*7.89% +0.97*0%)= 9.59%
Approach 3: Beta exposure to CRP, Location CRP
n E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5% + 7.89%)= 17.79%
Approach 4: Beta exposure to CRP, Operation CRP
n E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5% +( 0.03*7.89%+0.97*0%)) = 9.60%
Approach 5: Lambda exposure to CRP
n E(Return) = 4% + 1.07 (5%) + 0.27(7.89%) = 11.48%
Aswath Damodaran
63
Valuing Emerging Market Companies with
significant exposure in developed markets
64
Aswath Damodaran
64
Implied Equity Premiums
65
Aswath Damodaran
65
Implied Equity Premiums: January 2008
66
We can use the information in stock prices to back out how risk averse the market is and how much of a risk
premium it is demanding.
After year 5, we will assume that
Between 2001 and 2007 Analysts expect earnings to grow 5% a year for the next 5 years. We earnings on the index will grow at
dividends and stock will assume that dividends & buybacks will keep pace.. 4.02%, the same rate as the entire
buybacks averaged 4.02% Last years cashflow (59.03) growing at 5% a year economy (= riskfree rate).
of the index each year.
61.98 65.08 68.33 71.75 75.34
January 1, 2008
S&P 500 is at 1468.36
4.02% of 1468.36 = 59.03
If you pay the current level of the index, you can expect to make a return of 8.39% on stocks (which is obtained by
solving for r in the following equation)
61.98 65.08 68.33 71.75 75.34 75.35(1.0402)
1468.36 = + + + + +
(1+ r) (1+ r) 2 (1+ r) 3 (1+ r) 4 (1+ r) 5 (r .0402)(1+ r) 5
Implied Equity risk premium = Expected return on stocks - Treasury bond rate = 8.39% - 4.02% = 4.37%
Aswath Damodaran
66
A year that made a difference.. The implied
premium in January 2009
67
Year Market value of index Dividends Buybacks Cash to equity Dividend yield Buyback yield Total yield
2001 1148.09 15.74 14.34 30.08 1.37% 1.25% 2.62%
2002 879.82 15.96 13.87 29.83 1.81% 1.58% 3.39%
2003 1111.91 17.88 13.70 31.58 1.61% 1.23% 2.84%
2004 1211.92 19.01 21.59 40.60 1.57% 1.78% 3.35%
2005 1248.29 22.34 38.82 61.17 1.79% 3.11% 4.90%
2006 1418.30 25.04 48.12 73.16 1.77% 3.39% 5.16%
2007 1468.36 28.14 67.22 95.36 1.92% 4.58% 6.49%
2008 903.25 28.47 40.25 68.72 3.15% 4.61% 7.77%
Normalized 903.25 28.47 24.11 52.584 3.15% 2.67% 5.82%
Aswath Damodaran
68
An Updated Equity Risk Premium: January
2017
69
Aswath Damodaran
69
70
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
Implied Premiums in the US: 1960-2016
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
Implied Premium for US Equity Market: 1960-2016
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
Aswath Damodaran
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
7.00%
6.00%
5.00%
4.00%
3.00%
2.00%
1.00%
0.00%
Implied Premium
A Buyback Adjusted Version of the US ERP
71
Aswath Damodaran
71
Implied Premium versus Risk Free Rate
72
Aswath Damodaran
72
Equity Risk Premiums and Bond Default Spreads
73
8.00
6.00%
7.00
5.00%
Premium (Spread)
6.00
3.00% 4.00
3.00
2.00%
2.00
1.00%
1.00
0.00% 0.00
1960
1962
1964
1966
1968
1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
2016
ERP/Baa Spread Baa - T.Bond Rate ERP
Aswath Damodaran
73
Equity Risk Premiums and Cap Rates (Real
Estate)
74
6.00%
4.00%
2.00%
ERP
-4.00%
-6.00%
-8.00%
Aswath Damodaran
74
Why implied premiums matter?
75
Aswath Damodaran
75
Which equity risk premium should you use?
76
If you assume this Premium to use
Premiums revert back to historical norms Historical risk premium
and your time period yields these norms
Market is correct in the aggregate or that Current implied equity risk premium
your valuation should be market neutral
Marker makes mistakes even in the Average implied equity risk premium over
aggregate but is correct over time time.
Predictor Correlation with implied Correlation with actual Correlation with actual return
premium next year return- next 5 years next 10 years
Current implied premium 0.750 0.475 0.541
Average implied premium: Last 5 0.703 0.541 0.747
years
Historical Premium -0.476 -0.442 -0.469
Default Spread based premium 0.035 0.234 0.225
Aswath Damodaran
76
An ERP for the Sensex
77
Aswath Damodaran
77
Changing Country Risk: Brazil CRP & Total
ERP from 2000 to 2015
78
Aswath Damodaran
78
The evolution of Emerging Market Risk
79
Aswath Damodaran
79
80 Discount Rates: III
Relative Risk Measures
Aswath Damodaran
The CAPM Beta: The Most Used (and
Misused) Risk Measure
81
Aswath Damodaran
81
Unreliable, when it looks bad..
82
Aswath Damodaran
82
Or when it looks good..
83
Aswath Damodaran
83
One slice of history..
84
Aswath Damodaran
And subject to game playing
85
Aswath Damodaran
Measuring Relative Risk: You dont like betas or
modern portfolio theory? No problem.
86
Aswath Damodaran
86
Dont like the diversified investor focus,
but okay with price-based measures
87
Aswath Damodaran
87
Dont like the price-based approach..
88
Aswath Damodaran
88
Determinants of Betas & Relative Risk
89
Implications Implications
1. Cyclical companies should 1. Firms with high infrastructure
have higher betas than non- needs and rigid cost structures
cyclical companies. should have higher betas than
2. Luxury goods firms should firms with flexible cost structures.
have higher betas than basic 2. Smaller firms should have higher
goods. betas than larger firms.
3. High priced goods/service 3. Young firms should have higher
firms should have higher betas betas than more mature firms.
than low prices goods/services
firms.
4. Growth firms should have
higher betas.
Aswath Damodaran
89
In a perfect world we would estimate the beta of a
firm by doing the following
90
Adjust the business beta for the operating leverage of the firm to arrive at the
unlevered beta for the firm.
Use the financial leverage of the firm to estimate the equity beta for the firm
Levered Beta = Unlevered Beta ( 1 + (1- tax rate) (Debt/Equity))
Aswath Damodaran
90
Adjusting for operating leverage
91
Aswath Damodaran
92
Bottom-up Betas
93
Step 1: Find the business or businesses that your firm operates in.
Possible Refinements
Step 2: Find publicly traded firms in each of these businesses and
obtain their regression betas. Compute the simple average across
these regression betas to arrive at an average beta for these publicly If you can, adjust this beta for differences
traded firms. Unlever this average beta using the average debt to between your firm and the comparable
equity ratio across the publicly traded firms in the sample. firms on operating leverage and product
Unlevered beta for business = Average beta across publicly traded characteristics.
firms/ (1 + (1- t) (Average D/E ratio across firms))
Step 4: Compute a weighted average of the unlevered betas of the If you expect the business mix of your
different businesses (from step 2) using the weights from step 3. firm to change over time, you can
Bottom-up Unlevered beta for your firm = Weighted average of the change the weights on a year-to-year
unlevered betas of the individual business basis.
Aswath Damodaran
93
Why bottom-up betas?
94
Aswath Damodaran
94
Estimating Bottom Up Betas & Costs of
Equity: Vale
Sample' Unlevered'beta' Peer'Group' Value'of' Proportion'of'
Business' Sample' size' of'business' Revenues' EV/Sales' Business' Vale'
Global'firms'in'metals'&'
Metals'&' mining,'Market'cap>$1'
Mining' billion' 48' 0.86' $9,013' 1.97' $17,739' 16.65%'
Global'specialty'
Fertilizers' chemical'firms' 693' 0.99' $3,777' 1.52' $5,741' 5.39%'
Global'transportation'
Logistics' firms' 223' 0.75' $1,644' 1.14' $1,874' 1.76%'
Vale'
Operations' '' '' 0.8440' $47,151' '' $106,543' 100.00%'
Aswath Damodaran
95
Embraers Bottom-up Beta
96
Aswath Damodaran
96
Gross Debt versus Net Debt Approaches
97
Analysts in Europe and Latin America often take the difference between
debt and cash (net debt) when computing debt ratios and arrive at very
different values.
