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1 Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation • Recall that there are three questions in corporate finance. • The first regards what long-term investments the firm should make (the capital budgeting question). • The second regards the use of debt (the capital structure question). • This chapter is the nexus of these questions.

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Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation. Recall that there are three questions in corporate finance. The first regards what long-term investments the firm should make (the capital budgeting question). The second regards the use of debt (the capital structure question). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

1

Chapter 19Financing and Valuation

• Recall that there are three questions in corporate finance.

• The first regards what long-term investments the firm should make (the capital budgeting question).

• The second regards the use of debt (the capital structure question).

• This chapter is the nexus of these questions.

Page 2: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

2

The 3 Methods for Valuation

1. After Tax WACC

2. Flow of Equity Method

3. Adjusted Present Value

Page 3: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

3

Method 1 After Tax WACC

V

Er

V

DTcrWACC ED )1(

Tax Adjusted Formula

Page 4: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

4

After Tax WACCExample - Sangria Corporation

The firm has a marginal tax rate of 35%. The cost of equity is 12.4% and the pretax cost of debt is 6%. Given the book and market value balance sheets, what is the tax adjusted WACC?

Balance Sheet (Book Value, millions)Assets 1,000 500 Debt

500 EquityTotal assets 1,000 1,000 Total liabilities

Balance Sheet (Book Value, millions)Assets 1,000 500 Debt

500 EquityTotal assets 1,000 1,000 Total liabilities

Balance Sheet (Market Value, millions)Assets 1,250 500 Debt

750 EquityTotal assets 1,250 1,250 Total liabilities

Balance Sheet (Market Value, millions)Assets 1,250 500 Debt

750 EquityTotal assets 1,250 1,250 Total liabilities

Page 5: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

5

After Tax WACCExample - Sangria Corporation - continued

The company would like to invest in a perpetual crushing machine with cash flows of $1.731 million per year pre-tax. Given an initial investment of $12.5 million, what is the value of the machine?

Page 6: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

6

Remember with WACC Approach !

• Since tax shield is accounted for in the cost of capital, calculate cash flows as if the company is all equity financed.

• WACC approach values the assets and operations of the company. If you are interested in equity value, do not forget to subtract the value of the company’s debt.

Page 7: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

7

Capital BudgetingValuing a Business or Project• The value of a business or Project is usually

computed as the discounted value of FCF out to a valuation horizon (H).

• The valuation horizon is sometimes called the terminal value.

HH

HH

wacc

PV

wacc

FCF

wacc

FCF

wacc

FCFPV

)1()1(...

)1()1( 22

11

HH

HH

wacc

PV

wacc

FCF

wacc

FCF

wacc

FCFPV

)1()1(...

)1()1( 22

11

Page 8: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

8

Valuing a BusinessExample: Rio Corporation

Latest year0 1 2 3 4 5 6

1 Sales 83.6 89.5 95.8 102.5 106.6 110.8 115.22 Cost of goods sold 63.1 66.2 71.3 76.3 79.9 83.1 873 EBITDA (1-2) 20.5 23.3 24.4 26.1 26.6 27.7 28.24 Depreciation 3.3 9.9 10.6 11.3 11.8 12.3 12.75 Profit before tax (EBIT) (3-4) 17.2 13.4 13.8 14.8 14.9 15.4 15.56 Tax 6 4.7 4.8 5.2 5.2 5.4 5.47 Profit after tax (5-6) 11.2 8.7 9 9.6 9.7 10 10.18 Investment in fixed assets 11 14.6 15.5 16.6 15 15.6 16.29 Investment in working capital 1 0.5 0.8 0.9 0.5 0.6 0.6

10 Free cash flow (7+4-8-9) 2.5 3.5 3.2 3.4 5.9 6.1 6

PV Free cash flow, years 1-6 20.3 113.4 (Horizon value in year 6)PV Horizon value 67.6PV of company 87.9

Forecast

OCF=Profit After Tax + Depreciation

Page 9: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

9

Valuing a BusinessExample: Rio Corporation – continued - assumptions

Assumptions

Sales growth (percent) 6.7 7 7 7 4 4 4 375.5 74 74.5 74.5 75 75 75.5 7613.3 13 13 13 13 13 13 1379.2 79 79 79 79 79 79 79

