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Principles of Finance with Excel, 2 nd edition Instructor materials Chapter 16 Valuing stocks
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Four approaches to stock valuation Valuation method 1: Efficient markets approach Valuation method 2: Discounting future free cash flows (FCF) Valuation method 3: Discounting future equity payouts Valuation method 4: Valuation with multiples 2
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Excel in this chapter Sum NPV If Data table 3
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Valuation method 1: Efficient markets approach Efficient markets says: The market knows best Means: Current stock price is the right price! 4
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Page 484 5 MESSAGE: There’s a lot of evidence showing that you can’t outguess markets! MEANING: Before you do complicated stock valuations—consider the possibility that the market price is correct: Market price represents sum total of thinking about the stock The price may subsequently go up or down, but there’s no easy way to tell …
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Another example 6
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Valuation method 2: Stock price based on PV(FCF) Reminder: Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash produced by the business activities of the firm (Chapter 6/7) FCF = Profit after taxes + Depreciation - Increase in Current Assets + Increase in Current Liabilities - Capital expenditures + After-tax interest 7
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8 The DCF valuation steps: Value the enterprise value by taking the PV of future FCFs Add back initial cash and marketable securities Subtract out debt = Equity valuation
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DCF example: Arnold Corp. Current FCF = $2 million Growth rate of FCF = 8% annually WACC = 15% 1,000,000 shares $10 million debt $ 1 million cash 10
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Valuing Arnold Corporation 11
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Valuation method 3: Share price = PV of future anticipated equity cash flows discounted at cost of equity r E This method is more direct Equity cash flow=Dividends + stock repurchases r E = cost of equity Compute by using Gordon dividend model (Chapter 6) Compute by using SML (Chapter 13) 12
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Using equity payouts 13
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Why finance professionals shun direct equity valuation Equity payouts are even less predictable than FCFs The WACC is probably more stable than the cost of equity 14
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Valuation method 4: Using multiples Most common: Price-earnings ratio * Earnings EBITDA ratio * EBITDA See separate multiple valuation PPT on instructor website 15
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