Equity Value, Enterprise Value, and Valuation Metrics and Multiples Flashcards
What is Enterprise Value? How is it impacted by changes in capital structure?
Value of the core cash flows that belongs to all providers of capital
BIWS: the value of a company’s core business operations (Net Operating Assets (Operating Assets - Operating Liabilities) to ALL the investors in the company
EV excludes non-operating assets such as cash and financial investments and non-operating liabilities such as debt
EV is will not change - or at least, not by as much - due to changes in capital structure.
What is Net Debt?
Total Debt - Cash (because theoretically can use the cash to pay off debt)
What is Equity Value? How is it impacted by changes in capital structure?
Residual (or leftover after company satisfies other obligations to debt holders, etc.) claim that equity investors have on the value of the business
BIWS: The value of everything a company has (Net Assets (Total Assets - Total Liabilities)) but only to Equity Investors (common shareholders).
aka Market Capitalization or Market Cap and = Current Share Price * Shares Outstanding
Equity Value changes with changes in capital structure (i.e.: changes in CSE).
Walk through the formula to get to Enterprise Value from Equity Value/Explain the Eq Val to EV bridge.
Simple Answer: Eq Val minus cash plus debt = Enterprise Vale
Follow-Up Answer: Plus Preferred Stock and plus NCI
Advanced Answer: Less Equity Investments and Plus Capital Leases
BIWS: EV = Equity Value - Non-Operating Assets + Liabilities and Equity Items that Represent Other Investor Groups (i.e.: besides Common Shareholders)
A CEO picks up $100 up off the street. How does this affect Equity Value and Enterprise Value?
Simple Answer: Equity Value: Increases by $100 and Enterprise Value: No Change (increase in Equity Value is offset by subtracting $100)
Follow-Up (i.e.: what about taxes): Eq Value increases by $75 ($100 recognized as Extraordinary Gain on Income Statement) and EV does not change (because no change in NOA)
What are Enterprise Value Multiples?
Express the value of an entire enterprise - the value of all claims on a business - relative to a statistic that relates to the entire enterprise such as sales or EBITDA
What are Equity Value Multiples?
Express the value of shareholders’ claims on the assets and cash flow of the business relative to a statistic that also applies to shareholders only such as earnings/Net Income (the residual left after payments to creditors, minority shareholders, and other non-equity claimants)
A company’s EV/LTM EBITDA multiple is higher than the company’s EV/NTM EBITA Multiple. What does this mean?
This likely means that the company’s EBITDA is growing (because the numerator is static and the denominator is getting bigger which is reducing the EV/EBITDA multiple).
You have a company with an EV/Revenue of 3x and an EV/EBITDA of 10x. What is the EBITDA margin?
EBITDA Margin = EBITDA / Revenue
Can plug in numbers to solve: Let EV = 30, then Revenue = 10 and if EV = 30, then EBITDA = 3 and so EBITDA / Revenue = 3 / 10 = 30%
What is a multiple? What are the main drivers of a multiple? What does a higher multiple indicate?
Shorthand for a DCF or full valuation. Forward-looking and driven by investors’ expectations for the future.
Drivers include growth profile, cash conversion/profitability (the ability of the company to translate EBITDA into cash flow - efficiency), and return on capital/risk.
If a company has a higher expected growth rate than the other companies in the comparison set, then it should trade at higher multiples
Higher multiples indicate that you would be willing to pay more the company if its cash flows were growing more quickly
If a company’s Eq Val > EV what does that mean?
The company has a lot of cash - Cash > Debt
Can a company have negative Equity Value? Can a company have a negative Enterprise Value?
Yes. BV of Equity can be negative (i.e.: if liabilities are greater than assets, negative net assets, etc.)
But also no, because MV of Equity = # of shares outstanding * share price
^ neither of which will ever be negative
EV can be negative (for example, Equity Value = $100 million - cash of $200M and no debt)
What is Market Value?
What the company is worth right now according to the stock market, its current owners, or its current investors.
What is Implied or Intrinsic Value?
What the company should be worth according to a certain set of views and analysis.
Why does Market Value often differ from Intrinsic or Implied Value?
Primary Reason: Differences in beliefs re: the company’s future growth - future growth rate expectations.
Secondary Reason: Disagreement on discount rate, company’s cash flows, etc.
What are the three main methods for calculating Equity Value?
- For Publicly Traded Companies: Shares Outstanding * Current Share Price
- MV of Total Assets - MV of Total Liabilities (technically everything on the L&E side except for CSE)
- For Private Companies: Company’s valuation in its last round of funding or its valuation in an outside appraisal (or its most recent acquisition price, etc.)
Cash is a Non-Operating Asset. What is a Non-Operating Asset and what some examples of other Non-Operating Assets?
Non-Operating Assets are assets that the company does not need in order to sell/deliver products/services to the customer. Examples include:
Financial Investments such as bonds and stocks
Owned/Rental properties from which the company generates rental income (vs. using the properties internally and generating no income from them)
Side Businesses (that earn income for the company)
Assets Held for Sale and Assets from Discountinued Operations
Equity Investments or Associate Companies (which are assets that represent minority stakes in other companies; these assets are non-core because own less than 50% and therefore cannot control them)
NOLs (which are a component of DTAs; considered non-operating because not required to run the business/sell and deliver products/services)
Debt and Preferred Stock are both “Liability and Equity Line Items That Represent Other Investor Groups”. What other items are included in this category?
Capital Leases (which are debt-like obligations with interest payments that are used to acquire PPE)
Noncontrolling Interests (which represent the unowned portions of majoirty-owned companies)
Unfunded Pensions (which equals Pension Liabilities - Pension Assets)
(Potentially) Operating Leases
What are Noncontrolling Interests and why are they considered another investor group?
NCI represents the unowned portions of majority-owned companies.
If Company A owns 80% of Company B, it will consolidate Company B’s financials with its own but also record a NCI for the 20% of Company B that it does not own (on the L&E side of the B/S under Equity).
If a company owns more than 50% of another company, it has effective control of that other company and can draw on all of its resources, including those linked to the minority shareholders of this company. The minority shareholders in that other company effectively become an investor group.
True or False: Financing Events do not impact Enterprise Value.
True.
Issuing Debt: No impact on EV because cash and debt both increase and offset each other
Repaying Debt: No impact on EV because cash and debt both decrease and offset each other
Issuing Stock: No impact on EV because cash and equity value both increase and offset each other
Repurchasing Stock: No impact on EV because cash and equity value both decrease and offset each other
Issuing Dividends: No impact on EV because cash and equity value both decrease and offset each other
NOA do not change in any of the above examples. Cash, Debt, and common stock are all non-operating. EV only changes if a company’s NOA changes (i.e.: increase in PPE, Inventory, Deferred Revenue, etc.).
What items affect CSE?
Dividends, Net Income, Stock Issuances and Repurchases
What is Unlevered Free Cash Flow?
Cash Flow available to ALL investors in the firm.
aka Free Cash Flow to Firm
What is WACC?
WACC is equal to the cost of each part of a company’s capital structure times the percentage of capital in that part
If a company raises additional debt or equity, repays debt, or repurchases stock, its WACC will change
Why is Debt cheaper than Equity?
Debt holders expect lower returns than equity holders (because they earn only a fixed interest rate and there’s no upside potential).
Interest Expense is also tax-deductible, making it less expensive to pay.