Valuation REFINED COPY Flashcards
What is EBIT?
Earnings Before Interest & Taxes: This is the firm’s operating income from the I/S (Revenue - COGS - Operating Expenses). This includes impact of depreciation‚ amortization and other non-cash charges
What is EBITDA?
- Earnings Before Interest‚ Taxes‚ Depreciation & Amortization: The idea is to remove most non-cash charges and make it more accurately reflect cash flow potential (proxy for free cash flow).
- You may add back other non-cash charges‚ such as stock-based compensation.
How do you get unlevered free cash flows (free cash flow to firm)?
EBIT*(1 - tax rate) + Non-cash charges - changes in operating assets and liabilities - CapEx
How do you get levered free cash flows (free cash flow to equity)?
Net Income + Non-Cash Charges - changes in operating assets and liabilities - CapEx - Mandatory Debt Payments
What is the Enterprise Value / EBIT multiple used for? What does it mean?
- Used for many types of companies‚ mostly useful for those where CapEx is more important to factor in (since D&A flows CapEx closely)
- It’s a rough approximation of how valuable a company is relative to its income from business operations
What is the Enterprise Value / EBITDA multiple used for? What does it mean?
- Used for many types of companies‚ most useful for those where CapEx and D&A are not as important since it excludes both.
- It’s a rough approximation of how valuable a company is relative to its operational cash flow
What is the Enterprise Value / Unlevered FCF multiple used for? What does it mean?
- Used when CapEx or changes in operational assets and liabilities such as Deferred Revenue have a big impact‚ also critical in DCFs
- It’s similar to Levered FCF‚ but it’s capital structural-neutral‚ so it’s better for comparing different companies
Of the valuation multiples‚ which are the most common? Which is the “worst”?
- EV/EBITDA and EV/EBIT are the most common.
- P/E is probably the “worst” or “least accurate” since it includes non-cash charges and impacted by tax rates and capital structure. P/E more commonly used among general public than finance professionals.
Can you walk me through how to calculate EBIT and EBITDA? How are they different?
- EBIT is just a company’s operating income on its I/S‚ it includes not only COGS and operating expenses‚ but also non-cash expenses such as D&A and therefore reflects‚ at least indirectly‚ the company’s CapEx
- EBITDA is defined as EBIT plus D&A. You may sometimes add back other expenses
- The idea of EBITDA is to move closer to a company’s “cash flow‚” since D&A are non-cash expenses‚ but the problem is that you exclude CapEx altogether
Can you walk me through how to calculate Unlevered FCF (FCF to Firm) and Levered FCF (FCF to Equity)?
- Unlevered FCF = EBIT*(1 - Tax Rate) + Non-cash expenses - Change in Operating Assets & Liabilities - CapEx
- Levered FCF = Net Income + Non-Cash expenses - Change in Operating Assets & Liabilities - CapEx - Mandatory Debt Repayments
What are the most common valuation multiples? And what do they mean?
• EV/Revenue: how valuable a company is relative to its overall sales
- EV/EBITDA: how valuable a company is relative to its approximate cash flow
- EV/EBIT: how valuable a company is relative to the pre-tax profit it earns from its core business operations
- P/E: how valuable a company is in relation to its after-tax profits‚ inclusive of interest income and expense and other non-core business activities
- Other multiples include P/BV‚ EV/Unlevered FCF‚ Equity Value/Levered FCF
- EV/Unlevered FCF is closer to true cash flow than EV/EBITDA but takes more work to calculate‚ and Equity Value/Levered FCF is even closer‚ but is affected by company’s capital structure and takes even more time to calculate.
How are the key operating metrics and valuation multiples correlated? In other words‚ what might explain a higher or lower EV/EBITDA multiple?
- Usually there is a correlation between growth and valuation multiples
- Math also plays a role‚ sometimes companies w/ extremely high EBITDA margins may have lower EBITDA multiples because EBITDA itself is much higher to begin with (and its in the denominator)
Why can’t you use Equity Value / EBITDA as a multiple rather than EV/EBITDA?
Equity Value/EBITDA is comparing apples to oranges because equity value does not reflect the company’s entire capital structure (only what is available to common shareholders).
What would you use with Free Cash Flow multiples - Equity Value or Enterprise Value?
- For Unlevered FCF‚ you use enterprise value (cash flow available to all investors)
- For Levered FCF‚ you use equity value (cash flow available to equity investors)
Why does Warren Buffet prefer EBIT multiples to EBITDA multiples?
- WB dislikes EBITDA b/c it hides the CapEx companies make and disguises how much cash they require to finance their operations
- Any industry that is capital intensive and asset-heavy will have a huge disparity between EBIT and EBITDA
- Note: EBIT itself does NOT include CapEx but it includes depreciation (which is directly linked to CapEx). If a company has high depreciation‚ chances are it has high CapEx spending
What are some problems with EBITDA and EBITDA multiple? And if there are so many problems‚ why do we still use it?
- It hides the amount of debt principal and interest that a company is paying each year‚ which can be very large and make company cash flows negative‚ also hides CapEx spending
- EBITDA also ignores working capital requirements (e.g. A/R‚ Inv.‚ A/P)‚ which can be large for some companies
- In a lot of cases EBITDA may not even be close to true cash flow‚ it’s widely used for convenience and comparability (better for comparing cash generated by a company’s core business operations than other metrics)
The EV/EBIT‚ EV/EBITDA‚ and P/E multiples all measure a company’s profitability.
• What’s the difference between them‚ and when do you use each one?
- P/E is dependent on company’s capital structure
- P/E is used for financial institutions where interest is critical and capital structures are similar.
- EV/EBIT and EV/EBITDA are capital structure-neutral.
- EV/EBIT includes D&A‚ where EV/EBITDA excludes it
- EV/EBIT in industries where D&A is large and where CapEx and fixed assets is important (manufacturing)
- EV/EBITDA where fixed assets are less important and where D&A is comparatively smaller (e.g. internet companies)