5 14 14 14 14 14 14 14

Tax rate, percent 35%WACC 9%Long term growth forecast 3%

Fixed assets and working capital

Gross fixed assets 95 109.6 125.1 141.8 156.8 172.4 188.6 204.5Less accumulated depreciation 29 38.9 49.5 60.8 72.6 84.9 97.6 110.7Net fixed assets 66 70.7 75.6 80.9 84.2 87.5 91 93.8Depreciation 3.3 9.9 10.6 11.3 11.8 12.3 12.7 13.1Working capital 11.1 11.6 12.4 13.3 13.9 14.4 15 15.4

Capital spending

Investment in NWC

Page 10: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

10

Valuing a BusinessExample: Rio Corporation – continued

FCF = Profit after tax + depreciation - investment in fixed assets

- investment in working capital

FCF = 8.7 + 9.9 – (109.6 - 95.0) – (11.6 - 11.1) = $3.5 million

PV (FCF) = 3.5/(1.09) + 3.2/(1.09^2) + 3.4/(1.09^3) + 5.9/(1.09^4) + 6.1/(1.09^5) + 6.0/(1.09^6) = 20.3

Page 11: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

11

Valuing a BusinessExample: Rio Corporation – continued

6.67$3.1131.09

1 value)PV(horizon

3.11303.09.

8.6 PV Value Horizon

6

1H

gwacc

FCFH

6.67$3.1131.09

1 value)PV(horizon

3.11303.09.

8.6 PV Value Horizon

6

1H

gwacc

FCFH

million $87.9

6.673.02

value)PV(horizonPV(FCF)s)PV(busines

million $87.9

6.673.02

value)PV(horizonPV(FCF)s)PV(busines

Page 12: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

12

Things to Consider

1. Don’t value mechanically – for terminal value it might be wise to use knowledge about mature firms in the industry.

2. Liquidation value.

Page 13: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

13

In Practice

How are costs of financing determined?– What is included in debt?– What if there are other securities?– How do we determine debt return?– How do we determine preferred stock return?– What if project has a different leverage ratio?– How do we determine equity return for a firm that

is not yet traded, or (and) had a different leverage than what we observe in the stock market?

Page 14: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

14

Project with Different LeveragePerpetual Crusher project at 20% D/V

• rD is constant at 6% (at all debt levels up to 40%)

• At 40%: rE=12.4% ; Tc=35% WACC = 9%

1. Step 1: unlever the firm to find rA, the cost of capital (WACC) in an all equity firm.

2. Step 2: Find rE when Debt is 20% (note D/E = 0.2/0.8=25%)

3. Step 3: Recalculate WACC

Page 15: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

15

Example : Calculating WACC• World-Wide Enterprises (WWE) is planning to enter

into a new line of business (widget industry)• American Widgets (AW) is a firm in the widget industry

with an estimated beta of 1.5.• WWE has a D/E of 1/3, AW has a D/E of 2/3.• Borrowing rate for WWE is10 %

Borrowing rate for AW is 12 %

• Given: Market risk premium = 8.5 %, Rf = 8%, Tc= 40%

• What is the appropriate discount rate for WWE to use for its widget venture?

Page 16: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

16

A four step procedure to calculate discount rates:

1. Determining AW’s cost of Equity Capital (rE)

2. Determining AW’s Hypothetical All-Equity Cost of Capital. (rA)

3. Determining rE for WWE’s Widget Venture

4. Determining rWACC for WWE’s Widget Venture.

Example : Calculating WACC

Page 17: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

17

Beta and Leverage: No Corp.Taxes

• In a world without corporate taxes, and with riskless corporate debt, it can be shown that the relationship between the beta of the unlevered firm (beta of assets) and the beta of levered equity is:

EquityAsset βAsset

Equityβ

In a world without corporate taxes, and with risky corporate debt, it can be shown that the relationship between the beta of the unlevered firm and the beta of levered equity is:

EquityDebtAsset βAsset

Equityβ

Asset

Debtβ

Page 18: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

18

Beta and Leverage: with Corp. Taxes

• In a world with corporate taxes, and riskless debt, it can be shown that the relationship between the beta of the unlevered firm and the beta of levered equity is:

AssetCEquity βTEquity

Debtβ

)1(1

Since must be more than 1 for a

levered firm, it follows that AssetEquity ββ

)1(

Equity

Debt1 CT

Page 19: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

19

Beta and Leverage: with Corp. Taxes

• If the beta of the debt is non-zero, then:

E

DββTββ DebtAssetCAssetEquity ))(1(

Page 20: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

20

Method 2 Flow to Equity Approach

• Discount the cash flow from the project to the equity holders of the levered firm at the cost of levered equity capital, rE.

