Discounted Cash Flow - Basic Flashcards
How do you calculate the Cost of Equity?
Cost of Equity = Risk-Free Rate + Beta * Equity Risk Premium
The risk-free rate represents how much a 10-year or 20-year US Treasury should yield;
Beta is calculated based on the “riskiness” of Comparable Companies and the Equity Risk Premium is the % by which stocks are expected to out-perform “risk-less” assets.
Normally you pull the Equity Risk Premium from a publication called Ibbotson’s.
Note: This formula does not tell the whole story. Depending on the bank and how precise you want to be, you could also add in a “size premium” and “industry premium” to account for how much a company is expected to out-perform its peers is according to its market cap or industry.
Small company stocks are expected to out-perform large company stocks and certain industries are expected to out-perform others, and these premiums reflect these expectations.
A company has a high debt load and is paying off a significant portion of its principal each year. How do you account for this in a DCF?
Trick question.
You don’t account for this at all in an Unlevered DCF, because paying off debt principal shows up in Cash Flow from Financing on the Cash Flow Statement – but we only take into account EBIT * (1 – Tax Rate), and then a few items from Cash Flow from Operations, and then subtract Capital Expenditures to get to Unlevered Free Cash Flow.
If we were looking at Levered Free Cash Flow, then our interest expense would decline in future years due to the principal being paid off – the mandatory debt repayments would also reduce Levered Free Cash Flow
(note: some people define Levered FCF differently, but if you think about it, repaying debt really does reduce the cash flow that can go to equity investors so it should be subtracted out here).
How do you calculate the Terminal Value?
You can either apply an exit multiple to the company’s Year 5 EBITDA, EBIT or Free Cash Flow (Multiples Method) or you can use the Gordon Growth method to estimate its value based on its growth rate into perpetuity.
The formula for Terminal Value using Gordon Growth is:
Terminal Value = Year 5 Free Cash Flow * (1 + Growth Rate) / (Discount Rate – Growth Rate).
How do you get to Beta in the Cost of Equity calculation?
You look up the Beta for each Comparable Company (usually on Bloomberg), un-lever each one, take the median of the set and then lever it based on your company’s capital structure.
Then you use this Levered Beta in the Cost of Equity calculation.
For your reference, the formulas for un-levering and re-levering Beta are below:
Un-Levered Beta = Levered Beta / (1 + ((1 - Tax Rate) x (Total Debt/Equity)))
Levered Beta = Un-Levered Beta x (1 + ((1 - Tax Rate) x (Total Debt/Equity)))
Why would you not use a DCF for a bank or other financial institution?
Banks use debt differently than other companies and do not re-invest it in the business – they use it to create their “products” – loans – instead.
Also, interest is a critical part of banks’ business models and changes in working capital can be much larger than a bank’s net income – so traditional measures of cash flow don’t tell you much.
For financial institutions, it’s more common to use a Dividend Discount Model or Residual Income Model instead of a DCF.
Why do you use 5 or 10 years for DCF projections?
That’s usually about as far as you can reasonably predict into the future. Less than 5 years would be too short to be useful, and over 10 years is too difficult to predict for most companies.
What’s the relationship between debt and Cost of Equity?
More debt means that the company is more risky, so the company’s Levered Beta will be higher – all else being equal, additional debt would raise the Cost of Equity, and less debt would lower the Cost of Equity.
How do you calculate WACC for a private company?
This is problematic because private companies don’t have market caps or Betas. In this case you would most likely just estimate WACC based on work done by auditors or valuation specialists, or based on what WACC for comparable public companies is.
Walk me through how you get from Revenue to Free Cash Flow in the projections.
Subtract COGS and Operating Expenses to get to Operating Income (EBIT).
Then, multiply by (1 – Tax Rate), add back Depreciation and other non-cash charges, and subtract Capital Expenditures and the change in Working Capital.
Note: This gets you to Unlevered Free Cash Flow since you went off EBIT rather than EBT. You should confirm that this is what the interviewer is asking for.
Why would you use Gordon Growth rather than the Multiples Method to calculate the Terminal Value?
In banking, you almost always use the Multiples Method to calculate Terminal Value in a DCF. It’s much easier to get appropriate data for exit multiples since they are based on Comparable Companies – picking a long-term growth rate, by contrast, is always a shot in the dark.
However, you might use Gordon Growth if you have no good Comparable Companies or if you have reason to believe that multiples will change significantly in the industry several years down the road. For example, if an industry is very cyclical you might be better off using long-term growth rates rather than exit multiples.
How do you select the appropriate exit multiple when calculating Terminal Value?
Normally you look at the Comparable Companies and pick the median of the set, or something close to it. As with almost anything else in finance, you always show a range of exit multiples and what the Terminal Value looks like over that range rather than picking one specific number.
So if the median EBITDA multiple of the set were 8x, you might show a range of values using multiples from 6x to 10x.
How can we calculate Cost of Equity WITHOUT using CAPM?
There is an alternate formula:
Cost of Equity = (Dividends per Share / Share Price) + Growth Rate of Dividends
This is less common than the “standard” formula but sometimes you use it for companies where dividends are more important or when you lack proper information on Beta and the other variables that go into calculating Cost of Equity with CAPM.
What’s the flaw with basing terminal multiples on what public company comparables are trading at?
The median multiples may change greatly in the next 5-10 years so it may no longer be accurate by the end of the period you’re looking at. This is why you normally look at a wide range of multiples and do a sensitivity to see how the valuation changes over that range. This method is particularly problematic with cyclical industries (e.g. semiconductors).
If you use Levered Free Cash Flow, what should you use as the Discount Rate?
You would use the Cost of Equity rather than WACC since we’re not concerned with Debt or Preferred Stock in this case – we’re calculating Equity Value, not Enterprise Value.
Why do you have to un-lever and re-lever Beta?
Again, keep in mind our “apples-to-apples” theme.
When you look up the Betas on Bloomberg (or from whatever source you’re using) they will be levered to reflect the debt already assumed by each company. But each company’s capital structure is different and we want to look at how “risky” a company is regardless of what % debt or equity it has.
To get that, we need to un-lever Beta each time. But at the end of the calculation, we need to re-lever it because we want the Beta used in the Cost of Equity calculation to reflect the true risk of our company, taking into account its capital structure this time.