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Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return • Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation
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Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return

• Goal:

1) Definitions of values

2) Intrinsic Value Calculation

3) Required rate of return

4) Stock valuation

Page 2: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

1. What is Value?

1) Book Value: Price - Depreciation

2) Intrinsic Value:

Value determined by taking the present value of the future cash flows at the investor’s required rate of return.

3) Market value: Price determined in the market

Page 3: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• In finance, we assume that investors will buy until the market value rises to their intrinsic value and sell until the market value falls to their intrinsic value.

2. Fundamentals of Valuation

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Page 4: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• The more cash flows, the higher value

• The earlier cash flows, the higher value

3. Determining the Required Rate of Return

• Return offered by competing investment vehicles

• Risk of the investment

• Investors’ risk preference

Page 5: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

3-1) Risk Preferences

• Risk Averse

• Risk Neutral

• Risk Lover

• Investors are assumed to be risk averse.

• They can have different risk preference

Page 6: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

3-2) A Simple Risk Premium Model

• E(R) = Base Rate + Risk Premium

• Here, Base rate is the rate of return on a bench mark

• Problem: Too much subjective

3-3) CAPM

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Page 7: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• Kind of a simple premium model

• First part: risk free rate

• Second part: market risk premium

4. Valuing Common Stocks

• 1st Question: What are the expected cash flows? Dividends and sale price

Page 8: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

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Page 9: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

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Page 10: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

Ex) XYZ corporation recently paid a dividend of $2.4 and you expect that this dividend will continue to be paid into the foreseeable future. It is believed that you will be able to sell this stock in three years for $20 per share. If your required rate of return is 12% per year, what is the maximum amount that you should be willing to pay for a share of XYZ common stock?

Page 11: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• Depending on the assumptions for dividend payments, three types of stock valuation models are available:

1) Zero Growth- Preferred Stocks

2) Constant Growth

3) Non-constant Growth

Page 12: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

4-1) Zero Growth Model

• It assumes constant dividends: Perpetuity• Ex)Preferred stock with $ 2 dividend. And assumed 12%

of return

4-2) Constant Growth Model

• Under this model, dividend payments are assumed to grow constantly by g%.

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Page 13: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

Ex) Lets’ use the XYZ example. Here, we assume that the dividend is growing by 6% every year forever.

4-3) Non-constant Growth Model

• No pattern in dividend payments. Ex) you are supposed to purchase a share of the

common stock of the ABC corporation. ABC has not recently paid any dividends nor is it expected to for the next three years. However, ABC is expected to begin paying a dividend of 1.5 per share four years from now

Page 14: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

In the future, that dividend is expected to grow at a rate of 7% per year. If your required return is 15% per year, what is the price of the stock?

Page 15: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

5. Alternatives to dividend models

• 1) Earnings Model• 100% dividend payout ratio.• Dividend per share is the same as earnings

per share.• Zero growth rate• With zero growth, V=EPS1/K• With growth opportunities (PVGO),

V=EPS1/K+PVGO

Page 16: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

g = b(retention ratio)*r(ROE)

PVGO=NPV1/(k-g)NPV1=(RE1*r/k) – RE1

(here RE stands for reinvested earnings)

PVGO=(RE1*r/k-RE1)/(k-g)

= RE1(r/k-1)/(k-g)

•Thus, V=EPS1/K+RE1(r/k-1)/(k-g). It considers ROE in the stock valuation model.

Page 17: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• Ex) Analysts expect that Aurora Foods will earn $1.40 per share in the coming year and pay a dividend of $0.49 per share. Historically, the firm’s ROE has been 15% and its required return on investments is 12%. What is the value of stock?

• RE1=EPS1-D1=0.91• Retention ratio = 0.91/1.40 =0.65• Growth rate (g) = 0.65*0.15=0.00975• V=1.40/0.12+0.91(0.15/0.12-1)/(0.12-

0.0975)=21.78

Page 18: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

2) Free Cash Flow Model2-1) Free cash flows = operating cash flow – change

of operating assets.• Operating cash flow = NOPAT + Non-cash

expenses.(here, NOPAT = EBIT*(1-tax rate), Non-cash expenses are depreciation, amortization and other non-cash charge).

• Change of operating assets = change of NOWC + change of operating fixed assets.(here, NOWC = operating current asset – operating current liabilities).

Page 19: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• The value of the firm’s operating assets is the present value of the expected free cash flow, discounted at the firm’s weighted average cost of capital. But because non-operating assets (e.g. marketable securities) were omitted, it should be added back to calculate the value of entire firm.

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Page 20: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• Ex) Analysts project that Front Range Mountaineering Supplies will generate pre-tax operating profits (EBIT) of $160,000 in the coming year. The firm will have $40,000 in depreciation expenses and a tax rate of 30%. Management has told analysts that it expects to make net new investments of $30,000 in operating assets over the next year. It has $25,000 in marketable securities on the book and the market value of its debt is $450,000. The analysts believe that the WACC is 12% and that free cash flow can grow at about 7% per year. If the company has 350,000 common shares outstanding, what is the intrinsic value per share?

Page 21: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• 3) Relative Value Models• Valuation model without DCF• V = P/E ratio * EPS• (assumption: if the market is efficient, the

same price should be paid for dollars of earnings per share)

• Using a dividend model, we can see the impact of growth rate and the required rate of return on the P/E ratio.

• P/E = D/(k-g)/EPS

Page 22: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

P=V=EPS1/K+PVGOif it is divided by EPS

Page 23: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.
Page 24: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

6. Option Pricing

• 6-1) Two types of options

• - Call: option to buy stocks

• - Put: option to sell stocks

Page 25: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

6-2) payoff of options.

• Call option:

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Page 26: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• S1=stock price at expiration

• S0=stock price today

• C1=value of call option on the expiration date

• C0=value of call option today

• E=exercise price/ striking price

Page 27: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

6-2) Valuation• - replicating payoff of option: Buying call options and

investing in a risk free asset will generate the same payoff for having stocks

Ex) assumption• Current stock price:$100• Risk free rate is 20%• Stock price in one year is $110 or $130• Exercise price of call option is $105• Option value is $5 or $25• Invest the present value ($87.50 =105/(1+0.2)) of exercise

price in the risk free asset and purchase one call option

Page 28: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

In one year, performance will be

Stock value = Risk free + Call value

• 110 = 105 + 5

• 130 = 105 + 25

Therefore

In terms of the initial position

Stock price = E/(1+risk free) +call value

Call value = stock price - E/(1+risk free)

Page 29: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• Key point: purchasing stocks and investing in risk free rates, we can replicate payoff of call option.

• Black & Shore’s option pricing model

Page 30: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

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Page 31: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

• call put

• Stock price + -

• Exercise price - +

• Time to expiration + +

• Risk free rate + -

• Variance of return + +

Page 32: Ch.8 Valuation and Rates of Return Goal: 1) Definitions of values 2) Intrinsic Value Calculation 3) Required rate of return 4) Stock valuation.

Put call parity