For Embraer, using the gross debt ratio
Gross D/E Ratio for Embraer = 1953/11,042 = 18.95%
Levered Beta using Gross Debt ratio = 1.07
Using the net debt ratio, we get
Net Debt Ratio for Embraer = (Debt - Cash)/ Market value of Equity
= (1953-2320)/ 11,042 = -3.32%
Levered Beta using Net Debt Ratio = 0.95 (1 + (1-.34) (-.0332)) = 0.93
The cost of Equity using net debt levered beta for Embraer will be much
lower than with the gross debt approach. The cost of capital for Embraer
will even out since the debt ratio used in the cost of capital equation will
now be a net debt ratio rather than a gross debt ratio.
Aswath Damodaran
97
The Cost of Equity: A Recap
98
Aswath Damodaran
98
99 Discount Rates: IV
Mopping up
Aswath Damodaran
Estimating the Cost of Debt
100
Aswath Damodaran
101
Interest Coverage Ratios, Ratings and Default
Spreads: 2003 & 2004
102
If Interest Coverage Ratio is Estimated Bond Rating Default Spread(2003) Default Spread(2004)
> 8.50 (>12.50) AAA 0.75% 0.35%
6.50 - 8.50 (9.5-12.5) AA 1.00% 0.50%
5.50 - 6.50 (7.5-9.5) A+ 1.50% 0.70%
4.25 - 5.50 (6-7.5) A 1.80% 0.85%
3.00 - 4.25 (4.5-6) A 2.00% 1.00%
2.50 - 3.00 (4-4.5) BBB 2.25% 1.50%
2.25- 2.50 (3.5-4) BB+ 2.75% 2.00%
2.00 - 2.25 ((3-3.5) BB 3.50% 2.50%
1.75 - 2.00 (2.5-3) B+ 4.75% 3.25%
1.50 - 1.75 (2-2.5) B 6.50% 4.00%
1.25 - 1.50 (1.5-2) B 8.00% 6.00%
0.80 - 1.25 (1.25-1.5) CCC 10.00% 8.00%
0.65 - 0.80 (0.8-1.25) CC 11.50% 10.00%
0.20 - 0.65 (0.5-0.8) C 12.70% 12.00%
< 0.20 (<0.5) D 15.00% 20.00%
The first number under interest coverage ratios is for larger market cap companies and the second in
brackets is for smaller market cap companies. For Embraer , I used the interest coverage ratio table for
smaller/riskier firms (the numbers in brackets) which yields a lower rating for the same interest coverage
ratio.
Aswath Damodaran
102
Cost of Debt computations
103
Companies in countries with low bond ratings and high default risk
might bear the burden of country default risk, especially if they are
smaller or have all of their revenues within the country.
Larger companies that derive a significant portion of their revenues
in global markets may be less exposed to country default risk. In
other words, they may be able to borrow at a rate lower than the
government.
The synthetic rating for Embraer is A-. Using the 2004 default
spread of 1.00%, we estimate a cost of debt of 9.29% (using a
riskfree rate of 4.29% and adding in two thirds of the country
default spread of 6.01%):
Cost of debt
= Riskfree rate + 2/3(Brazil country default spread) + Company default spread
=4.29% + 4.00%+ 1.00% = 9.29%
Aswath Damodaran
103
Synthetic Ratings: Some Caveats
104
20.00%
15.00%
Axis Title
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Aaa/AA Baa2/BB
Aa2/AA A1/A+ A2/A A3/A- Ba1/BB+ Ba2/BB B1/B+ B2/B B3/B- Caa/CCC Ca2/CC C2/C D2/D
A B
Spread: 2017 0.60% 0.80% 1.00% 1.10% 1.25% 1.60% 2.50% 3.00% 3.75% 4.50% 5.50% 6.50% 8.00% 10.50% 14.00%
Spread: 2016 0.75% 1.00% 1.10% 1.25% 1.75% 2.25% 3.25% 4.25% 5.50% 6.50% 7.50% 9.00% 12.00% 16.00% 20.00%
Spread: 2015 0.40% 0.70% 0.90% 1.00% 1.20% 1.75% 2.75% 3.25% 4.00% 5.00% 6.00% 7.00% 8.00% 10.00% 12.00%
Aswath Damodaran
106
Subsidized Debt: What should we do?
107
Aswath Damodaran
107
Weights for the Cost of Capital Computation
108
Aswath Damodaran
108
Estimating Cost of Capital: Embraer in 2004
109
Equity
Cost of Equity = 4.29% + 1.07 (4%) + 0.27 (7.89%) = 10.70%
Market Value of Equity =11,042 million BR ($ 3,781 million)
Debt
Cost of debt = 4.29% + 4.00% +1.00%= 9.29%
Market Value of Debt = 2,083 million BR ($713 million)
Cost of Capital
Cost of Capital = 10.70 % (.84) + 9.29% (1- .34) (0.16)) = 9.97%
The book value of equity at Embraer is 3,350 million BR.
The book value of debt at Embraer is 1,953 million BR; Interest
expense is 222 mil BR; Average maturity of debt = 4 years
Estimated market value of debt = 222 million (PV of annuity, 4 years,
9.29%) + $1,953 million/1.09294 = 2,083 million BR
Aswath Damodaran
109
If you had to do it.Converting a Dollar Cost of
Capital to a Nominal Real Cost of Capital
110
Aswath Damodaran
110
Dealing with Hybrids and Preferred Stock
111
Assume that the firm that you are analyzing has $125 million
in face value of convertible debt with a stated interest rate of
4%, a 10 year maturity and a market value of $140 million. If
the firm has a bond rating of A and the interest rate on A-
rated straight bond is 8%, you can break down the value of
the convertible bond into straight debt and equity portions.
Straight debt = (4% of $125 million) (PV of annuity, 10 years, 8%) + 125
million/1.0810 = $91.45 million
Equity portion = $140 million - $91.45 million = $48.55 million
The debt portion ($91.45 million) gets added to debt and the
option portion ($48.55 million) gets added to the market
capitalization to get to the debt and equity weights in the cost
of capital.
Aswath Damodaran
112
Recapping the Cost of Capital
113
Cost of Capital = Cost of Equity (Equity/(Debt + Equity)) + Cost of Borrowing (1-t) (Debt/(Debt + Equity))
Cost of equity
based upon bottom-up Weights should be market value weights
beta
Aswath Damodaran
113
Aswath Damodaran 114
Aswath Damodaran
115
Measuring Cash Flows
116
Aswath Damodaran
116
Measuring Cash Flow to the Firm: Three
pathways to the same end game
117
Aswath Damodaran
117
118 Cash Flows I
Accounting Earnings, Flawed but Important
Aswath Damodaran
From Reported to Actual Earnings
119
Measuring Earnings
Update
- Trailing Earnings
- Unofficial numbers
Aswath Damodaran
119
I. Update Earnings
120
Aswath Damodaran
120
II. Correcting Accounting Earnings
121
Aswath Damodaran
121
The Magnitude of Operating Leases
122
60.00%
50.00%
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Market Apparel Stores Furniture Stores Restaurants
Aswath Damodaran
122
Dealing with Operating Lease Expenses
123
Aswath Damodaran
123
Operating Leases at The Gap in 2003
124
The Gap has conventional debt of about $ 1.97 billion on its balance sheet and its
pre-tax cost of debt is about 6%. Its operating lease payments in the 2003 were
$978 million and its commitments for the future are below:
Year Commitment (millions) Present Value (at 6%)
1 $899.00 $848.11
2 $846.00 $752.94
3 $738.00 $619.64
4 $598.00 $473.67
5 $477.00 $356.44
6&7 $982.50 each year $1,346.04
Debt Value of leases = $4,396.85 (Also value of leased asset)
Debt outstanding at The Gap = $1,970 m + $4,397 m = $6,367 m
Aswath Damodaran
124
The Collateral Effects of Treating Operating
Leases as Debt
125
! Conventional!Accounting! Operating!Leases!Treated!as!Debt!
Income!Statement! !Income!Statement!
EBIT&&Leases&=&1,990& EBIT&&Leases&=&1,990&
0&Op&Leases&&&&&&=&&&&978& 0&Deprecn:&OL=&&&&&&628&
EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1,012& EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1,362&
Interest&expense&will&rise&to&reflect&the&
conversion&of&operating&leases&as&debt.&Net&
income&should¬&change.&
Balance!Sheet! Balance!Sheet!
