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Stock Valuation
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Valuation of Bonds and Stocks
First Principles: Value of financial securities = PV of expected future cash flows To value bonds and stocks we need to: Estimate future cash flows: Size (how much) and Timing (when) Discount future cash flows at an appropriate rate: The rate should be appropriate to the risk presented by the security.
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Discounted Cash Flow Techniques
Advantages: Since DCF valuation is based on an assetβs fundamentals, it should be less exposed to market moods and perceptions. If you are buying business, rather than stocks, DCF is the right way to think about you are getting when you buy an asset. (Warren Buffet) DCF forces you to think about the underlying characteristics of the firm, and understand its business. Disadvantages: It requires far more explicit inputs and information than other valuation approaches These inputs and information are not only noisy, but also can be manipulated by the analyst to provide the conclusion he/she wants There is no guarantee that anything will emerge as under or over valued.
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Discounted Cash Flow Techniques: Dividend Discount Model (DDM)
Under the dividend discount model, the future cash flows for stocks are: Under the DDM, the future cash flows for stocks are Dividends and Selling Price These cash flows are highly uncertain. To find the value of common stocks, we make assumptions about high dividends evolve in the future Two set assumptions: Dividend grow at constant rate (constant dividend growth model) Non-constant dividend growth D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 Dn+ Selling Price
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DDM- Constant Dividends Growth Model
Assume that dividends grow at a constant rate (g), per period forever. Given this assumption the price of common stock equals: Do=Dividend that the firm just paid D1=Dividend next period π π = π· 0 (1+π) π π βπ = π· 1 π π βπ Required rate of return on equity (CAPM) Dividend Growth Rate
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Example-Zero Growth Hampshire Products will pay a dividend of $4 per share a year from now. Analysts expect the dividends to stay the same forever. The required rate of return on the stock is 15%.What is the value of the stock? Since future cash flows are constant, the value of a zero growth stock is the present value of a perpetuity:
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Constant Growth Assume that dividends will grow at a constant rate, g, forever. i.e. Since future cash flows grow at a constant rate forever, the value of a constant growth stock is the present value of a growing perpetuity: . . .
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Example- Constant Growth
Assume that Hampshire Productsβ dividends are expected to grow at 10% per year forever. What is the value of the stock? Since future cash flows grow at a constant rate forever, the value of a constant growth stock is the present value of a growing perpetuity:
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Differential Growth Assume that dividends will grow at different rates in the foreseeable future and then will grow at a constant rate thereafter. To value a Differential Growth Stock, we need to: Estimate future dividends in the foreseeable future. Estimate the future stock price when the stock becomes a Constant Growth Stock (case 2). Compute the total present value of the estimated future dividends and future stock price at the appropriate discount rate.
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Example- A Differential Growth
A common stock just paid a dividend of $2. The dividend is expected to grow at 8% for 3 years, then it will grow at 4% in perpetuity. What is the stock worth? The discount rate is 12%.
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Example-Continued β¦ The constant growth phase beginning in year 4 can be valued as a growing perpetuity at time 3.
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Question: What is the problem in dividend discount model?
If the dividend discount model is correct, why arenβt no dividend stocks selling at zero? Consider a simple returnβ¦. What are the components?
