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Corporate Finance: Spring 2013
Aswath Damodaran
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Ponderous Thoughts, or maybe not
There are few facts and lots of opinions. Even the givens (cash & risk free rate) are not With accounting and market numbers, all bets are off. The real world is a messy place. Money making firms can become money losers Companies can be restructured/ given facelifts Models don’t compute values and optimal paths. You do. Change is the only constant. Numbers don’t match. Different betas from different sources. Book value of equity is negative Optimal debt ratio for Co
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The Breakdown in the Classical Objective Function
STOCKHOLDERS Managers put their interests above stockholders Have little control over managers Significant Social Costs Lend Money Managers BONDHOLDERS SOCIETY Bondholders can get ripped off Some costs cannot be traced to firm Delay bad news or provide misleading information Markets make mistakes and can over react FINANCIAL MARKETS
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I. Where does the power lie?
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II. Who is your marginal investor? From Spring 2012
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III. Risk Profiles and Costs of Equity
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Beta: The Standard Approach
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Regression Estimation Approaches
Typical reasons My company is unique. I cannot find comparable firms. My company is in only one line of business My bottom-up beta is too different from my regression beta
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Beta Distribution
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Jensen’s Alpha Distribution
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R Squared
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Cost of Capital
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Distribution of Current Market Value Debt Ratios
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IV. The Quality of Investments: The Firm View
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Return Spreads
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VI. The Optimal Financing Mix
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Under versus Over Levered Firms
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VIII. The Right Kind of Financing
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IX. Measuring Potential Dividends
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Dividends versus FCFE
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X. Valuation: Match up cashflows and discount rates…
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Getting to equity value per share
Approach used To get to equity value per share Discount dividends per share at the cost of equity Present value is value of equity per share Discount aggregate FCFE at the cost of equity Present value is value of aggregate equity. Subtract the value of equity options given to managers and divide by number of shares. Discount aggregate FCFF at the cost of capital PV = Value of operating assets + Cash & Near Cash investments + Value of minority cross holdings Debt outstanding = Value of equity Value of equity options =Value of equity in common stock / Number of shares
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Value versus Price
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Ways of changing value…
To change value, you have to take actions that affect one of four inputs: Cash flows from existing assets Expected growth Cost of capital Length of the growth period
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Brings it all together. Stock looks under valued… or maybe the valuation is wrong…
Note that the non operating investment is the value of their minority holdings in Hong Kong Disney (they own 43% and the Chinese government owns 57%) and the minority interests represents the value of external equity investors in fully consolidated ventures. In both cases, we used book value because we had no way of accessing the market value. The equity options is the value of management options, valued using an option pricing model, and adjusted for taxes. Aswath Damodaran
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Note that with two changes, a higher return on capital on new investments over the high growth phase (from 9,.91% to 12%) and moving to the optimal debt ratio of 40%, we can raise the value per share from $28.16 to $ The difference of $8.51 can be viewed as the value of control. In general, the better managed a firm is, the lower will be the value of control. Aswath Damodaran
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So, how do you explain the price? Its all relative..
Note that when people compare firms across sectors, they implicitly assume that firms in a sector have similar risk and cash flow characteristics. This is clearly a dangerous assumption to make. The PEG ratio is a simplistic way of controlling for expected growth differences across firms. A low PEG ratio is viewed as a sign of an undervalued firm. The PEG ratio is based upon the implicit assumption that PE and expected growth are linearly related.
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Most undervalued stocks!!
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The Triple Whammy: Underlevered, Cash Build-up and Under valued?
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First Principles As we begin, so we end.
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Objectives of this class
If you get the big picture, the details will come (sooner or later) Tools are useful but only in the larger context of answering bigger questions. Corporate finance is not so bad !!!
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And don’t forget your CFEs…
1. This course was mentally challenging/intellectually stimulating. No-brainer! Brilliant insights! 2. This course was demanding of my time. What work? Haven’t slept all semester. 3. This course provided me with tools and information that I will find useful in the future. Only in prison Completely relevant 4. Overall evaluation of the course Horrible! ( I want my money back) Stupendous! 5. The instructor was organized and well prepared for class. Had trouble finding classroom Scarily efficient! 6. The instructor communicated his/her ideas and material well. Garbled gobbledygook! Should have own TV show 7. The instructor was enthusiastic about his/her subject matter. Dead man talking! I am a convert 8. Overall evaluation of the instructor Dog! Star!
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