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B40.2302 Class #2

B40.2302 Class #2. BM6 chapters 4, 5, 6 Based on slides created by Matthew Will Modified 9/18/2001 by Jeffrey Wurgler. Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers Sixth Edition. The Value of Common Stocks. Slides by Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler. Chapter 4. Irwin/McGraw Hill.

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B40.2302 Class #2

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  1. B40.2302 Class #2 • BM6 chapters 4, 5, 6 • Based on slides created by Matthew Will • Modified 9/18/2001 by Jeffrey Wurgler

  2. Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers Sixth Edition • The Value of Common Stocks Slides by Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler Chapter 4 Irwin/McGraw Hill • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

  3. Topics Covered • How To Value Common Stock • Capitalization Rates • Stock Prices and EPS • Cash Flows and the Value of a Business

  4. Stocks & Stock Market Common Stock - Ownership shares in a publicly held corporation. Secondary Market - Market in which previously-issued securities are traded. Dividend - Periodic cash distribution from the firm to the shareholders. P/E Ratio - Price per share divided by earnings per share.

  5. Stocks & Stock Market Book Value - Net worth of the firm according to the balance sheet. Liquidation Value - Net proceeds that would be realized by selling (liquidating) all assets and paying off all creditors. Market Value Balance Sheet – Balance sheet that uses market value of assets and liabilities (instead of the usual accounting value).

  6. Valuing Common Stocks Expected Return- The percentage gain that an investor forecasts from a specific investment over a set period of time. Sometimes called the market capitalization rate.

  7. Valuing Common Stocks Expected return can be broken into two parts: Dividend Yield + Capital Appreciation

  8. Valuing Common Stocks Dividend Discount Model - Model of today’s stock price which states that share value equals the present value of all expected future dividends. H - Time horizon for your investment.

  9. Valuing Common Stocks Example Current forecasts are for XYZ Company to pay annual cash dividends of $3, $3.24, and $3.50 per share over the next three years, respectively. At the end of three years you expect to sell your share at a market price of $94.48. What should be the price of a share today with a 12% expected return?

  10. Valuing Common Stocks No Growth DDM If we forecast no growth, and plan to hold our stock indefinitely, then we can value the stock as a perpetuity. Assumes all earnings are paid to shareholders. So Div = EPS each year. No retentions, no growth.

  11. Valuing Common Stocks Constant Growth DDM - A version of the dividend growth model in which dividends grow at a constant rate g. When you use the growing perpetuity formula to value a stock, you are using the “Gordon Growth Model.”

  12. Valuing Common Stocks Example If a stock is selling for $100 in the stock market, what might the market be assuming about the growth rate of dividends? Answer The market is assuming the dividend will grow at 9% per year, indefinitely.

  13. Valuing Common Stocks Example – continued Suppose in the same example you knew g was 9% per year, but didn’t know r. What is the market’s estimate of r? Answer The market has set r at 12% per year.

  14. Valuing Common Stocks • If the board elects to pay a lower dividend, and reinvest the remainder, the stock price may increase because future dividends may be higher. Payout Ratio - Fraction of earnings paid out as dividends. Plowback Ratio - Fraction of earnings retained or “plowed back” into the firm. Payout Ratio + Plowback Ratio = 1

  15. Valuing Common Stocks An accounting return measurement

  16. Valuing Common Stocks Instead of asking an analyst, growth can be derived from applying the return on equity to the percentage of earnings plowed back into operations. g = Plowback Ratio x ROE

  17. Valuing Common Stocks Example We forecast a $5.00 dividend next year, which represents 100% of earnings. This will provide investors with a 12% expected return. Instead, we decide to plow back 40% of the earnings at the firm’s current accounting return on equity of 20%. What is the value of the stock before and after the plowback decision? No Growth (Div=EPS) With Growth (Div<EPS)

  18. Valuing Common Stocks Example - continued With the no growth policy, the stock price is $41.67. With the plowback / growth policy, the price rose to $75.00. The difference between these two numbers (75.00-41.67=33.33) is called the Present Value of Growth Opportunities (PVGO).

  19. Valuing Common Stocks Present Value of Growth Opportunities (PVGO) Net present value of a firm’s future investments. Sustainable Growth Rate - Steady rate at which a firm can grow without new external capital: ROE x Plowback Ratio.

  20. EPS, P/E, and share price • Under a no-growth policy, Div=EPS, so: • In general, share price = capitalized value of average earnings under no-growth policy, plus PVGO:

  21. EPS, P/E, and share price • Rearranging, • EPS/P ratio underestimates r if PVGO > 0 • “Growth stocks” sell at high P/E ratios because PVGO is high.