• There are three steps in the FTE Approach:– Step One: Calculate the levered cash flows

– Step Two: Calculate rE.

– Step Three: Valuation of the levered cash flows at rE.

Page 21: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

21

Flow to EquitySangria Corporation - continued

The company would like to invest in a perpetual crushing machine with cash flows of $1.731 million per year pre-tax. Given an initial investment of $12.5 million, what is the value of the machine?

Remember: rE = 12.4%, D=$5million (40% of project’s cost), rD = 6%, TC=35%.

Page 22: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

22

Method 2Adjusted Present ValueAPV = Base Case NPV+ PV Impact

1. Base Case = All equity finance NPV – Discount unlevered cashflow by unlevered cost of equity (rA), assuming not tax world.

2. PV Impact = all costs/benefits directly resulting from project- Discount all cost/benefits of financing according to their particular risk.

Page 23: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

23

Adjusted Present ValueSangria Corporation - continued

The company would like to invest in a perpetual crushing machine with cash flows of $1.731 million per year pre-tax. Given an initial investment of $12.5 million, what is the value of the machine?

Remember: rE = 12.4%, D=$5million (40% of project’s cost), rD = 6%, TC=35%.

Page 24: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

Example:

Project A has an NPV of $150,000. In order to finance the project we must issue stock, with a brokerage cost of $200,000.

Project B has a NPV of -$20,000. We can issue debt at 8% to finance the project. The new debt has a PV Tax Shield of $60,000.

Side Effects in APV – Easy to Add Up

Page 25: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

25

Summary: APV, FTE, and WACC

APV WACC FTE

Initial Investment All All Equity Portion

Cash Flows Unlevered Unlevered Levered

Discount Rates rA rWACC rE

PV of financing effects Yes No No

Which approach is best?

Use APV when the level of debt is constant

Use WACC and FTE when the debt ratio is constant– WACC is by far the most common– FTE is a reasonable choice for a highly levered firm

Page 26: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

26

A Comparison of the APV, FTE, and WACC Approaches

• All three approaches attempt the same task: valuation in the presence of debt financing.

• Guidelines:– Use WACC or FTE if the firm’s target debt-to-value

ratio applies to the project over the life of the project.– Use the APV if the project’s level of debt is known

over the life of the project.• In the real world, the WACC is the most widely used

approach by far.

Page 27: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

27

The Three Methods

1. The APV formula can be written as:

2. The FTE formula can be written as:

3. The WACC formula can be written as

investment

Initial

debt

of effects

Additional

r

UCFNPV

tt

A

t

1 )1(

borrowed

Amount

investment

Initial

r

LCFNPV

tt

E

t

1 )1(

investment

Initial

r

UCFNPV

tt

WACC

t

1 )1(

Page 28: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

28

Some Practical Issues1. APV and NPV basically mean the same thing.

2. The three approaches will most likely yield different NPVs.

3. The APV is useful when special financing considerations are tied to the particular project.

4. WACC most common – has an intuitive appeal, a project should be accepted if its rate of return is higher than the weighted average cost of capital.

Page 29: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

29

WACC Approach

WACC approach is the most widely used because of its relative simplicity.

WACC is only appropriate as a discount rate for a project when:

1. The project has similar systematic business risk as the firm.

2. The project and firm have the same debt capacity.3. The debt to equity ratio is presumed to stay constant

throughout the life of the project.

Page 30: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

30

Discounting Safe Cash Flows (for APV Approach)

Safe (risk-free) cash flows are discounted by the after tax borrowing rate rD(1-TC). This may be applied for issues such as subsidized loans and depreciation tax shields.

Example: The company is granted a one-year subsidized loan of $100k at 5%. The company’s borrowing rate is 13% and its tax rate 35%. What is the NPV of the loan?