Off&balance&sheet&(Not&shown&as&debt&or&as&an& Asset&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&Liability&
asset).&Only&the&conventional&debt&of&$1,970& OL&Asset&&&&&&&4397&&&&&&&&&&&OL&Debt&&&&&4397&
million&shows&up&on&balance&sheet& Total&debt&=&4397&+&1970&=&$6,367&million&
&
Cost&of&capital&=&8.20%(7350/9320)&+&4%& Cost&of&capital&=&8.20%(7350/13717)&+&4%&
(1970/9320)&=&7.31%& (6367/13717)&=&6.25%&
Cost&of&equity&for&The&Gap&=&8.20%& &
After0tax&cost&of&debt&=&4%&
Market&value&of&equity&=&7350&
Return&on&capital&=&1012&(10.35)/(3130+1970)& Return&on&capital&=&1362&(10.35)/(3130+6367)&
&&&&&&&&&=&12.90%& &&&&&&&&&=&9.30%&
&
Aswath Damodaran
125
The Magnitude of R&D Expenses
126
60.00%
50.00%
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Market Petroleum Computers
Aswath Damodaran
126
R&D Expenses: Operating or Capital Expenses
127
Aswath Damodaran
127
Capitalizing R&D Expenses: SAP
128
Aswath Damodaran
128
The Effect of Capitalizing R&D at SAP
129
! Conventional!Accounting! R&D!treated!as!capital!expenditure!
Income!Statement! !Income!Statement!
EBIT&&R&D&&&=&&3045& EBIT&&R&D&=&&&3045&
.&R&D&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1020& .&Amort:&R&D&=&&&903&
EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&2025& EBIT&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&2142&(Increase&of&117&m)&
EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&=&&1285&m& EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&=&1359&m&
Ignored&tax&benefit&=&(1020.903)(.3654)&=&43&
Adjusted&EBIT&(1.t)&=&1359+43&=&1402&m&
(Increase&of&117&million)&
Net&Income&will&also&increase&by&117&million&&
Balance!Sheet! Balance!Sheet!
Off&balance&sheet&asset.&Book&value&of&equity&at& Asset&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&Liability&
3,768&million&Euros&is&understated&because& R&D&Asset&&&&2914&&&&&Book&Equity&&&+2914&
biggest&asset&is&off&the&books.& Total&Book&Equity&=&3768+2914=&6782&mil&&
Capital!Expenditures! Capital!Expenditures!
Conventional&net&cap&ex&of&2&million& Net&Cap&ex&=&2+&1020&&903&=&119&mil&
Euros&
Cash!Flows! Cash!Flows!
EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&&&=&&1285&& EBIT&(1.t)&&&&&&&&&&=&&&&&1402&&&
.&Net&Cap&Ex&&&&&&=&&&&&&&&2& .&Net&Cap&Ex&&&&&&=&&&&&&&119&
FCFF&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&1283&&&&&& FCFF&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&=&&&&&1283&m&
Return&on&capital&=&1285/(3768+530)& Return&on&capital&=&1402/(6782+530)&
Aswath Damodaran
129
III. One-Time and Non-recurring Charges
130
Aswath Damodaran
130
IV. Accounting Malfeasance.
131
Aswath Damodaran
131
V. Dealing with Negative or Abnormally Low
Earnings
132
A Framework for Analyzing Companies with Negative or Abnormally Low Earnings
Normalize Earnings
Aswath Damodaran
132
133 Cash Flows II
Taxes and Reinvestment
Aswath Damodaran
What tax rate?
134
The tax rate that you should use in computing the after-
tax operating income should be
a. The effective tax rate in the financial statements (taxes
paid/Taxable income)
b. The tax rate based upon taxes paid and EBIT (taxes paid/EBIT)
c. The marginal tax rate for the country in which the company
operates
d. The weighted average marginal tax rate across the countries in
which the company operates
e. None of the above
f. Any of the above, as long as you compute your after-tax cost of
debt using the same tax rate
Aswath Damodaran
134
The Right Tax Rate to Use
135
Aswath Damodaran
135
A Tax Rate for a Money Losing Firm
136
Aswath Damodaran
136
Net Capital Expenditures
137
Aswath Damodaran
138
Ciscos Acquisitions: 1999
139
Aswath Damodaran
139
Ciscos Net Capital Expenditures in 1999
140
Aswath Damodaran
141
Working Capital: General Propositions
142
Aswath Damodaran
142
Volatile Working Capital?
143
Aswath Damodaran
143
144 Cash Flows III
From the firm to equity
Aswath Damodaran
Dividends and Cash Flows to Equity
145
Aswath Damodaran
145
Measuring Potential Dividends
146
Aswath Damodaran
146
Estimating Cash Flows: FCFE
147
Aswath Damodaran
147
Estimating FCFE when Leverage is Stable
148
Net Income
- (1- DR) (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation)
- (1- DR) Working Capital Needs
= Free Cash flow to Equity
DR = Debt/Capital Ratio
For this firm,
Proceeds from new debt issues = Principal Repayments + d
(Capital Expenditures - Depreciation + Working Capital Needs)
In computing FCFE, the book value debt to capital ratio
should be used when looking back in time but can be
replaced with the market value debt to capital ratio,
looking forward.
Aswath Damodaran
148
Estimating FCFE: Disney
149
Aswath Damodaran
149
FCFE and Leverage: Is this a free lunch?
150
1600
1400
1200
1000
FCFE
800
600
400
200
0
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
Debt Ratio
Aswath Damodaran
150
FCFE and Leverage: The Other Shoe Drops
151
8.00
7.00
6.00
5.00
Beta
4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
0.00
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
Debt Ratio
Aswath Damodaran
151
Leverage, FCFE and Value
152
Aswath Damodaran
152
Aswath Damodaran 153
ESTIMATING GROWTH
Growth can be good, bad or neutral
The Value of Growth
154
Aswath Damodaran
154
Ways of Estimating Growth in Earnings
155
Aswath Damodaran
155
156 Growth I
Historical Growth
Aswath Damodaran
Historical Growth
157
Aswath Damodaran
157
Motorola: Arithmetic versus Geometric Growth
Rates
158
Aswath Damodaran
158
A Test
159
Aswath Damodaran
159
Dealing with Negative Earnings
160
Aswath Damodaran
160
The Effect of Size on Growth: Callaway Golf
161
Aswath Damodaran
161
Extrapolation and its Dangers
162
Aswath Damodaran
162
163 Growth II
Analyst Estimates
Aswath Damodaran
Analyst Forecasts of Growth
164
Aswath Damodaran
164
How good are analysts at forecasting growth?
165
Aswath Damodaran
165
Are some analysts more equal than others?
166
Aswath Damodaran
166
The Five Deadly Sins of an Analyst
167
Aswath Damodaran
167
Propositions about Analyst Growth Rates
168
Aswath Damodaran
168
169 Growth III
Its all in the fundamentals
Aswath Damodaran
Fundamental Growth Rates
170
+
in Existing ROI from in New Investment on
Projects X current to next Projects X New Projects Change in Earnings
$1000 period: 0% $100 12% = $ 12
Aswath Damodaran
170
Growth Rate Derivations
171
In the special case where ROI on existing projects remains unchanged and is equal to the ROI on new projects
in the more general case where ROI can change from period to period, this can be expanded as follows:
For instance, if the ROI increases from 12% to 13%, the expected growth rate can be written as follows:
Aswath Damodaran
171
Estimating Fundamental Growth from new
investments: Three variations
172
Aswath Damodaran
172
I. Expected Long Term Growth in EPS
173
Aswath Damodaran
174
Regulatory Effects on Expected EPS growth
175
Aswath Damodaran
175
One way to pump up ROE: Use more debt
176
Aswath Damodaran
176
Decomposing ROE: Brahma in 1998
177
Aswath Damodaran
178
II. Expected Growth in Net Income from non-
cash assets
179
Aswath Damodaran
179
Estimating expected growth in net income from
non-cash assets: Coca Cola in 2010
180
Aswath Damodaran
180
III. Expected Growth in EBIT And Fundamentals:
Stable ROC and Reinvestment Rate
181
Ciscos Fundamentals
Reinvestment Rate = 106.81%
Return on Capital =34.07%
Expected Growth in EBIT =(1.0681)(.3407) = 36.39%
Motorolas Fundamentals
Reinvestment Rate = 52.99%
Return on Capital = 12.18%
Expected Growth in EBIT = (.5299)(.1218) = 6.45%
Ciscos expected growth rate is clearly much higher than Motorolas sustainable
growth rate. As a potential investor in Cisco, what would worry you the most
about this forecast?
