Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

C hapter 9 Valuation of Common Stock 1. Reading Stock Listings pp. 235 New York Stock Exchange Listing 52 Weeks Hi Lo Stock Sym Div Yid% P/E Vol100s Hi.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "C hapter 9 Valuation of Common Stock 1. Reading Stock Listings pp. 235 New York Stock Exchange Listing 52 Weeks Hi Lo Stock Sym Div Yid% P/E Vol100s Hi."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 C hapter 9 Valuation of Common Stock 1. Reading Stock Listings pp. 235 New York Stock Exchange Listing 52 Weeks Hi Lo Stock Sym Div Yid% P/E Vol100s Hi Lo Close Net Chg -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - - -- --

3 -cont’ 2. The Discounted Dividend Model (DDM) ☆ A discounted dividend model (DDM) the model that computes the value of a share of stock as the present value of its expected future CF. ☆ risk – adjusted discounted rate (market capitalization rate) the expected rate of return that investors require in order to be willing to invest in the stock. ☆ the expected rate of return that investors require, E(r):

4 --cont’ ☆ -- A general valuation (pricing) model Based on above formula, we got:

5 - -cont’ ☆ -- Zero Growth: g=0 As n→∞, D 1 =D 2 =D 3 =······=D P 0 =D / k ☆ -- Constant Growth :g≠0 D 1 =D 0 (1+g) D 2 =D 1 (1+g)=D 0 (1+g) 2 D 3 =D 2 (1+g)=D 0 (1+g) 3 ······ ······ ······ ······ D t =D 1 (1+g) t-1

6 --cont ’ in general, we have: P t =D t+1 / (k-g) ☆ Question: XYZ stock is expected to pay a dividend of $2 per share a year from now, and its dividends are expected to grow by 6% per year thereafter. If its price is now $20 per share,what must be the market capitalization rate? ( K= D 1 / P 0 + g )

7 Valuing an Erratic-Growth Stock Suppose: expected dividend growth varies for n periods but is constant at g forever after that. At time n, the next dividend is D n+1 =(1+g)D n. Using above formula, the stock ’ s value at n is: then we got P 0 of stock:

8 3. Earnings and Investment Opportunities another approach to DCF valuation focuses on future earnings and investment opportunities. This helps to concentrate the analyst ’ s attention on the core business determinants of value. formula: P 0 =E 1 /k + NPV of future investment opportunities Example1 pp.239-241

9 --cont ’ Generalize E 1 = earnings per shares without reinvestment R I = rate of return on new investment r = retention ratio g=Earnings retention rate×Rate of return on new investment = r × R I k= capital cost (market capitalization rate)

10 example 2 Quick check 9-2 pp.241, 250 E 1 = $10 per shares R I = 18% r = 75% g = r × R I = 75% × 18% = 13.5% k= 15% without retention : P 0 =E 1 / k =10 / 15% =$66.67 with retention : P 0 =D 1 /(k-g)=$10 × 25% / (15%-13.5%) =$166.67 NPV of future investment is the difference between the two values: $166.67- $66.67 = $100

11 4. Price/Earnings Multiple Approach Growth stock stock ’ s future investments are expected to earn rates of return in excess of the market capitalization rate. So it has relatively high P/E ratios. This stock are called Growth stock. Why does stock ’ s price (P/E) much higher ? → investors ’ expectation (beliefs: investment opportunities better than others) → market demand (also result from expectation) P/E ratios tend to vary over time relatively small changes in expected growth rates of earnings or capitalization rates can result large changes in P/E ratios.

12 5. Dividend Policy Dividend policy -- Company ’ s decision to payout a portion of its earnings to its shareholders in cash. -- A dividend policy involves a trade-off among cash dividend, capital budgeting, and capital structure. Whether does the dividend policy trade-off affect the value of the company? -- irrelevant or relevant : dividend policy doesn ’ t matter in a perfect capital market environment. But dividend policy is relevant in imperfect capital market (in practice).the empirical evidence shows consistent patterns of dividend policy,and shows significant average stock price reactions to dividend changes.

13 --cont ’ Cash dividend and share repurchases -- cash dividend -- payout ratio: the ratio of cash dividend paid to earnings -- ex-dividend ( 除息 ): P = P 0 – dividend per share -- share repurchases -- example1 pp.243-244 -- example2 Quick check 9-3, pp.243,250

14 Stock dividend -- stock splits -- stock dividends (DR) -- example cash dividends vs. stock dividends pp. 245 - 246

15 --cont ’ MM theorem -- In a frictionless financial market environment, in which there are no taxes, no costs of issuing new shares of stock or repurchasing existing shares, a firm ’ s dividend policy can have no effect on the wealth of its current shareholders. -- some strict hypothesis Dividend policy in real world income taxes, regulation, costs of external finance, informational content of dividends.


Download ppt "C hapter 9 Valuation of Common Stock 1. Reading Stock Listings pp. 235 New York Stock Exchange Listing 52 Weeks Hi Lo Stock Sym Div Yid% P/E Vol100s Hi."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google