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1 CHAPTER 5 Basic Stock Valuation
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CHAPTER 5

Jan 08, 2016

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CHAPTER 5. Basic Stock Valuation. Topics in Chapter. Features of common stock Determining common stock values Efficient markets Preferred stock. Common Stock: Owners, Directors, and Managers. Represents ownership. Ownership implies control. Stockholders elect directors. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: CHAPTER 5

1

CHAPTER 5

Basic Stock Valuation

Page 2: CHAPTER 5

2

Topics in Chapter

Features of common stock Determining common stock values Efficient markets Preferred stock

Page 3: CHAPTER 5

3

Common Stock: Owners, Directors, and Managers

Represents ownership. Ownership implies control. Stockholders elect directors. Directors hire management. Since managers are “agents” of

shareholders, their goal should be: Maximize stock price.

Page 4: CHAPTER 5

4

Classified Stock

Classified stock has special provisions.

Could classify existing stock as founders’ shares, with voting rights but dividend restrictions.

New shares might be called “Class A” shares, with voting restrictions but full dividend rights.

Page 5: CHAPTER 5

5

Tracking Stock The dividends of tracking stock are tied

to a particular division, rather than the company as a whole. Investors can separately value the divisions. Its easier to compensate division managers

with the tracking stock. But tracking stock usually has no voting

rights, and the financial disclosure for the division is not as regulated as for the company.

Page 6: CHAPTER 5

6

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

A firm “goes public” through an IPO when the stock is first offered to the public.

Prior to an IPO, shares are typically owned by the firm’s managers, key employees, and, in many situations, venture capital providers.

Page 7: CHAPTER 5

7

Seasoned Equity Offering (SEO)

A seasoned equity offering occurs when a company with public stock issues additional shares.

After an IPO or SEO, the stock trades in the secondary market, such as the NYSE or Nasdaq.

Page 8: CHAPTER 5

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Different Approaches for Valuing Common Stock

Dividend growth model Using the multiples of comparable

firms Free cash flow method (covered in

Chapter 11)

Page 9: CHAPTER 5

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Stock Value = PV of Dividends

What is a constant growth stock?

One whose dividends are expected togrow forever at a constant rate, g.

P0 =^

(1+rs)1 (1+rs)2 (1+rs)3 (1+rs)∞

D1 D2 D3 D∞+ + +…

+

Page 10: CHAPTER 5

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For a constant growth stock:

D1 = D0(1+g)1

D2 = D0(1+g)2

Dt = D0(1+g)t

If g is constant and less than rs, then:

P0 = ^ D0(1+g)

rs - g=

D1

rs - g

Page 11: CHAPTER 5

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Dividend Growth and PV of Dividends: P0 = ∑(PVof Dt)

$

0.25

Years (t)

Dt = D0(1 + g)t

PV of Dt =Dt

(1 + r)t

If g > r, P0 = ∞ !

Page 12: CHAPTER 5

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What happens if g > rs?

P0 =^

(1+rs)1 (1+rs)2 (1+rs)∞

D0(1+g)1 D0(1+g)2 D0(1+rs)∞ + +…

+

(1+g)t

(1+rs)t

If g > rIf g > rss, then, then P0 = ∞^

> 1, and

So g must be less than rs to use the constant growth model.

Page 13: CHAPTER 5

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Required rate of return: beta = 1.2, rRF = 7%, and RPM = 5%.

rs = rRF + (RPM)bFirm

= 7% + (5%) (1.2)= 13%.

Use the SML to calculate rs:

Page 14: CHAPTER 5

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Projected Dividends

D0 = 2 and constant g = 6%

D1 = D0(1+g) = 2(1.06) = 2.12 D2 = D1(1+g) = 2.12(1.06) =

2.2472 D3 = D2(1+g) = 2.2472(1.06) =

2.3820

Page 15: CHAPTER 5

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Expected Dividends and PVs (rs = 13%, D0 = $2, g = 6%)

0 1

2.2472

2

2.3820

3g=6% 4

1.87611.75991.6508

13%

2.12

Page 16: CHAPTER 5

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Intrinsic Stock Value: D0 = 2.00, rs = 13%, g = 6%.

Constant growth model:

= = = $30.29.0.13 - 0.06

$2.12 $2.12

0.07

P0 = ^ D0(1+g)

rs - g=

D1

rs - g

Page 17: CHAPTER 5

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Expected value one year from now:

P1 = ^ D2

rs - g=

$2.2427

0.07= $32.10

D1 will have been paid, so expected dividends are D2, D3, D4 and so on.