Page 31: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

31

PMM’s Project Valuation - APV

Suppose PMM Inc. has an investment that costs $10,000,000 with expected EBIT (cash flows from operations) of $3,030,303 per year forever. The investment can be financed either with $10,000,000 in equity or with $5,000,000 of 10% debt and $5,000,000 of internally generated (equity) cash flows. The discount rate on an all‑equity-financed project with this kind of risk is 20%. The firm's marginal tax rate is 34%.

1. Using the APV approach – find whether the project should be pursued if financed with equity only.

2. Using the APV approach – find whether the project should be pursued if financed with 50% debt.

Page 32: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

32

Extension 1 : Subsidized (or below‑market‑rate) financingSuppose a municipal government decides that the investment is socially (and politically) desirable and agrees to raise the $5,000,000 debt financing as a municipal bond, or 'muni.' PPM Inc. can effectively borrow $5,000,000 at the municipality's borrowing rate, rD = 7%. (Interest income on a muni is exempt from Federal tax, so the muni rate is typically below the rate on corporate debt.)Using APV approach – find the effect of this subsidy on APV.

PMM’s Project Valuation with Subsidy

Page 33: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

33

Extension 2 : Flotation Costs

When a company raises funds through external debt or equity, it must incur flotation costs. Assume that the municipal government no longer sponsored the project and PPM Inc. must obtain $5,000,000 with new debt at the market interest rate of 10%. Flotation costs are 12.5% of gross proceeds. Assume that the Canadian tax code allows this expense to be amortized over five years.

Using APV approach – find the effect of flotation costs on APV.

PMM’s Project Valuation with Subsidy

Page 34: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

34

PMM’s Project Valuation – Flow to Equity

Suppose PMM Inc. has an investment that costs $10,000,000 with expected EBIT (cash flows from operations) of $3,030,303 per year forever. The investment can be financed with $5,000,000 of 10% debt and $5,000,000 of internally generated (equity) cash flows. The discount rate on an all‑equity-financed project with this kind of risk is 20%. The firm's marginal tax rate is 34%. Assume D/E = 50/67.

Using the Flow to equity approach find whether the project should be pursued if financed with 50% debt.

Page 35: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

35

PMM’s Project Valuation – WACC

Suppose PMM Inc. has an investment that costs $10,000,000 with expected EBIT (cash flows from operations) of $3,030,303 per year forever. The investment can be financed with $5,000,000 of 10% debt and $5,000,000 of internally generated (equity) cash flows. The discount rate on an all‑equity-financed project with this kind of risk is 20%. The firm's marginal tax rate is 34%. Assume D/E = 50/67.

Using the WACC approach find whether the project should be pursued if financed with 50% debt.

Page 36: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

36

Pearson Company Project ValuationConsider a project of the Pearson Company, the timing and size of the incremental after-tax cash flows for an all-equity firm are:

0 1 2 3 4

-$1,000 $125 $250 $375 $500

The unlevered cost of equity of Pearson is rA = 10%. The firm plans to finance the project with $600 of debt carrying an 8% interest. The overall debt to equity target ratio of the firm is 1.5 and the corporate tax rate is TC=40%. Calculate the NPV of the project according to (1) APV, (2) Flow to equity, (3) WACC.

Page 37: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

37

Pearson’s - Flows to Equity Approach

Switching from unlevered to levered cash flows.

0 1 2 3 4

-$400 $221.20

CF2 = $250 -28.80

$346.20

CF3 = $375 -28.80

-$128.80

CF4 = $500 -28.80 -600

CF1 = $125-28.80

$96.20

Page 38: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

38

Example: Worldwide TrousersWorldwide Trousers, Inc. is considering a $5 million expansion of their existing business. The initial expense will be depreciated straight-line over five years to zero salvage value. The pretax salvage value in year 5 will be $500,000. The project will generate pretax earnings (EBDIT) of $1,500,000 per year, and not change the risk level of the firm. The firm can obtain a five-year $3,000,000 loan at 12.5% to partially finance the project. If the project were financed with all equity, the cost of capital would be 18%. The corporate tax rate is 34%, and the risk-free rate is 4%. The project will require a $100,000 investment in net working capital.  Calculate the NPV using the APV, WACC, and flow to equity approaches.

Page 39: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

39

Relative Valuation

Valuing a company relative to another company

Page 40: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

40

Relative vs. Fundamental Valuation

The DCF (WACC, FTE, APV) model of valuation is a fundamental method.