a. That Ciscos return on capital may be overstated (why?)
b. That Ciscos reinvestment comes mostly from acquisitions (why?)
c. That Cisco is getting bigger as a firm (why?)
d. That Cisco is viewed as a star (why?)
e. All of the above
Aswath Damodaran
182
The Magical Number: ROIC (or any
accounting return) and its limits
183
Aswath Damodaran
183
IV. Operating Income Growth when Return on
Capital is Changing
184
= .1722*.5299 +{ [1+(.1722-.1218)/.1218]1/5-1}
= .1629 or 16.29%
One way to think about this is to decompose Motorolas expected growth
into
Growth from new investments: .1722*5299= 9.12%
Growth from more efficiently using existing investments: 16.29%-9.12%= 7.17%
Note that I am assuming that the new investments start making 17.22%
immediately, while allowing for existing assets to improve returns
gradually
Aswath Damodaran
185
The Value of Growth
186
Aswath Damodaran
186
187 Growth IV
Top Down Growth
Aswath Damodaran
Estimating Growth when Operating Income is
Negative or Margins are changing
188
All of the fundamental growth equations assume that the firm has a
return on equity or return on capital it can sustain in the long term.
When operating income is negative or margins are expected to change
over time, we use a three step process to estimate growth:
Estimate growth rates in revenues over time
n Determine the total market (given your business model) and estimate the
market share that you think your company will earn.
n Decrease the growth rate as the firm becomes larger
n Keep track of absolute revenues to make sure that the growth is feasible
Estimate expected operating margins each year
n Set a target margin that the firm will move towards
n Adjust the current margin towards the target margin
Estimate the capital that needs to be invested to generate revenue growth and
expected margins
n Estimate a sales to capital ratio that you will use to generate reinvestment needs
each year.
Aswath Damodaran
188
Tesla in July 2015: Growth and Profitability
189
Aswath Damodaran
189
Tesla: Reinvestment and Profitability
190
Aswath Damodaran
190
Expected Growth Rate
ROCt+1*Reinvestment Rate
ROC * + (ROCt+1-ROCt)/ROCt
Reinvestment Rate
1. Revenue Growth
2. Operating Margins
Earnings per share Net Income 3. Reinvestment Needs
CLOSURE IN VALUATION
The Big Enchilada
Getting Closure in Valuation
193
A publicly traded firm potentially has an infinite life. The value is therefore
the present value of cash flows forever.
t= CF
Value = t
t
t=1 (1+r)
Since we cannot estimate cash flows forever, we estimate cash flows for a
growth period and then estimate a terminal value, to capture the value
at the end of the period:
t=N CF
Value = t + Terminal Value
t (1+r) N
t=1 (1+r)
Aswath Damodaran
193
Ways of Estimating Terminal Value
194
Terminal Value
Aswath Damodaran
194
1. Obey the growth cap
195
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
The stable growth rate cannot exceed the growth rate of the economy but
it can be set lower.
If you assume that the economy is composed of high growth and stable growth firms,
the growth rate of the latter will probably be lower than the growth rate of the
economy.
The stable growth rate can be negative. The terminal value will be lower and you are
assuming that your firm will disappear over time.
If you use nominal cashflows and discount rates, the growth rate should be nominal in
the currency in which the valuation is denominated.
One simple proxy for the nominal growth rate of the economy is the
riskfree rate.
Aswath Damodaran
195
Risk free Rates and Nominal GDP Growth
Risk free Rate = Expected Inflation + Nominal GDP Growth = Expected Inflation
Expected Real Interest Rate + Expected Real Growth
The real interest rate is what borrowers The real growth rate in the economy
agree to return to lenders in real measures the expected growth in the
goods/services. production of goods and services.
Aswath Damodaran
197
2. Dont wait too long
198
Assume that you are valuing a young, high growth firm with
great potential, just after its initial public offering. How long
would you set your high growth period?
a. < 5 years
b. 5 years
c. 10 years
d. >10 years
While analysts routinely assume very long high growth
periods (with substantial excess returns during the periods),
the evidence suggests that they are much too optimistic.
Most growth firms have difficulty sustaining their growth for
long periods, especially while earning excess returns.
Aswath Damodaran
198
And tie to competitive advantages
199
Aswath Damodaran
199
3. Dont forget that growth has to be earned..
200
Aswath Damodaran
200
The Big Assumption
201
Aswath Damodaran
201
Excess Returns to Zero?
202
There are some (McKinsey, for instance) who argue that the return on
capital should always be equal to cost of capital in stable growth.
But excess returns seem to persist for very long time periods.
Aswath Damodaran
202
And dont fall for sleight of hand
203
Aswath Damodaran
203
4. Be internally consistent
204
Risk and costs of equity and capital: Stable growth firms tend
to
Have betas closer to one
Have debt ratios closer to industry averages (or mature company
averages)
Country risk premiums (especially in emerging markets should evolve
over time)
The excess returns at stable growth firms should approach (or
become) zero. ROC -> Cost of capital and ROE -> Cost of
equity
The reinvestment needs and dividend payout ratios should
reflect the lower growth and excess returns:
Stable period payout ratio = 1 - g/ ROE
Stable period reinvestment rate = g/ ROC
Aswath Damodaran
204
Aswath Damodaran 205
Aswath Damodaran
206
Which cash flow should I discount?
207
Aswath Damodaran
207
Given cash flows to equity, should I discount
dividends or FCFE?
208
Aswath Damodaran
208
What discount rate should I use?
209
If your firm is
large and growing at a rate close to or less than 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 Stable 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 2-Stage Growth Model
If your firm
is small and growing at a very high rate (> Overall growth rate + 10%) or
has significant barriers to entry into the business
has firm characteristics that are very different from the norm
Use a 3-Stage or n-stage Model
Aswath Damodaran
210
The Building Blocks of Valuation
211
Choose a
Cash Flow Dividends Cashflows to Equity Cashflows to Firm
Expected Dividends to
Stockholders Net Income EBIT (1- tax rate)
- (1- ) (Capital Exp. - Deprecn) - (Capital Exp. - Deprecn)
- (1- ) Change in Work. Capital - Change in Work. Capital
= Free Cash flow to Equity (FCFE) = Free Cash flow to Firm (FCFF)
[ = Debt Ratio]
& A Discount Rate Cost of Equity Cost of Capital
Basis: The riskier the investment, the greater is the cost of equity. WACC = ke ( E/ (D+E))
Models: + kd ( D/(D+E))
CAPM: Riskfree Rate + Beta (Risk Premium) kd = Current Borrowing Rate (1-t)
APM: Riskfree Rate + Betaj (Risk Premiumj): n factors E,D: Mkt Val of Equity and Debt
& a growth pattern Stable Growth Two-Stage Growth Three-Stage Growth
g g g
| |
t High Growth Stable High Growth Transition Stable
Aswath Damodaran
211
Aswath Damodaran 212
+ Value of Cross Holdings How do you value cross holdings in other companies?
What if the cross holdings are in private businesses?
Aswath Damodaran
213
1. The Value of Cash
214
The simplest and most direct way of dealing with cash and
marketable securities is to keep it out of the valuation - the
cash flows should be before interest income from cash and
securities, and the discount rate should not be contaminated
by the inclusion of cash. (Use betas of the operating assets
alone to estimate the cost of equity).
Once the operating assets have been valued, you should add
back the value of cash and marketable securities.
In many equity valuations, the interest income from cash is
included in the cashflows. The discount rate has to be
adjusted then for the presence of cash. (The beta used will be
weighted down by the cash holdings). Unless cash remains a
fixed percentage of overall value over time, these valuations
will tend to break down.
Aswath Damodaran
214
An Exercise in Cash Valuation
215
Trades in US US Argentina
In which of these companies is cash most likely to be
a) A Neutral Asset (worth $100 million)
b) A Wasting Asset (worth less than $100 million)
c) A Potential Value Creator (worth >$100 million)
Aswath Damodaran
215
Should you ever discount cash for its low
returns?
216
There are some analysts who argue that companies with a lot of
cash on their balance sheets should be penalized by having the
excess cash discounted to reflect the fact that it earns a low return.