Page 18: CHAPTER 5

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Expected Dividend Yield and Capital Gains Yield (Year 1)

Dividend yield = = = 7.0%.

$2.12$30.29

D1

P0

CG Yield = =P1 - P0^

P0

$32.10 - $30.29$30.2

9= 6.0%.

Page 19: CHAPTER 5

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Total Year-1 Return

Total return = Dividend yield + Capital gains yield.

Total return = 7% + 6% = 13%. Total return = 13% = rs. For constant growth stock:

Capital gains yield = 6% = g.

Page 20: CHAPTER 5

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Rearrange model to rate of return form:

Then, rs = $2.12/$30.29 + 0.06= 0.07 + 0.06 = 13%.

^

P0 = ^ D1

rs - gto

D1

P0

rs

^= + g.

Page 21: CHAPTER 5

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If g = 0, the dividend stream is a perpetuity.

2.00 2.002.00

0 1 2 3rs=13%

P0 = = = $15.38.PMT

r$2.000.13

^

Page 22: CHAPTER 5

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Supernormal Growth Stock

Supernormal growth of 30% for 3 years, and then long-run constant g = 6%.

Can no longer use constant growth model.

However, growth becomes constant after 3 years.

Page 23: CHAPTER 5

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Nonconstant growth followed by constant growth (D0 = $2):

0

2.3009

2.6470

3.0453

46.1135

1 2 3 4rs=13%

54.1067 = P0

g = 30% g = 30% g = 30% g = 6%

2.60 3.38 4.394 4.6576

^P3 = ^ $4.6576

0.13 – 0.06= $66.5371

Page 24: CHAPTER 5

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Expected Dividend Yield and Capital Gains Yield (t = 0)

CG Yield = 13.0% - 4.8% = 8.2%.

Dividend yield = = = 4.8%.

$2.60$54.11

D1

P0

At t = 0:

(More…)

Page 25: CHAPTER 5

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Expected Dividend Yield and Capital Gains Yield (t = 4) During nonconstant growth, dividend yield

and capital gains yield are not constant. If current growth is greater than g, current

capital gains yield is greater than g. After t = 3, g = constant = 6%, so the t =

4 capital gains gains yield = 6%. Because rs = 13%, the t = 4 dividend yield

= 13% - 6% = 7%.

Page 26: CHAPTER 5

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Is the stock price based onshort-term growth?

The current stock price is $54.11. The PV of dividends beyond year 3

is $46.11 (P3 discounted back to t = 0).

The percentage of stock price due to “long-term” dividends is:

= 85.2%.

$46.11$54.11

Page 27: CHAPTER 5

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Intrinsic Stock Value vs. Quarterly Earnings

If most of a stock’s value is due to long-term cash flows, why do so many managers focus on quarterly earnings?

See next slide.

Page 28: CHAPTER 5

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Intrinsic Stock Value vs. Quarterly Earnings

Sometimes changes in quarterly earnings are a signal of future changes in cash flows. This would affect the current stock price.

Sometimes managers have bonuses tied to quarterly earnings.

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Suppose g = 0 for t = 1 to 3, and then g is a constant 6%.

0

1.76991.56631.3861

20.9895

1 2 3 4rs=13%

25.7118

g = 0% g = 0% g = 0% g = 6%

2.00 2.00 2.00 2.12

2.12P30.07

30.2857

Page 30: CHAPTER 5

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Dividend Yield and Capital Gains Yield (t = 0)

Dividend Yield = D1 / P0

Dividend Yield = $2.00 / $25.72 Dividend Yield = 7.8%

CGY = 13.0% - 7.8% = 5.2%.

Page 31: CHAPTER 5

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Dividend Yield and Capital Gains Yield (t = 3)

Now have constant growth, so: Capital gains yield = g = 6% Dividend yield = rs – g Dividend yield = 13% - 6% = 7%

Page 32: CHAPTER 5

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If g = -6%, would anyone buy the stock? If so, at what price?

Firm still has earnings and still paysdividends, so P0 > 0:^

= = = $9.89.

$2.00(0.94)0.13 - (-0.06)

$1.880.19

P0 = ^ D0(1+g)

rs - g=

D1

rs - g

Page 33: CHAPTER 5

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Annual Dividend and Capital Gains Yields

Capital gains yield = g = -6.0%.

Dividend yield = 13.0% - (-6.0%)= 19.0%.

Both yields are constant over time, with the high dividend yield (19%) offsetting the negative capital gains yield.

Page 34: CHAPTER 5

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Using Stock Price Multiples to Estimate Stock Price

Analysts often use the P/E multiple (the price per share divided by the earnings per share).