• Value of firm (equity) is the PV of future cash flows.

• Ignores the current level of the stock market (industry).

• Appropriate for comparing investments across different asset classes (stocks vs. bond vs. real estate, etc).

• In the long run, fundamental is the correct way of value any asset.

Page 41: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

41

Relative vs. Fundamental Valuation

Relative valuation is based on P/E ratios and a host of other “multiples”.

• Extremely popular with the press, CNBS, Stock brokers• Used to value one stock against another.• Can not compare value across different asset classes

(stocks vs. bond vs. real estate, etc).• Can not answer the question is the “stock market over

valued?”• Can answer the question, “I want to buy a tech stock,

which one should I buy?”• Can answer the question, “Which one of these

overpriced IPO’s is the best buy?”

Page 42: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

42

Relative vs. Fundamental Valuation

You are investing for your retirement. You are planning to take a buy and hold strategy which involves picking some fairly priced stocks and holding them for several years. Which valuation approach should you use?

Relative or fundamental?

Page 43: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

43

Relative vs. Fundamental Valuation

You are a short term investor. You trade several times a week on your E-trade account, and rarely hold a stock for more than a month. Which valuation technique should you use?

Relative or fundamental?

Page 44: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

44

Relative ValuationPrices can be standardized using a common variable such as earnings,

cashflows, book value, or revenues.- Earnings Multiples

• Price/Earning ratio (PE) and variants• Value/EBIT• Value/EBDITA• Value/Cashflow• Enterprise value/EBDITA

- Book Multiples• Price/Book Value (of equity) PBV

- Revenues• Price/Sales per Share (PS)• Enterprise Value/Sales per Share (EVS)

- Industry Specific Variables (Price/kwh, Price per ton of steel, Price per click, Price per labor hour)

Page 45: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

45

Multiples

Relative valuation relies on the use of multiples and a little algebra.

For example: house prices.

House Price Sq ft Price per sq ft

A $ 110,000 1,700 $ 64.71

B $ 120,000 1,725 $ 69.57

C $ 96,000 1,500 $ 64.00

D $ 99,000 1,550 $ 63.87

E $ 105,000 1,605 $ 65.42

Average $65.51

What is the price of a 1,650 sq ft house?

Answer: 1650 × 65.51 = $108,092

Page 46: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

46

Multiples can be misleading

To use a multiple intelegantly you must: • Know what are the fundamentals that determine the

multiple.• Know how changes in these fundamentals change the

multiple.• Know what the distribution of the multiple looks like.• Ensure that both the denominator and numerator

represent claims to the same group• - OK: P/E – Price equityholders, EPS equityholders

• - Not OK: P/EBIT – Price equityholders, EBIT All claimants

• Ensure that firms are comparable.

Page 47: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

47

Price Earnings Ratios

PE – Market price per share / Earnings per share

There are a number of variants of the basic PE ratio in use. They are based on how the price and earnings are defined.

• Price

- current price

- or average price for the year• Earnings

- most recent financial year

- trailing 12 months (Trailing PE)

- forecasted eps (Forward PE)

Page 48: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

48

PE Ratio: Understanding the Fundamentals

To understand the fundamental start with the basic equity discounted cash flow model.

• With the dividend discounted model

• Dividing both sides by EPS

gr

DivP

e 1

0

gr

gratio Payout

EPS

P

e

)1(

0

0

Page 49: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

49

PE Ratio: Understanding the Fundamentals

Holding all else equal• higher growth firms will have a higher PE ratio

than lower growth firms.• higher risk firms will have a lower PE ratio than

low risk firms.• Firms with lower reinvestment needs will have a

higher PE ratio than firms with higher reinvestment needs.

Of course, other things are difficult to hold equal since high growth firms, tend to have high risk and high reinvestment rates.

Page 50: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

50

Graph PE ratio (Amir Rubin)0

50

100

150

VW

_P

E

1975q1 1980q1 1985q1 1990q1 1995q1 2000q1 2005q1stata_qtr

Page 51: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

51

Is low (high) PE cheap (expensive)?

• A market strategist argues that stocks are over priced because the PE ratio today is too high relative to the average PE ratio across time. Do you agree?

• Yes• No• If you do not agree, what factor might

explain the high PE ratio today?