Excess cash is usually defined as holding cash that is greater than what the
firm needs for operations.
A low return is defined as a return lower than what the firm earns on its
non-cash investments.
This is the wrong reason for discounting cash. If the cash is invested
in riskless securities, it should earn a low rate of return. As long as
the return is high enough, given the riskless nature of the
investment, cash does not destroy value.
There is a right reason, though, that may apply to some
companies Managers can do stupid things with cash (overpriced
acquisitions, pie-in-the-sky projects.) and you have to discount for
this possibility.
Aswath Damodaran
216
Cash: Discount or Premium?
217
Aswath Damodaran
217
A Detour: Closed End Mutual Funds
218
Aswath Damodaran
The Most Famous Closed End Fund in History?
219
2.62
$350,000
2.42 2.50
2.27
$300,000
$100,000
0.50
$50,000
$0 0.00
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Aswath Damodaran
219
2. Dealing with Holdings in Other firms
220
Aswath Damodaran
220
An Exercise in Valuing Cross Holdings
221
Now assume that you are told that Company A owns 10% of
Company B and that the holdings are accounted for as passive
holdings. If the market cap of company B is $ 500 million, how
much is the equity in Company A worth?
Aswath Damodaran
222
If you really want to value cross holdings right.
223
Aswath Damodaran
223
Valuing Yahoo as the sum of its intrinsic
pieces
224
Aswath Damodaran
224
If you have to settle for an approximation, try this
225
Aswath Damodaran
225
Yahoo: A pricing game?
226
Aswath Damodaran
226
3. Other Assets that have not been counted
yet..
227
Assets that you should not be counting (or adding on to DCF values)
If an asset is contributing to your cashflows, you cannot count the market value of
the asset in your value. Thus, you should not be counting the real estate on which
your offices stand, the PP&E representing your factories and other productive
assets, any values attached to brand names or customer lists and definitely no non-
assets (such as goodwill).
Assets that you can count (or add on to your DCF valuation)
Overfunded pension plans: If you have a defined benefit plan and your assets
exceed your expected liabilities, you could consider the over funding with two
caveats:
n Collective bargaining agreements may prevent you from laying claim to these
excess assets.
n There are tax consequences. Often, withdrawals from pension plans get taxed at
much higher rates.
Unutilized assets: If you have assets or property that are not being utilized to
generate cash flows (vacant land, for example), you have not valued them yet. You
can assess a market value for these assets and add them on to the value of the
firm.
Aswath Damodaran
227
An Uncounted Asset?
228
Aswath Damodaran
228
4. A Discount for Complexity:
An Experiment
229
Company A Company B
Operating Income $ 1 billion $ 1 billion
Tax rate 40% 40%
ROIC 10% 10%
Expected Growth 5% 5%
Cost of capital 8% 8%
Business Mix Single Multiple
Holdings Simple Complex
Accounting Transparent Opaque
Which firm would you value more highly?
Aswath Damodaran
229
Measuring Complexity: Volume of Data in
Financial Statements
230
Aswath Damodaran
230
Measuring Complexity: A Complexity Score
231
Aswath Damodaran
231
Dealing with Complexity
232
Aswath Damodaran
232
5. Be circumspect about defining debt for cost of
capital purposes
233
Aswath Damodaran
233
Book Value or Market Value
234
Aswath Damodaran
234
But you should consider other potential
liabilities when getting to equity value
235
Aswath Damodaran
235
6. Equity to Employees: Effect on Value
236
The Easier Problem: Restricted Stock Grants
237
Aswath
Damodaran
237
The Bigger Challenge: Employee Options
238
XYZ company has $ 100 million in free cashflows to the firm, growing 3% a
year in perpetuity and a cost of capital of 8%. It has 100 million shares
outstanding and $ 1 billion in debt. Its value can be written as follows:
Value of firm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000
Debt = 1000
= Equity = 1000
Value per share = 1000/100 = $10
XYZ decides to give 10 million options at the money (with a strike price of
$10) to its CEO. What effect will this have on the value of equity per
share?
a. None. The options are not in-the-money.
b. Decrease by 10%, since the number of shares could increase by 10 million
c. Decrease by less than 10%. The options will bring in cash into the firm but they
have time value.
Aswath Damodaran
239
I. The Diluted Share Count Approach
240
The treasury stock approach adds the proceeds from the exercise of
options to the value of the equity before dividing by the diluted number
of shares outstanding.
In the example cited, this would imply the following:
Value of firm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000
Debt = 1000
= Equity = 1000
Number of diluted shares = 110
Proceeds from option exercise = 10 * 10 = 100
Value per share = (1000+ 100)/110 = $ 10
The treasury stock approach fails to consider the time premium on the
options. The treasury stock approach also has problems with out-of-the-
money options. If considered, they can increase the value of equity per
share. If ignored, they are treated as non-existent.
Aswath Damodaran
241
III. Option Value Drag
242
Aswath Damodaran
242
Valuing Equity Options issued by firms The Dilution
Problem
243
Aswath Damodaran
244
Value of Equity to Value of Equity per share
245
Using the value per call of $5.42, we can now estimate the
value of equity per share after the option grant:
Value of firm = 100 / (.08-.03) = 2000
Debt = 1000
= Equity = 1000
Value of options granted = $ 54.2
= Value of Equity in stock = $945.8
/ Number of shares outstanding / 100
= Value per share = $ 9.46
Note that this approach yields a higher value than the
diluted share count approach (which ignores exercise
proceeds) and a lower value than the treasury stock
approach (which ignores the time premium on the options)
Aswath Damodaran
245
To tax adjust or not to tax adjust
246
Aswath Damodaran
246
Option grants in the future
247
Aswath Damodaran
248
NARRATIVE AND NUMBERS:
VALUATION AS A BRIDGE
Tell me a story..
Valuation as a bridge
Illusions/Delusions
Illusions/Delusions
1. Creativity cannot be quantified
1. Precision: Data is precise
2. If the story is good, the
2. Objectivity: Data has no bias
investment will be.
3. Control: Data can control reality
3. Experience is the best teacher
250
Step 1: Survey the landscape
251
Step 2: Create a narrative for the future
253
The Uber Narrative
254
Step 3: Check the narrative against history,
economic first principles & common sense
255
Aswath Damodaran
255
The Impossible, The Implausible and the
Improbable
256
Aswath Damodaran
256
Uber: Possible, Plausible and Probable
257
The Impossible: The Runaway Story
The Story The Checks (?)
+ +
+ Money
The Implausible: The Big Market Delusion
The Improbable: Willy Wonkitis
Step 4: Connect your narrative to key
drivers of value
The Uber narrative (June 2014)
-
Uber will maintain its current model of keeping 20%
Operating Expenses of car service payments, even in the face of
competition, because of its first mover advantages. It
= will maintain its current low-infrastructure cost model,
allowing it to earn high margins.
Operating Income Target pre-tax operating margin is 40%.
-
Taxes
After-tax Operating Income Uber has a low capital intensity model, since it
does not own cars or other infrastructure,
- allowing it to maintain a high sales to capital
ratio for the sector (5.00)
Reinvestment
After-tax Cash Flow The company is young and still trying to establish
a business model, leading to a high cost of
Adjust for time value & risk capital (12%) up front. As it grows, it will become
safer and its cost of capital will drop to 8%.
Adjusted for operating risk
with a discount rate and
VALUE OF
for failure with a
OPERATING
probability of failure.
ASSETS
261
Step 4: Value the company (Uber)
262
Aswath Damodaran
262
Step 5: Keep the feedback loop
263
Aswath Damodaran
263
Valuing Bill Gurleys Uber narrative
264
Different narratives, Different Numbers
265
Step 6: Be ready to modify narrative as
events unfold
266
Aswath Damodaran
266
Aswath Damodaran 267
The equity risk premiums that I have used in the valuations that follow
reflect my thinking (and how it has evolved) on the issue.
Pre-1998 valuations: In the valuations prior to 1998, I use a risk premium of 5.5%
for mature markets (close to both the historical and the implied premiums then)
Between 1998 and Sept 2008: In the valuations between 1998 and September
2008, I used a risk premium of 4% for mature markets, reflecting my belief that risk
premiums in mature markets do not change much and revert back to historical
norms (at least for implied premiums).
