TSR Flashcards
What is the conponents of TSR Strategy?
TSR strategy: Building an integrated strategy for value creation
- Business strategy (Growth, margins, portfolio, targets, risk) - sounds like operational
- Financial strategy (capital structure, dividends/buyback)
- Investor strategy (Valuation multiple, messaging, migration)
Drivers of TSR
- Earnings growth
- Revenue growth, net income margin
- Multiple expansion (change in valuation - P/E)
- Growth and profitability expectations (revenue, EPS, innovation, margins, ROIC)
- Performance consistency and meeting expectations
- Confidence in management
- Portfolio changes
- Targeting optimal investors
- Dividend and share repurchases
- Risk factors (debt, volatility, M&A)
- FCF contribution
- Net income - reinvestments (CAPEX, Working capital needs) dividends, share repurchase, debt, cash
Why is Price/EV a wrong metric?
The chosen numerator and denimoniator must be relevant to each other
- For example EV links to Sales or EBITDA (Focus on both equity and debt holder)
- Equity value links to net income, earnings per share (only focus on equity holders)
What is valuation multiples influenced by?
Change in valuation multiple is influenced by:
- Growth variables (e.g. revenue growth)
- Cash flow variables (e.g. growth margin)
- Return and balance shset variables (e.g. inventory turnover)
- Leverage variables (e.g. debt/capital ratio)
- Other variables (e.g. dividend payout ratio)
How can a company work with their financial policy?
- A company’s financial strategy is a set of decisions it makes about its capital:
- Invest in growth - Organic vs inorganic growth
- Organic: What investment should be made to drive earnings growth?
- Inorganic: Is the current M&A strategy clear and appropriate?
- Mange the balance sheet
- Pyy down debt: What is the optimal leverage structure that preserves the company’s desired credit ratings?
- Keep cash on the balance sheet: “how much cash should be left on the balance sheet?”
- Payout to shareholders
- What persentage of Free Cash flow should be invested back in the business vs to shareholderS?
- Dividend distribution - payment to shareholders
- Share repurchases - company buyback.
- Invest in growth - Organic vs inorganic growth
How does financial policy impact shareholders?
Each decisoin has unique implications for shareholders
1. Invest in growth
- Organic
- TSR will increase when growth is profitable and appropriately balanced. High rates of growth require significant cash investment, diverting funds from other opportunities
- Inorganic
- High-risk growth strategy and is often disounted for sharheolders unless there is a clear and compelling rationale to support it
- Majority of M&A deals fail
- TSR depends on deal characteristics, execution risks, return and fit with company.
- Manage the balance sheet
- Pay down debt:- Having a healthy D/E ratio is important formaintaining liquidoty for investments and i salso key to maintaining investment-grade ating for the company
- Reducing debt levels lowers debt payments, freeing up cash for other purposes
- Value investors see low debt levels as an inefficient use of balance sheet.
- Keep cash on the balance sheet: - Protect companies in tough times
- Enables funding of future growth
- Excessive cash frequently viewed as inefficient as it provides low returns
- May encourage reckles investments or acquisitions by management
- Payout to shareholders
- Dividend distribution:- The decision provides “guaranteed” return and is important to non-growth investors.
- Dividend increases can unlock trapped value through increased yield which is particularly valuable in a yield-scare environment
- HIgh yield provides floor for the share price which increars as P/E declines
- Share repurchases: - Buybacks improve earnings per share (EPS), which can elevate market value of remaining shares
- Long-term investors who do not sell their shared during buybacks like buyback’s tax efficiency: They are not subject to taxes, whereas shareholders selling shares and/or receiving dividends are taxed.