Page 52: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

52

A Question

You are reading an equity research report on Informix, and the analyst claims that the stock is undervalued because its PE ratio is 9.71 while the average of the sector PE ratio is 35.51. Would you agree?

• Yes• No• Why or why not?

Page 53: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

53

Example: Valuing a firm using P/E ratios

• In an industry we identify 4 stocks which are similar to the stock we want to evaluate.

• The average PE = (14+18+24+21)/4=19.25• Our firm has EPS of $2.10• P/2.25=19.25 P=19.25*2.25=$40.425• Note – do not include the stock to be valued in the

average• Also do not include firm with negative P/E ratios

Stock A PE=14

Stock B PE=18

Stock C PE=24

Stock D PE=21

Page 54: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

54

Value/Cashflow

• PE ratios are from equityholders, while cash flow measures are the whole firm.

• Cash flow is from continuing operations before capital expenditure.

• FCF is uncommitted freely available cash flow after capital expenditure to maintain operations at the same economic level.

• FCFF (cash flow from assets) is free cash flow to total firm

• In the US in 1999, the mean value was 24.

FCFF

MVdebtequityMV

FCFF

Value

Page 55: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

55

Value/FCFF

• For a firm with a constant growth rate

• Therefore, the value/FCFF is a function of the – The cost of capital– The expected growth rate

gwacc

gFCFFV

)1(0

0

gwacc

g

FCFF

V

)1(

0

0

Page 56: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

56

Example: Valuing using value/FCFF

• Industry average is 20• Firm has FCFF of $2,500• Shares outstanding of 450• MV of debt = $30,000

• Using Value/FCFF=20 value = FCFF*20 MV equity + MV debt = FCFF*20 MV equity = FCFF*20 – MV debt Price = (FCFF*20-MV debt)/Shares

Price = ($2,500*20-$30,000)/450 = 44.44

Page 57: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

57

Alternatives to FCFF : EBDITA and EBIT

• Most analysts find FCFF to complex or messy to use in multiples. They use modified versions.

• After tax operating income: EBIT (1-t)• Pre tax operating income or EBIT• EBDITA, which is earnings before interest, tax,

depreciation and amortization.

EBDITA

MVdebtequityMV

EBDITA

Value

Page 58: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

58

Value/EBDITA multiple

• The no-cash version

• When cash and marketable securities are netted out of the value, none of the income from the cash or securities should be reflected in the denominator.

• The no-cash version is often called “Enterprise Value”.

EBDITA

cashMVdebtequityMV

EBDITA

Value

Page 59: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

59

Enterprise Value

• EV = market value of equity + market value of debt – cash and marketable securities

• Many companies who have just conducted an IPOs have huge amount of cash – a “war chest”

• EV excludes this cash from value of the firm• Cash +MV of non-cash assets = MV debt + MV equity

MV of non-cash assets = MV debt + MV equity - Cash

For example: Nasdaq AWRE (did IPO in 1996)Its 1996 cash was $31.1 million, Total assets = $40.1 million,

Debt=0 EV=$9 million.

For young firms it is common to use EV instead of Value.

Page 60: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

60

Reasons for increased use of Value/EBDITA

1. The multiple can be computed even for firms that are reporting net losses, since EBDITA are usually positive.

2. More appropriate than the PE ratio of high growth firms.

3. Allows for comparison across firms with different financial leverage.

Page 61: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

61

Price to Book Value Ratio

The measure of market value of equity to book value of equity.

BVequity

equityMV

B

P

Page 62: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

62

Price Book Value Ratio: Stable Growth Firm• Going back to dividend discount model,

• Defining the return on equity (ROE)=EPS0/BV0 and realizing that div1=EPS0*payout ratio, the value of equity can be written as

• If the return is based on expected earnings (next period)

gr

DivP

e 1

0

gr

gratio payoutROEBVP

e

)1(0

0

gr

gratio payoutROEPVB

BV

P

e

)1(

0

0

gr

ratio payoutROEPVB

BV

P

e

0

0

Page 63: Chapter 19 Financing and Valuation

63

Price Sales Ratio• The ratio of market value of equity to the sales

• Though the third most popular ration it has a fundamental problem. - the ratio is internally inconsistent.

