Equity #36 - Market Based Valuation Flashcards
what to know
LOS 36.a
- rationale
- drawbacks
- calculation
- fundamental influence
- calculate justified ratio
- use it with a stock
trailing P/R probelms
LOS 36.c,d
- transitory, nonrecurring components of earnings that are company-specific
- cyclicality components of earnings due to business or industry trends
- differences in account practices
- potential dilution of EPS
underlying earnings
LOS 36.e
Analysts want to remove nonrecurring items from earnings for forecasting purposes. Result is persistent, continuing, and core earnings.
Nonrecurring items to remove include:
- gain/loss on asset sales
- asset write-downs - impairment
- loss provisions (restructuring, etc)
- changes in accounting estimates
Two methods:
- historical EPS
- avg ROE (preferred)
“justified price multiple”
LOS 36.b
Can be justified by two methods:
- comparables
- forecasted fundamentals
Example using P/E:
- P/E > V0/E ⇒ stock P is undervalued
- P/E < V0/E ⇒ stock P is overvalued
using P/E in valuation
LOS 36.c
Rationales:
- EPS (earnings power) is primary determinant of investor value
- popularity
- empirically explains long-run avg stock returns
Problems:
- “E” can be negative
- “E” is volatile, so difficult to interpret
- management disrection distorts reports “E”
using P/B in valuation
LOS 36.c
Rationales:
- “B” usually positive
- “B” more stable than EPS
- “B” good NAV measure for firms with large liquid assets e.g. banks, insurance, etc.
- useful for valuing firms going out of business
- empirically explains long-run avg stock returns
Problems (that cause BV != MV):
- doesn’t recognize value of nonphysical assets
- misleading for large firm size differences
- different accounting methods add to errors
- inlation and technology changes
using P/S in valuation
LOS 36.c
Rationales:
- P/S meaningful even for distressed firms
- sales rev difficult to manipulate vs. EPS
- not as volatile as P/E
- appropriate for mature, cyclical industries and for start-ups with no historical earnings
- empirically explains long-run avg stock returns
Problems:
- higher sales doesn’t mean higher operating profits
- doesn’t capture cost structure differences
- revenue manipulation/acceleration can distort it
using P/CF in valuation
LOS 36.c
Rationales:
- CF harder to manipulate than earnings
- more stable than P/E
- solves accrual accounting differences
- empirically explains long-run avg stock returns
Problems:
- EPS + NNC ignores some items affecting CFO
- FCFE preferred but more volatile than CFO
using dividend yield (D/P) in valuation
LOS 36.c
Rationales:
- Div contributes to total investment return
- Div not as risky as cap apprec component of TR
Problems:
- Div only one component of stock return
- higher Div = slower growth, all else equal
multiple influencers
LOS 36.g
All else equal:
- P/E ⇔ +g, -re
- P/S ⇔ +profit margin, -re
- P/CF ⇔ +g of FCFE, -re
- D/P ⇔ -g, +re
calculate P/E, P/B and P/S based on forecasted fundamentals and DCF valuation
LOS 36.h
lead P/E = P0/E1 = (1-b) / (r-g); (1-b) is “payout ratio”
P0/B0 = (ROE - g) / (r-g)
P0/S0 = (E0/S0) x (1 - b)(1 + g) / (r-g)
PEG ratio
LOS 36.k
PEG = P/E x 1/g
- lower PEG are more attractive, all else equal
using price multiples to estimate terminal value, VT
LOS 36.l
for P/E, P/B, P/S, P/CF price multiples:
VT = price multiple x terminal vaue of fundamental variable i.e. denominator
four common measures of CF for CF multiples and EV multiples
LOS 36.m
- E + NCC = NI + D + amort + depletion
E + NCC = EPS + D/Sh + amort/Sh + depl/Sh - adjusted CFO = CFO + (noncash int outflow)(1 - T)
better value est. than E + NCC - FCFE = CFO - CapEx - principal pmt to debtholders
even better value est. but FCFE more volatile - EBITDA = EBIT + D + amort (for forecasting)
EBITDA = recur. earn cont. ops + Int + T + D + amort (for historical values)
EV/EBITDA
LOS 36.n
EV = MVequity + MVdebt + MVpref - cash & equiv
EBITDA is a pre-interest ernaings measure and therefore measure of cash flow to the firm, both debt and equity holders.
EV/EBITDA commonly used to measure relative company value.