Valuations done in 2009: After the 2008 crisis and the jump in equity risk premiums
to 6.43% in January 2008, I have used a higher equity risk premium (5-6%) for the
next 5 years and will assume a reversion back to historical norms (4%) only after
year 5.
After 2009: In 2010, I reverted back to a mature market premium of 4.5%,
reflecting the drop in equity risk premiums during 2009. In 2011, I used 5%,
reflecting again the change in implied premium over the year. In 2012 and 2013,
stayed with 6%, reverted to 5% in 2014 and will be using 5.75% in 2015.
Aswath Damodaran
268
The Valuation Set up
269
Aswath Damodaran
269
270 Training Wheels On?
Stocks that look like Bonds, Things Change and
Market Valuations
Aswath Damodaran
Test 1: Is the firm paying Training Wheels valuation: Test 2: Is the stable growth rate
dividends like a stable growth Con Ed in August 2008 consistent with fundamentals?
firm? Retention Ratio = 27%
Dividend payout ratio is 73% ROE =Cost of equity = 7.7%
In trailing 12 months, through June Expected growth = 2.1%
2008
Earnings per share = $3.17 Growth rate forever = 2.1%
Dividends per share = $2.32
Value per share today= Expected Dividends per share next year / (Cost of equity - Growth rate)
= 2.32 (1.021)/ (.077 - ,021) = $42.30
$70.00
$60.00
$40.00
$30.00
$20.00
$10.00
$0.00
4.10% 3.10% 2.10% 1.10% 0.10% -0.90% -1.90% -2.90% -3.90%
Expected Growth rate
Aswath Damodaran
272
From DCF value to target price and returns
273
Aswath Damodaran
273
Current Cashflow to Firm
3M: A Pre-crisis valuation
Return on Capital
EBIT(1-t)= 5344 (1-.35)= 3474 Reinvestment Rate 25%
- Nt CpX= 350 30% Stable Growth
Expected Growth in g = 3%; Beta = 1.10;
- Chg WC 691
EBIT (1-t) Debt Ratio= 20%; Tax rate=35%
= FCFF 2433
.30*.25=.075 Cost of capital = 6.76%
Reinvestment Rate = 1041/3474
7.5% ROC= 6.76%;
=29.97%
Return on capital = 25.19% Reinvestment Rate=3/6.76=44%
Value/Share $ 83.55
Cost of capital = 8.32% (0.92) + 2.91% (0.08) = 7.88%
On September 12,
Cost of Equity Cost of Debt 2008, 3M was
8.32% (3.72%+.75%)(1-.35) Weights trading at $70/share
= 2.91% E = 92% D = 8%
Value/Share $ 60.53
Cost of capital = 10.86% (0.92) + 3.55% (0.08) = 10.27%
Risk Premium
Riskfree Rate: Beta X 5.11%
Treasury bond rate + 1.00 Set at the average ERP over
2.17% the last decade
S&P 500 is a good reflection of
276 overall market
From a Company to the Market: Valuing the S&P 500: Augmented Dividend Discount Model in January 2015
Rationale for model
Why augmented dividends? Because companies are increasing returning cash in the form of stock buybacks
Why 2-stage? Because the expected growth rate in near term is higher than stable growth rate.
Risk Premium
Riskfree Rate: Beta X 5.11%
Treasury bond rate + 1.00 Set at the average ERP over
2.17% the last decade
S&P 500 is a good reflection of
overall market
277
Valuing the S&P 500: Augmented Dividends and Fundamental Growth January 2015
Rationale for model
Why augmented dividends? Because companies are increasing returning cash in the form of stock buybacks
Why 2-stage? Why not?
Risk Premium
Riskfree Rate: Beta X 5.11%
Treasury bond rate + 1.00 Set at the average ERP over
2.17% the last decade
S&P 500 is a good reflection of
overall market
Aswath Damodaran
The fundamental determinants of value
280
Aswath Damodaran
280
The Dark Side of Valuation
281
Aswath Damodaran
281
Difficult to value companies
282
Aswath Damodaran
282
I. The challenge with young companies
283
Aswath Damodaran
283
Upping the ante.. Young companies in young
businesses
284
Aswath Damodaran
284
9a. Amazon in January 2000 Sales to capital ratio and
expected margin are retail Stable Growth
Current Current
Revenue Margin: industry average numbers Stable Stable
Stable Operating ROC=20%
$ 1,117 -36.71% Revenue
Sales Turnover Competitive Margin: Reinvest 30%
Ratio: 3.00 Advantages Growth: 6% 10.00% of EBIT(1-t)
EBIT
From previous -410m Revenue Expected
years Growth: Margin: Terminal Value= 1881/(.0961-.06)
NOL: 42% -> 10.00% =52,148
500 m
Term. Year
$41,346
Revenues $2,793 5,585 9,774 14,661 19,059 23,862 28,729 33,211 36,798 39,006 10.00%
Value of Op Assets $ 14,910 EBIT
-$373 -$94 $407 $1,038 $1,628 $2,212 $2,768 $3,261 $3,646 $3,883 35.00%
+ Cash $ 26 EBIT (1-t) -$373 -$94 $407 $871 $1,058 $1,438 $1,799 $2,119 $2,370 $2,524 $2,688
- Reinvestment $559 $931 $1,396 $1,629 $1,466 $1,601 $1,623 $1,494 $1,196 $736 $ 807
= Value of Firm $14,936 FCFF -$931 -$1,024 -$989 -$758 -$408 -$163 $177 $625 $1,174 $1,788
- Value of Debt $ 349 $1,881
= Value of Equity $14,587 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
- Equity Options $ 2,892 Forever
Value per share $ 34.32 Cost of Equity 12.90% 12.90% 12.90% 12.90% 12.90% 12.42% 12.30% 12.10% 11.70% 10.50%
Cost of Debt 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 7.80% 7.75% 7.67% 7.50% 7.00%
All existing options valued AT cost of debt 8.00% 8.00% 8.00% 6.71% 5.20% 5.07% 5.04% 4.98% 4.88% 4.55%
as options, using current Cost of Capital 12.84% 12.84% 12.84% 12.83% 12.81% 12.13% 11.96% 11.69% 11.15% 9.61%
stock price of $84. Amazon was
trading at $84 in
Used average January 2000.
Cost of Equity interest coverage Cost of Debt Weights
12.90% ratio over next 5 6.5%+1.5%=8.0% Debt= 1.2% -> 15%
years to get BBB Tax rate = 0% -> 35%
rating. Pushed debt ratio
Dot.com retailers for firrst 5 years to retail industry
average of 15%.
Convetional retailers after year 5
Beta
Riskfree Rate: + 1.60 -> 1.00 X Risk Premium
T. Bond rate = 6.5% 4%
287
Lesson 3: Scaling up is hard to do & failure
is common
Lower revenue growth
rates, as revenues
scale up.
Keep track of dollar
revenues, as you go
through time,
measuring against
market size.
Lesson 4: Dont forget to pay for growth
289
Lesson 5: The dilution is taken care off..
290
Lesson 6: If you are worried about failure,
incorporate into value
291
Lesson 7: There are always scenarios
where the market price can be justified
292
Lesson 8: You will be wrong 100% of the
tim and it really is not your fault
No matter how careful you are in getting your inputs and
how well structured your model is, your estimate of
value will change both as new information comes out
about the company, the business and the economy.
As information comes out, you will have to adjust and
adapt your model to reflect the information. Rather than
be defensive about the resulting changes in value,
recognize that this is the essence of risk.
A test: If your valuations are unbiased, you should find
yourself increasing estimated values as often as you are
decreasing values. In other words, there should be equal
doses of good and bad news affecting valuations (at least
over time).
293
And the market is often more wrong.
$90.00
$80.00
$70.00
$60.00
$50.00
$30.00
$20.00
$10.00
$0.00
2000 2001 2002 2003
Time of analysis
294
Assessing my 2000 forecasts, in 2014
295
Aswath Damodaran
295
Amazon: My Field of Dreams Valuation October 2014
Aswath Damodaran
299
The perils of valuing mature companies
300
Aswath Damodaran
300
Hormel Foods: The Value of Control Changing
Hormel Foods sells packaged meat and other food products and has been in existence as a publicly traded company for almost 80 years.
In 2008, the firm reported after-tax operating income of $315 million, reflecting a compounded growth of 5% over the previous 5 years.
The Status Quo
Run by existing management, with conservative reinvestment policies (reinvestment rate = 14.34% and debt ratio = 10.4%.