  22. FCF and PV • Free Cash Flows (FCF) are the theoretical basis for all PV calculations. • FCF is more relevant than EPS. • FCFt = cash inflowst – cash outflowst • PV(firm) = PV(FCF)

  23. FCF and PV Valuing a Business The value of a business is often computed as the present value of FCF out to a valuation horizon (H). • The value at H is sometimes called the terminal value or horizon value

  24. FCF and PV Example Given the cash flows for Concatenator Manufacturing Division, calculate the PV of near term cash flows, PV (horizon value), and the total value of the firm. r=10% and g= 6%

  25. FCF and PV Example - continued .

  26. Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers Sixth Edition • Why Net Present Value Leads to Better Investment Decisions than Other Criteria Slides by Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler Chapter 5 Irwin/McGraw Hill • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

  27. Topics Covered • NPV and its Competitors • The Payback Period • The Book Rate of Return • Internal Rate of Return • Capital Rationing – what to do? • Profitability Index • Linear Programming

  28. NPV and Cash Transfers • Evaluating projects requires understanding the flows of cash. Cash Investment opportunities (real assets) Investment opportunities (financial assets) Firm Shareholder Invest… … or pay dividend … … so shareholders invest for themselves

  29. Payback • The payback period of a project is the time it takes before the cumulative forecasted cash inflow equals the initial outflow. • The payback rule says only accept projects that “payback” within some set time frame. • This rule is common but very flawed.

  30. Payback Example Examine the three projects and note the mistake we would make if we insisted on only taking projects with a payback period of 2 years or less.

  31. Book Rate of Return Book Rate of Return – An accounting measure of profitability. Also called accounting rate of return. Note the components reflect tax and accounting figures, not market values or cash flows.

  32. Internal Rate of Return • The Internal Rate of Return is the discount rate that makes the project’s NPV = 0. • IRR rule is to accept a project if the IRR>cost of capital. Example You can purchase a machine for $4,000. The investment will generate $2,000 and $4,000 in cash flows in the next two years. What is the IRR on this investment?

  33. Internal Rate of Return IRR=28%

  34. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 1 -Strange cash flow patterns • With some cash flows the NPV of the project increases as the discount rate increases. • This is contrary to the normal relationship. NPV Discount Rate

  35. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 1 – Strange cash flow patterns • Example where IRR gets it wrong for this reason:

  36. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 2 - Multiple Rates of Return (even stranger CF patterns) • Some cash flow patterns can generate NPV=0 at two different IRRs! • The following cash flow generates NPV=0 at both (-50%) and 15.2%. NPV 1000 IRR=15.2% 500 Discount Rate 0 -500 IRR=-50% -1000

  37. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 2 - Multiple Rates of Return • Example where IRR gets it wrong for this reason:

  38. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 3 - Mutually Exclusive Projects • IRR ignores the scale of the project.

  39. Internal Rate of Return Pitfall 4 – Flat Term Structure Assumption • IRR has problems when the term structure isn’t flat. • In this case, we’d need to compare the project IRR with the expected IRR (yield to maturity) offered by a traded security that • Has equivalent risk • Has same time-pattern of cash flows • At this point easier to calculate NPV!

  40. Internal Rate of Return Even calculating IRR can be hard. Financial calculators can perform this function easily, though. In the previous example, HP-10B EL-733A BAII Plus -350,000 CFj -350,000 CFi CF 16,000 CFj 16,000 CFfi 2nd {CLR Work} 16,000 CFj 16,000 CFi -350,000 ENTER 466,000 CFj 466,000 CFi 16,000 ENTER {IRR/YR} IRR 16,000 ENTER 466,000 ENTER IRR CPT All produce IRR=12.96

  41. Profitability Index • When resources are limited (capital is “constrained” or “rationed”) the profitability index (PI) provides a tool for selecting among various project combinations and alternatives. • The highest weighted-average PI can indicate the right plan in these circumstances.

  42. Profitability Index Example We only have $300,000 to invest. Which do we select? Proj NPV Investment PI A 230,000 200,000 1.15 B 141,250 125,000 1.13 C 194,250 175,000 1.11

  43. Linear Programming • Maximize Cash flows or NPV • Minimize costs Example Max NPV = 21Xa + 16 Xb + 12 Xc + 13 Xd subject to 10Xa0 + 5Xb0 + 5Xc0 + 0Xd0 <= 10 -30Xa1 - 5Xb1 - 5Xc1 + 40Xd1 <= 12

  44. Principles of Corporate Finance Brealey and Myers Sixth Edition • Making Investment Decisions with the Net Present Value Rule Slides by Matthew Will, Jeffrey Wurgler Chapter 6 Irwin/McGraw Hill • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000

  45. Topics Covered • What To Discount • IM&C Project • Project Interaction • Timing • Equivalent Annual Cost • Replacement • Cost of Excess Capacity • Fluctuating Load Factors

  46. What To Discount Only Cash Flow is Relevant

  47. What To Discount • Do not confuse average with incremental. • Treat inflation consistently. • Include all incidental effects. • Do not forget working capital requirements. • Forget sunk costs. • Include opportunity costs. • Beware of allocated overhead costs. Points to watch out for:

  48. IM&C’s Guano Project Revised projections ($000s) reflecting inflation

  49. IM&C’s Guano Project Cash flow analysis ($1000s)

  50. IM&C’s Guano Project • NPV (using nominal cash flows)

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