Revenue Total

equityMV

S

P

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Price Sales Ratio• Using the dividend discount model, we have

• Dividing both sides by sales per share and remembering that

• We get

gr

gratio payoutmargin ProfitPS

sales

P

e

)1(

0

0

gr

DivP

e 1

0

shareper Sales

shareper Earnings margin Profit

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Price Sales Ratio and Profit Margin• The key determinant of price-sales ratio is profit margin.• A decline in profit margin has a twofold effect

– First, the reduction in profit margin reduces the price-sales ratio directly

– Second, the lower profit margin can lead to lower growth and indirectly reduce price-sales ratio.

Expected growth rate = retention rate * ROE retention ratio *(Net profit/sales)*( sales/book value of equity)

retention ratio * (profit margin) * (sales/ BV of equity)

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Inconsistency in Price/Sales Ratio• Price is the value of equity• While sales accrue to the entire firm.• Enterprise to sales, however, is consistent.

• To value a firm using EV/S• Compute the average EV/S for comparable firms• EV of subject firm = average EV/S time subject’s firm projected

sales• Market value = EV – market debt value + cash

gr

Cash-debt MVequity MV

sales

EV

e

0

0

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Choosing between the Multiples • There are dozen of multiples• There are three choices

– Use a simple average of the valuations obtained using a number of different multiples

– Use a weighted average of the valuations obtained using a number of different multiples (one ratio may be more important than another)

– Choose one of the multiples and base your valuation based on that multiple (usually the best way as you provide some insights why that multiple is important – remember car industry video segment)

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Real Options – Chapter 22

4 types of “Real Options”1 - The opportunity to expand and make follow-up

investments.2 - The opportunity to “wait” and invest later.3 - The opportunity to shrink or abandon a project.4 - The opportunity to vary the mix of the firm’s output or production methods.

Value “Real Option” = NPV with option - NPV w/o option

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Microcomputer Forecasts

1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987

After-tax operating cash flow (1) 110 159 295 185 0Capital investment (2) 450 0 0 0 0 0Increase in working capital (3) 0 50 100 100 -125 -125Net cash flow (1)-(2)-(3) -450 60 59 195 310 125

NPV at 20% = - $46.45, or about -$46 million

Year

Example – Mark I Microcomputer ($ millions)

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Microcomputer ForecastsYour comment – If we do not launch the Mark I, it will probably be too expensive to enter the micro market later, when Apple and IBM are firmly established. In other words, we lose the option to produce the Mark II Microcomputer.

Assumptions:

1) The decision on Mark II will take place 3 years from now, in 1985.

2) The investment in Mark II is double that of Mark I, i.e., $900m.

3) Forecasted cash flows are also doubled, with PV of $807m in 1985, and $467m in 1982.

4) Assume standard deviation of 35% for cashflow uncertainty.

5) Annual riskfree rate is 10%.

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Microcomputer ForecastsExample – Mark II Microcomputer ($ millions)

Forecasted cash flows from 1982

1982 ………. 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990After-tax operating cash flow 220 318 590 370 0Increase in working capital 100 200 200 -250 -250Net cash flow 120 118 390 620 250Present Value @ 20% 467 807Investment, PV @ 10% 676 900Forecasted NPV in 1985 -93

Year

NPV(1982) =PV(inflows) -PV(investment)

= 467 – 676

= - $209 million

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Microcomputer ForecastsExample – Mark II Microcomputer (1985)

Distribution of possible Present Values

Expected value

($807)

Required investment

($900)

Present value in 1985

Probability

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Restaurant InvestmentYou have negotiated a deal with a major restaurant chain to open one

of its restaurants in your home town. The terms of the contract specify that you must open the restaurant either immediately or in exactly one year. If you do neither, you lose the right to open the restaurant. It will cost you $5 million to open the restaurant, whether you open it now or in one year. If you open the restaurant immediately, you expect to generate $600,000 in free cash flow the first year. While future cash flow vary with the consumer tastes, they are expected to grow at a rate of 2% per year. The risk free rate is 5% , the appropriate cost of capital for this investment is 12%, and the return volatility of publicly traded comparable firms is 40%.

a. What is the NPV of the project if you open today?b. What is the NPV of the project if you delay the opening and wait

the year?