Anemic growth rate and short growth period, due to reinvestment policy Low debt ratio affects cost of capital
Aswath Damodaran
302
Lesson 2: Increasing growth is not always a value
creating option.. And it may destroy value at times..
303
Aswath Damodaran
303
Lesson 3: Financial leverage is a double-edged
sword..
304
Exhibit 7.1: Optimal Financing Mix: Hormel Foods in January 2009
Current Cost
of Capital Optimal: Cost of
capital lowest
between 20 and
30%.
Aswath Damodaran
304
III. Dealing with decline and distress
305
Historial data often Growth can be negative, as firm sheds assets and
reflects flat or declining shrinks. As less profitable assets are shed, the firms
revenues and falling remaining assets may improve in quality.
margins. Investments
often earn less than the What is the value added by growth
cost of capital. assets?
When will the firm
What are the cashflows become a mature
from existing assets? fiirm, and what are
How risky are the cash flows from both the potential
Underfunded pension existing assets and growth assets? roadblocks?
obligations and
litigation claims can
lower value of equity. Depending upon the risk of the There is a real chance,
Liquidation assets being divested and the use of especially with high financial
preferences can affect the proceeds from the divestuture (to leverage, that the firm will not
value of equity pay dividends or retire debt), the risk make it. If it is expected to
in both the firm and its equity can survive as a going concern, it
What is the value of change. will be as a much smaller
equity in the firm? entity.
Aswath Damodaran
305
a. Dealing with Decline
306
Aswath Damodaran
306
Figure 14.5: A Valuation of JC Penney
Margins
Declining business: Revenues expected to drop by 3% a year fo next 5 years improve
gradually to
Base year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 median for
Revenue growth rate -3.00% -3.00% -3.00% -3.00% -3.00% -2.00% -1.00% 0.00% 1.00% 2.00% US retail
sector
Revenues $ 12,522 $ 12,146 $ 11,782 $ 11,428 $ 11,086 $ 10,753 $ 10,538 $ 10,433 $ 10,433 $ 10,537 $ 10,748
(6.25%)
EBIT (Operating) margin 1.32% 1.82% 2.31% 2.80% 3.29% 3.79% 4.28% 4.77% 5.26% 5.76% 6.25%
EBIT (Operating income) $ 166 $ 221 $ 272 $ 320 $ 365 $ 407 $ 451 $ 498 $ 549 $ 607 $ 672 As stores
Tax rate 35.00% 35.00% 35.00% 35.00% 35.00% 35.00% 36.00% 37.00% 38.00% 39.00% 40.00% shut down,
EBIT(1-t) $ 108 $ 143 $ 177 $ 208 $ 237 $ 265 $ 289 $ 314 $ 341 $ 370 $ 403 cash
- Reinvestment $ (188) $ (182) $ (177) $ (171) $ (166) $ (108) $ (53) $ - $ 52 $ 105 released from
FCFF $ 331 $ 359 $ 385 $ 409 $ 431 $ 396 $ 366 $ 341 $ 318 $ 298 real estate.
Cost of capital 9.00% 9.00% 9.00% 9.00% 9.00% 8.80% 8.60% 8.40% 8.20% 8.00% The cost of
PV(FCFF) $ 304 $ 302 $ 297 $ 290 $ 280 $ 237 $ 201 $ 173 $ 149 $ 129 capital is at
Terminal value $ 5,710 9%, higher
PV(Terminal value) $ 2,479 because of
PV (CF over next 10 years) $ 2,362 high cost of
Sum of PV $ 4,841 debt.
Probability of failure = 20.00% High debt load and poor earnings put
Proceeds if firm fails = $2,421 survival at risk. Based on bond rating,
Value of operating assets = $4,357 20% chance of failure and liquidation will
bring in 50% of book value
Aswath Damodaran
308
Reinvestment:
Capital expenditures include cost of Stable Growth
Current Current new casinos and working capital Stable Stable
Revenue Margin: Stable Operating ROC=10%
$ 4,390 4.76% Revenue Margin: Reinvest 30%
Extended Industry Growth: 3% 17% of EBIT(1-t)
reinvestment average
EBIT break, due ot
$ 209m investment in Expected
past Margin: Terminal Value= 758(.0743-.03)
-> 17% =$ 17,129
Term. Year
Revenues $4,434 $4,523 $5,427 $6,513 $7,815 $8,206 $8,616 $9,047 $9,499 $9,974 $10,273
Oper margin 5.81% 6.86% 7.90% 8.95% 10% 11.40% 12.80% 14.20% 15.60% 17% 17%
EBIT $258 $310 $429 $583 $782 $935 $1,103 $1,285 $1,482 $1,696 $ 1,746
Tax rate 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 26.0% 28.4% 30.8% 33.2% 35.6% 38.00% 38%
EBIT * (1 - t) $191 $229 $317 $431 $578 $670 $763 $858 $954 $1,051 $1,083
- Reinvestment -$19 -$11 $0 $22 $58 $67 $153 $215 $286 $350 $ 325
Value of Op Assets $ 9,793 FCFF $210 $241 $317 $410 $520 $603 $611 $644 $668 $701 $758
+ Cash & Non-op $ 3,040 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
= Value of Firm $12,833 Forever
- Value of Debt $ 7,565 Beta 3.14 3.14 3.14 3.14 3.14 2.75 2.36 1.97 1.59 1.20
= Value of Equity $ 5,268 Cost of equity 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 21.82% 19.50% 17.17% 14.85% 12.52% 10.20%
Cost of debt 9% 9% 9% 9% 9% 8.70% 8.40% 8.10% 7.80% 7.50%
Value per share $ 8.12 Debtl ratio 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 73.50% 68.80% 64.10% 59.40% 54.70% 50.00%
Cost of capital 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.88% 9.79% 9.50% 9.01% 8.32% 7.43%
Riskfree Rate:
T. Bond rate = 3% Las Vegas Sands
Risk Premium
Beta 6% Feburary 2009
+ 3.14-> 1.20 X Trading @ $4.25
Aswath Damodaran
310
IV. Emerging Market Companies
311
Aswath Damodaran
311
Lesson 1: Country risk has to be incorporated but
with a scalpel, not a bludgeon
312
Riskfree Rate:
US$ Riskfree Rate= Beta Mature market Country Equity Risk
+ 0.88 X premium + Lambda X Premium
3.8% 0.27
4% 3.66%
Aswath Damodaran
314
Lesson 3: The corporate governance drag
315
Aswath Damodaran
315
6a. Tube Investments: Status Quo (in Rs)
Return on Capital
Current Cashflow to Firm Reinvestment Rate 9.20%
EBIT(1-t) : 4,425 60% Expected Growth Stable Growth
- Nt CpX 843 in EBIT (1-t) g = 5%; Beta = 1.00;
- Chg WC 4,150 .60*.092-= .0552 Debt ratio = 44.2%
= FCFF - 568 5.52% Country Premium= 3%
Reinvestment Rate =112.82% ROC= 9.22%
Reinvestment Rate=54.35%
Riskfree Rate:
Riskfree Rate: Rs Riskfree Rate= 5% Beta Mature market Country Equity Risk
Beta Mature market Country Equity Risk + 1.20 X premium + Lambda X Premium
Rs Riskfree Rate= 5% X + Lambda X 0.80
+ 1.21 premium
0.75
Premium 4.5% 4.50%
4.5% 4.50%
Riskfree Rate:
Rs Riskfree Rate= 5% Beta Mature market Country Equity Risk
+ 1.05 X premium + Lambda X Premium
4.5% 0.20 4.50%
80.00% 36.62%
47.45%
47.06%
60.41%
47.62% 50.94%
20.00%
0.00%
Tata Chemicals Tata Steel Tata Motors TCS
Aswath Damodaran
321
Lesson 5: Truncation risk can come in many forms
322
Aswath Damodaran
322
V. Valuing Financial Service Companies
323
Aswath Damodaran
323
CIB Egypt in December 2015
Valuation in Egyptian Pounds
ROE = 42.48%
Retention
Ratio =
Dividends 75.25% Expected Growth g =10%: ROE = 25%(=Cost of equity)
EPS = 4.04 EGP 75.25% * Beta = 0.81
* Payout Ratio 24.75% 42.48% = 31.96% Payout = (1- 10/25) = .60
DPS = 1.00 EGP
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Terminal Value
Expected Growth Rate 31.96% 31.96% 31.96% 31.96% 31.96% 27.57% 23.18% 18.79% 14.39% 10.00% = EPS6*Payout/(r-g)
Earnings per share 5.33 .. 7.04 .. 9.28 .. 12.25 .. 16.17 .. 20.63 .. 25.41 .. 30.18 .. 34.52 .. 37.97 ..
