Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
Challenges
Defining and forecasting CFs
CFt V0 t (1 r ) t 1
FCF valuation
PV of FCFF is the total value of the company. Value of equity is PV of FCFF minus the market value of outstanding debt.
PV of FCFE is the value of equity.
Discount rate for FCFF is the WACC. Discount rate for FCFE is the cost of equity (required rate of return for equity).
Valuing FCFE
The value of equity can also be found by discounting FCFE at the required rate of return on equity (r):
Equity Value
t 1
FCFE t (1 r )t
Since FCFE is the cash flow remaining for equity holders after all other claims have been satisfied, discounting FCFE by r (the required rate of return on equity) gives the value of the firms equity. Dividing the total value of equity by the number of
Risk premium: compensation for risk, measured relative to the risk-free rate
Required rate of return: minimum return required by investor to invest in an asset Cost of equity: required rate of return on common stock
CAPM
Expected return is the risk-free rate plus a risk premium related to the assets beta:
E(Ri) = RF + i[E(RM) RF] The beta is i = Cov(Ri,RM)/Var(RM) [E(RM) RF] is the market risk premium or the equity risk premium
CAPM
What do we use for the risk-free rate of return?
Choice is often a short-term rate such as the 30day T-bill rate or a long-term government bond rate. We usually match the duration of the bond rate with the investment period, so we use the longterm government bond rate. Risk-free rate must be coordinated with how the equity risk premium is calculated (i.e., both based on same bond maturity).
BYPRP method
The bond yield plus risk premium method finds the cost of equity as:
BYPRP cost of equity
= YTM on the companys long-term debt + Risk premium
The discount rate is r, the required return on equity. The growth rate of FCFF and the growth
FCFF = EBIT(1-tax rate) + depreciation Cap. Expend. change in working capital change in other assets
Forecasting FCFE
If the firm finances a fixed percentage of its capital spending and investments in working capital with debt, the calculation of FCFE is simplified. Let DR be the debt ratio, debt as a percentage of assets. In this case, FCFE can be written as
FCFE = NI (1 DR)(Capital Spending Depreciation) (1 DR)Inv(WC)
When building FCFE valuation models, the logic, that debt financing is used to finance a constant fraction of investments, is very useful. This equation is pretty common.
Two-distinct stages of growth (the twostage growth model and the H model)
Three distinct stages of growth (the threestage growth model)
D0 (1 g ) D1 V0 rg rg
D1 V0 r
P0 D1 / E1 (1 b) E1 rg rg
If E is this years earnings (trailing P/E):
P0 D0 (1 g ) / E0 (1 b)(1 g ) E0 rg rg
Three-stage DDM
There are two popular version of the threestage DDM
The first version is like the two-stage model, only the firm is assumed to have a constant dividend growth rate in each of the three stages. A second version of the three-stage DDM combines the two-stage DDM and the H model. In the first stage, dividends grow at a high, constant (supernormal) rate for the whole period. In the second stage, dividends decline linearly as they do in the H model. Finally, in stage three, dividends grow at a sustainable, constant rate.
Spreadsheet modeling
Spreadsheets allow the analyst to build very complicated models that would be very cumbersome to describe using algebra.
Built-in functions such as those to find rates of return use algorithms to get a numerical answer when a mathematical solution would be impossible or extremely complicated.
Finding g
The simplest model of the dividend growth rate is:
g = b x ROE where g = Dividend growth rate b = Earnings retention rate (1 payout ratio)