Advanced Valuation Lecture 1 Flashcards
What are the key drivers of value?
- Growth: reinvestment rate, RONIC, inflation
// - Spread in business return (ROIC, RONIC, ROE, CFROI) versus required return (WACC, CoC, CoE)
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If ROIC < WACC , growth destroys value
If ROIC > WACC, growth adds value
What are the items of the restructured balance sheet?
- Operating fixed assets
- Operating NWC
- Operating liabilities
/// - Non-operating assets
- Non-operating liabilities
/// - Financial liabilities
- Equity
Why are transaction multiples higher than trading multiples? What does it consist of? What’s a problem of transaction multiple?
Due to the acquisition premium paid in an M&A deal. It consists of 2 things:
1. Control
2. Synergies
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Problem with transaction multiples: Winner’s Curse > bidder might have overpaid.
Valuation context determines the valuation method used…
- DCF: you implicitly assume you control the FCFs = control perspective
- For a minority stake valuation –> use Dividend Discount Model
- FCFE is what you could payout versus what you do pay out (DDM). Use FCFE to value financial institutions
- If EV < nominal value of the debt, the ordinary shares are OTM –> use option pricing technique to value the shares
- Use accounting based valuation when the company is distressed. There’s a difference between going-concern value and liquidation value. In case of liquidation, intangible assets (e.g., customer relationships) disappear.
When cleaning the historical financials, you adjust for certain items…
- Nonrecurring items
- Pro-forma adjustments: for example the impact of an acquisition, changes in accounting policy
- Accounting adjustments: for example expensing R&D and marketing costs, off-balance sheet items, netting of capitalised financing fees from gross debt
- Management adjustments
How do you account for lease adjustments?
- Rent expense = 500 x multiple of 8x = 4,000
- Add 4,00 to PPE and Lease liabilities
Break 500 up in:
- depr = 300
- interest = 4,000 x cost of borrowing of 5% = 200
Rent = op. expense so EBITDA goes up with 500
Depr goes up with 300
EBIT goes up with 200
Interest goes up with 200
EBT remains UNCHANGED!!
Formula for ROIC
EBIT * (1 - tax rate) / avg(op. cap. previous period ; op. cap. current period)
Dupont ROIC formula. Discuss the impact of high/low asset heaviness
ROIC = EBIT/revenues x (1-tax rate) x revenues/avg. op. capital
1st term = ROS
2nd term = op. taxes
3rd term = op. asset turnover ( = asset utilisation)
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asset heavy industries: high ROS, low asset turnover
asset light industries: low ROS, high asset turnover
Explain what ROIC incl and excl goodwill measures
Excluding goodwill: measuring operating performance
Including goodwill: measuring operating performance + EFFECTIVENESS OF INORGANIC GROWTH
What are the challenges with ROIC?
- difficult to apply in asset light industries
- subject to other accounting conventions, such as capitalising R&D costs
- subject to aging of the asset base
Propose a solution to the challenge of ROIC in assets light industries
ROIC in asset light industries can be challenging:
- very high ROIC as the firm has limited op. cap. but is profitable
- negative ROIC if op. cap. is negative while firm is highly profitable
- very volatile ROIC as low op. cap. can be volatile due to swings in working capital.
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Asset light industries rely on internally generated intangibles that are not capitalised on the BS under GAAP. Examples: R&D, client acquisition costs, brand building costs, training & development costs.
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Solutions:
- create pro forma financial statements by capitalising expenses
- abandon ROIC concept and express value creation not in Op. Cap., but use another scaling factor such as Sales / no. of employees
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Economic profit / Sales = (NOPAT - WACC x OC) / Sales
Economic profit / no. employees = (NOPAT - WACC x OC) / no. of employees
What is a solution for the ROIC challenges?
Use CFROI:
= sustainable op. CF / gross asset base (incl. working capital)
= NOPAT + depr&amort - maintenance Capex / gross asset base (incl. working capital)
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where gross asset base is based on historical cost and adjusted for inflation
general comment: the basis for forecasting is industry and strategic analysis. By combining industry specific factors and firm specific factors, you can build a forecast story line
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What are the forecasting methodologies? And when do you use each one?
- Top-down: start with demand and TAM etc. and work down to firm specific drivers
- Bottom-up: start with firm capacities and work your way up (favourable)
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Use 1 if the business is very scalable. Use 2 if the industry/business is very capacity driven
How do you decide on how long the explicit forecast period should be?
The planning period should be long enough so that the business will have reached a steady state = constant growth, constant RONIC, constant reinvestment rates).
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10Y is recommendation