= (37.97*.6)/(.2325-.10) = 189.20
Payout ratio 24.75% 24.75% 24.75% 24.75% 24.75% 31.80% 38.85% 45.90% 52.95% 60.00%
Dividends per share 1.32 .. 1.74 .. 2.30 .. 3.03 .. 4.00 .. 6.56 .. 9.87 .. 13.85 .. 18.28 .. 22.78 ..
Cost of Equity 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25% 23.25%
Cumulative Cost of Equity 123.25% 151.90% 187.21% 230.73% 284.37% 350.48% 431.95% 532.37% 656.13% 808.66%
Present Value 1.07 .. 1.15 .. 1.23 .. 1.31 .. 1.41 .. 1.87 .. 2.29 .. 2.60 .. 2.79 .. 2.82 ..
.........
Value of Equity per Forever
share = PV of Discount at Cost of Equity
Dividends &
In December 2015, CIB
Terminal value =
was trading at 36 EGP
41.93 EGP Cost of Equity
per share
10.53% + 0.81 (15.70%) = 23.25%
Riskfree Rate:
In EGP Equity Risk Premium
10.53% + 0.81 15.7%
X
US $ risk free rate (2.27%)
adjusted for diff inflation
324 Aswath Damodaran
(1.0227)*(1.097/1.015)-1 Average Beta for Banks 100% in Egypt
2b. Goldman Sachs: August 2008 Left return on equity at 2008
levels. well below 16% in
Rationale for model 2007 and 20% in 2004-2006.
Why dividends? Because FCFE cannot be estimated
Why 3-stage? Because the firm is behaving (reinvesting, growing) like a firm with potential.
ROE = 13.19%
Retention
Ratio =
Dividends 91.65% Expected Growth in g =4%: ROE = 10%(>Cost of equity)
EPS = $16.77 *
Payout Ratio 8.35% first 5 years = Beta = 1.20
DPS =$1.40 91.65%*13.19% = Payout = (1- 4/10) = .60 or 60%
(Updated numbers for 2008 12.09%
financial year ending 11/08)
Terminal Value= EPS10*Payout/(r-g)
= (42.03*1.04*.6)/(.095-.04) = 476.86
Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
EPS $18.80 $21.07 $23.62 $26.47 $29.67 $32.78 $35.68 $38.26 $40.41 $42.03
Payout ratio 8.35% 8.35% 8.35% 8.35% 8.35% 18.68% 29.01% 39.34% 49.67% 60.00%
DPS $1.57 $1.76 $1.97 $2.21 $2.48 $6.12 $10.35 $15.05 $20.07 $25.22
Value of Equity per Forever
share = PV of Discount at Cost of Equity
Dividends &
Terminal value = Between years 6-10, as growth drops
$222.49 to 4%, payout ratio increases and cost In August 2008, Goldman
of equity decreases. was trading at $ 169/share.
Cost of Equity
4.10% + 1.40 (4.5%) = 10.4%
Riskfree Rate:
Treasury bond rate Risk Premium
4.10% Beta 4.5%
+ 1.40 X Impled Equity Risk
premium in 8/08
Aswath Damodaran
326
2c. Wells Fargo: Valuation on October 7, 2008 Assuming that Wells will have to increase its
capital base by about 30% to reflect tighter
Rationale for model regulatory concerns. (.1756/1.3 =.135
Why dividends? Because FCFE cannot be estimated
Why 2-stage? Because the expected growth rate in near term is higher than stable growth rate.
ROE = 13.5%
Retention
Ratio =
Return on Dividends (Trailing 12 45.37% Expected Growth g =3%: ROE = 7.6%(=Cost of equity)
equity: 17.56% months) 45.37% * Beta = 1.00: ERP = 4%
EPS = $2.16 * 13.5% = 6.13% Payout = (1- 3/7.6) = .60.55%
Payout Ratio 54.63%
DPS = $1.18
Riskfree Rate:
Long term treasury bond Risk Premium
rate Beta 5%
3.60% + 1.20 X Updated in October 2008
The book value of assets and equity is mostly irrelevant when valuing
non-financial service companies. After all, the book value of equity is a
historical figure and can be nonsensical. (The book value of equity can be
negative and is so for more than a 1000 publicly traded US companies)
With financial service firms, book value of equity is relevant for two
reasons:
Since financial service firms mark to market, the book value is more likely to reflect
what the firms own right now (rather than a historical value)
The regulatory capital ratios are based on book equity. Thus, a bank with negative
or even low book equity will be shut down by the regulators.
From a valuation perspective, it therefore makes sense to pay heed to
book value. In fact, you can argue that reinvestment for a bank is the
amount that it needs to add to book equity to sustain its growth
ambitions and safety requirements:
FCFE = Net Income Reinvestment in regulatory capital (book equity)
Aswath Damodaran
328
FCFE for a bank
329
Aswath Damodaran
329
330 Aswath Damodaran
VI. Valuing Companies with intangible assets
331
Aswath Damodaran
331
Lesson 1: Accounting rules are cluttered with
inconsistencies
332
Aswath Damodaran
332
Exhibit 11.1: Converting R&D expenses to R&D assets - Amgen
Step 1: Ddetermining an amortizable life for R & D expenses. 1
How long will it take, on an expected basis, for research to pay off at Amgen? Given the length of the approval process for new
drugs by the Food and Drugs Administration, we will assume that this amortizable life is 10 years.
4
Current years R&D expense = Cap ex = $3,030 million
R&D amortization = Depreciation = $ 1,694 million
Unamortized R&D = Capital invested (R&D) = $13,284 million
On May 1,2007,
Amgen was trading
Cost of Equity Cost of Debt at $ 55/share
11.70% (4.78%+..85%)(1-.35) Weights
= 3.66% E = 90% D = 10%
Aswath Damodaran
335
VII. Valuing cyclical and commodity companies
336
Company growth often comes from movements in the
economic cycle, for cyclical firms, or commodity prices,
for commodity companies.
Aswath Damodaran
336
Lesson 1: With macro companies, it is easy to get
lost in macro assumptions
337
Aswath Damodaran
337
Lesson 2: Use probabilistic tools to assess value as a
function of macro variables
338
Aswath Damodaran
338
339 Aswath Damodaran
Shells Revenues & Oil Prices
450,000.0
$100.00
400,000.0
Revenues = 39,992.77 + 4,039.39 * Average Oil Price
R squared = 96.44%
$80.00
300,000.0
250,000.0 $60.00
200,000.0
$40.00
150,000.0
100,000.0
$20.00
50,000.0
0 $-
340
341 Aswath Damodaran
Aswath Damodaran 342
Aswath Damodaran
343
Test 1: Are you pricing or valuing?
344
Aswath Damodaran
344
Test 2: Are you pricing or valuing?
345
Aswath Damodaran
345
The drivers of value
346
Aswath Damodaran
346
The determinants of price
347
Incremental information
Since you make money on
price changes, not price levels, Group Think
the focus is on incremental To the extent that pricing is
information (news stories, about gauging what other
rumors, gossip) and how it investors will do, the price can
measures up, relative to be determined by the "herd".
expectations
Aswath Damodaran
347
Three views of the gap
348
The pricers dilemma..
349
The valuers dilemma and ways of dealing with it
350
Strategies for managing the risk in the closing of
the gap
The karmic approach: In this one, you buy (sell short) under
(over) valued companies and sit back and wait for the gap to
close. You are implicitly assuming that given time, the market
will see the error of its ways and fix that error.
The catalyst approach: For the gap to close, the price has to
converge on value. For that convergence to occur, there
usually has to be a catalyst.
If you are an activist investor, you may be the catalyst yourself. In fact,
your act of buying the stock may be a sufficient signal for the market to
reassess the price.
If you are not, you have to look for other catalysts. Here are some to
watch for: a new CEO or management team, a blockbuster new
product or an acquisition bid where the firm is targeted.
Aswath Damodaran
351
351
An example: Apple Price versus Value
(my estimates) from 2011 to 2015
352
Aswath Damodaran
352
A closing thought
353
Aswath Damodaran
353