Example: Estimate the average P/E ratio of

comparable firms. This is the P/E multiple.

Multiply this average P/E ratio by the expected earnings of the company to estimate its stock price.

Page 35: CHAPTER 5

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Using Entity Multiples The entity value (V) is:

the market value of equity (# shares of stock multiplied by the price per share)

plus the value of debt. Pick a measure, such as EBITDA, Sales,

Customers, Eyeballs, etc. Calculate the average entity ratio for a

sample of comparable firms. For example, V/EBITDA V/Customers

Page 36: CHAPTER 5

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Using Entity Multiples (Continued) Find the entity value of the firm in

question. For example, Multiply the firm’s sales by the V/Sales

multiple. Multiply the firm’s # of customers by the

V/Customers ratio The result is the total value of the firm. Subtract the firm’s debt to get the total

value of equity. Divide by the number of shares to get

the price per share.

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Problems with Market Multiple Methods It is often hard to find comparable firms. The average ratio for the sample of

comparable firms often has a wide range. For example, the average P/E ratio might be

20, but the range could be from 10 to 50. How do you know whether your firm should be compared to the low, average, or high performers?

Page 38: CHAPTER 5

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Preferred Stock

Hybrid security. Similar to bonds in that preferred

stockholders receive a fixed dividend which must be paid before dividends can be paid on common stock.

However, unlike bonds, preferred stock dividends can be omitted without fear of pushing the firm into bankruptcy.

Page 39: CHAPTER 5

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Expected return, given Vps = $50 and annual dividend = $5

Vps = $50 =$5rps^

rps$5$50

^ = = 0.10 = 10.0%

Page 40: CHAPTER 5

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Why are stock prices volatile?

P0 = ^ D1

rs - g

rs = rRF + (RPM)bi could change. Inflation expectations Risk aversion Company risk

g could change.

Page 41: CHAPTER 5

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Consider the following situation.

D1 = $2, rs = 10%, and g = 5%:

P0 = D1 / (rs-g) = $2 / (0.10 - 0.05) = $40.

What happens if rs or g change?

Page 42: CHAPTER 5

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Stock Prices vs. Changes in rs and g

g

rs 4% 5% 6%

9% 40.00 50.00 66.67

10% 33.33 40.00 50.00

11% 28.57 33.33 40.00

Page 43: CHAPTER 5

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Are volatile stock prices consistent with rational pricing?

Small changes in expected g and rs cause large changes in stock prices.

As new information arrives, investors continually update their estimates of g and rs.

If stock prices aren’t volatile, then this means there isn’t a good flow of information.

Page 44: CHAPTER 5

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What is market equilibrium? In equilibrium, the expected price must

equal the actual price. In other words, the fundamental (or intrinsic) value must be the same as the actual price.

If the actual price is lower than the fundamental value, then the stock is a “bargain.” Buy orders will exceed sell orders, the actual price will be bid up. The opposite occurs if the actual price is higher than the fundamental value.

(More…)

Page 45: CHAPTER 5

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rs = D1/P0 + g = rs = rRF + (rM - rRF)b.

^

In equilibrium, expected returns must equal required returns:

Page 46: CHAPTER 5

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How is equilibrium established?

If rs = + g > rs, then P0 is “too low.”

If the price is lower than the fundamental value, then the stock is a “bargain.” Buy orders will exceed sell orders, the price will be bid up until:

D1/P0 + g = rs = rs.

D̂1

^

^P0

Page 47: CHAPTER 5

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What’s the Efficient MarketHypothesis (EMH)?

Securities are normally in equilibrium and are “fairly priced.” One cannot “beat the market” except through good luck or inside information.

(More…)

Page 48: CHAPTER 5

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Weak-form EMH

Can’t profit by looking at past trends. A recent decline is no reason to think stocks will go up (or down) in the future. Evidence supports weak-form EMH, but “technical analysis” is still used.

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Semistrong-form EMH

All publicly available information is reflected in stock prices, so it doesn’t pay to pore over annual reports looking for undervalued stocks. Largely true.

Page 50: CHAPTER 5

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Strong-form EMH

All information, even inside information, is embedded in stock prices. Not true—insiders can gain by trading on the basis of insider information, but that’s illegal.

Page 51: CHAPTER 5

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Markets are generally efficient because:

100,000 or so trained analysts--MBAs, CFAs, and PhDs--work for firms like Fidelity, Merrill, Morgan, and Prudential.

These analysts have similar access to data and megabucks to invest.

Thus, news is reflected in P0 almost instantaneously.