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Option Valuation

There are two ways to calculate the value of an option.1. Find the combination of stock and loan that replicates

an investment in the option. Since the two strategies give identical payoffs in the future, they must sell for the same price today. This is basically how one derives the B&S formula.

2. Since option pricing does not depend on risk aversion of investors, we can pretend that all investors are indifferent to risk, work out the expected future value of the option in such a world, and discount it back at the risk-free rate to give the current value. This is called risk-neutral pricing.

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Growth Option

StartUp Incorporated is a new company whose only asset is a patent on a new drug. If produced, the drug will generate certain profits of $1 million per year for the life of the patent, which is 17 years (after then, competition will drive profits to zero). It will cost $10 million to produce the drug. Assume that the yield on a 17 year risk free annuity is currently 8% per year.

a. What is the value of the patent?b. Now assume interest rates will change in exactly one

year. At that time, all risk-free interest rates in the economy will be either 10% per year or 5% per year, and then will remain at that level forever. What is the value of the patent?

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Malted Herring Plant Valuation

Option to Wait

200 (NPV = 200-180 = 20)

Cash flow = 16 Cash flow = 25

Cash flow = 160Cash flow = 250

The project costs $180, either now or later. Waiting means loss of first year’s cash flows.

Assume risk free rate is 5%.

Year 1 cash flows

PV of Year 2 on cash flows

Option value = 0 Option value = 250-80=70

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Option to Wait

Real Estate Development

Suppose you own a slot of vacant land that can be used for a hotel or an office building, but not for both. To convert a hotel to an office, or an office to a hotel involves high costs. You may be reluctant to invest, even if both investments have positive NPVs.

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Option to Wait

Example – Development option

Wait

NPV<0 100 240

Hotel NPV>0

Cash flow from hotel

Cash flow Office Bldg

Office Bldg

NPV>0

240

100

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Example - AbandonMrs. Mulla gives you a non-retractable offer to buy your company for $150 mil at anytime within the next year. Given the following decision tree of possible outcomes, what is the value of the offer (i.e. the put option) and what is the most Mrs. Mulla could charge for the option? Assume a discount rate of 10%

Option to Abandon

Year 0 Year 1 Year 2

120 (.6)

100 (.6)

90 (.4)

NPV = 145

70 (.6)

50 (.4)

40 (.4)

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Option to Abandon

Year 0 Year 1 Year 2

120 (.6)

100 (.6)

90 (.4)

NPV = ?

150 (.4)

Example - AbandonMrs. Mulla gives you a non-retractable offer to buy your company for $150 mil at anytime within the next year. Given the following decision tree of possible outcomes, what is the value of the offer (i.e. the put option) and what is the most Mrs. Mulla could charge for the option? Assume a 10% discount rate.

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The Zircon Subductor Project

Information:1) The investment required is $12m and may last up to 10 years.

Throughout the project life the company can sell the asset for a certain salvage value that depreciates over time. At year 10 it is worth $5.99m.

2) Revenues: $2.5 million per year (at today’s prices). Revenues are proportional to price. Risk-adjusted rate is 9%.

3) The fixed cost are constant at $700k per year and are risk fee. Risk free discount rate is 6%.

4) NPV without abandonment option is negative at $ -1.108m.5) Prices of Subductor follow a random walk with a 20% standard

deviation. Assuming log normal distribution this leads to a binomial tree of either 22% up or 82% down.

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Option to Abandon

Example – Ms. East - Revenues

2.50

3.05

2.05

3.73

2.50

1.68

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Option to Abandon

Solving Procedure:1) Have the salvage value in each of the years 1-10 (e.g.,

5% deprecation per year)2) Start at far right (year t=10) and work recursively

backwards to the present. At year 10, the project is valued at the ending salvage value.

3) Work backwards to year t-1, use risk neutral probabilities to calculate PV of continuation project.

4) If salvage value of year t-1> PV of continuation value, than the value at the nod=salvage value. If salvage value< PV of continuation project then value at nod = PV of continuation project.

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Temporary Abandonment

• Suppose you own an oil tanker and you charter your service. The tanker costs $5 million a year to operate and produces $5.25 in revenue.

• What happens if tanker rates go down by 10%, do you close the business immediately?

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Tanker Example

Mothballing costs

Value if mothballed

Cost of reactivating

Value in operation

Tanker Rates

Value of Tanker