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Component of Return π
ππ‘π’ππ= πΈπππππ πππππ ππ π πβπππβπ΅ππππππππ πππππ+πΆππ β π·ππ£πππππ π΅ππππππππ πππππ OR π
ππ‘π’ππ= πΈπππππ πππππ ππ π πβπππβπ΅ππππππππ πππππ π΅ππππππππ πππππ + πΆππ β π·ππ£πππππ π΅ππππππππ πππππ Capital Gain Dividend Yield
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Letβs link what we learn from financial statement analysis and stock valuation
Remember from the financial statement analysis: We have two ways to find cash flows ππΉπΆπΉ=πΈπ΅πΌπ 1βπππ₯ +π·ππππππππ‘πππβπΆππππ‘ππ πΈπ₯ππππππ‘π’ππ ββπππππππ πΆππππ‘ππββππ‘βππ π΄π π ππ‘π Current Assets βCurrent Liabilities OR; πΉπΆπΉ=πππ‘ πΌπππππ+π·ππππππππ‘πππβπΆππππ‘ππ πΈπ₯ππππππ‘π’ππ +πππ€ π·πππ‘ πΌπ π π’πβπππππππππ π·πππ‘ πππ¦ππππ‘π ββπππππππ πΆππππ‘ππββππ‘βππ π΄π π ππ‘π Current Assets βCurrent Liabilities
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Relative Valuation Techniques: Multiples
In contrast to various discounted cash flows techniques that attempt to estimate a specific value based on its estimated growth rates and its discount rate, the relative valuation techniques implicitly contend that it is possible to determine the value of an economic entity by comparing its stock price to relevant variable that affect a stockβs value, such as earnings, cash flow, book value and sales
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Relative Valuation Techniques- Earnings Multiplier Model
Price to earnings ratio measure how many dollars investors are willing to pay for a dollar of expected earnings: πΈπ= π π‘ πΈππ π‘+1 Assume the firm is mature and maintains a constant dividend growth, then we can use the dividend discounted model (DDM) to find the stock price π πΈππ = π· 1 (πβπ) πΈππ 1 = π· 1 πΈππ 1 (πβπ) = π·ππ£πππππ πππ¦ππ’π‘ π
ππ‘ππ (πβπ)
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Example If stock has an expected dividend payout ratio of 50%, a required rate of return of 12%, and expected growth rate for dividends of 8%, what is the stockβs P/E ratio?
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Relative Valuation Techniques: The Price to Cash Flow Ratio
Price to cash flow ratio is introduced due to the concern that some firms may manipulate and generate misleading P/E ratio. Comparing to earnings, cash flow values are generally less prone to manipulation. ππΆπΉ π
ππ‘ππ= π π‘ πΆπΉ π‘+1
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Relative Valuation Techniques: Price to Book Value Ratio
Fama and French (1992) find a significant inverse relation between price to book ratios and excess returns of stocks. Based on their findings, the price to book ratio gained popularity and credibility as a relative valuation technique for all types of firms ππ΅ πππ‘ππ= π π‘ π΅π π‘+1 (1) =Total Assets/ # Shares (2) =Share holdersβ Equity/ # Shares
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Relative Valuation Techniques: Price to Sales Ratio
The advocates of the price/sales ratio believe the ratio is useful for two reasons: (1)strong and consistent sales growth is a requirement for a growth company (2) Sales information is subject to less manipulation than any other data item. ππ π
ππ‘ππ= π π‘ π π‘+1 Be careful: Profitability ratios vary dramatically across industries
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Applying the relative valuation techniques: Example
Letβs suppose Wal-Martβs current stock price is $47.50/share. Expected Earnings for Wal-Mart is $2.62/share. What is the earnings multiplier for Wal-Mart? How could we know if earnings multiplier is too high or too low?
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Applying Earnings Multipliers
(1) Historical Multipliers: If historically, the price for Wal-Mart 7x to 12x earnings, an analyst would have to justify the price being so high relative to Wal-Martβs current or expected earnings. It may be that the price cannot justified and therefore the stock is overvalued (2) Industry Comparison: In addition to average P/E ratio for the stockβs industry can be used as a comparison. If the βdiscount merchandiseβ industry as a whole has a current P/E of 10x earnings, again, there would be concern as to whether Wal-Martβs P/E of 18 is justified It might be that industry leader is more valuable than its peers, and may be that it is priced higher (3) Market Comparison: Finally, the historical relationship between P/E and Wall-Martβs P/E can be analyzed If Wal-Mart has always had a higher P/E than the overall market, and if this is the currently the case, then the analyst needs to decide whether this is still the case and will continue into foreseeable future
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Example-Valuation of Nike
What is FCF in 2017? How to apply the DCF approach on Nike, Inc.?
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