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Advanced Corporate Finance

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'Bird in the hand theory' Gordon ... Lintner/Gordon (bird in hand) say the share price will increase! ... Big trouble for Merck. Where to get information... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Advanced Corporate Finance


1
Advanced Corporate Finance
  • Getting started !
  • Dividends and Repurchases (15)
  • FINC 5880 SUFE-Webster University Spring 2008

2
Agenda
  • Fresh up FINC 5000
  • FINC 5880 Introduction
  • Your team
  • Your SP 500 company
  • Introduction Dividend Policy (ch. 15)
  • Introduction Investment Banking (ch. 16)
  • Your homework
  • In the news

3
How we will run the classes(as a business)
  • Be in time (even when it snows) we will begin
    8.30 AM sharp (synchronize your watches please)
  • Do not bring your entire breakfast to the class
    room please
  • Switch of your mobiles exceptions can be made
    for emergencies but you will have to tell me in
    advance
  • Make sure that if you bring your laptop that the
    battery is fully charged(use flash memory)
  • Make sure your flash memory is compatible with
    the PC you will use to show your PPTs
  • We will have one break during the morning before
    lunch and one break after lunch in the afternoon
    for the afternoon class (10.05-10.25 am and
    14.35-15.05 pm)you can ask individual/team
    questions in that period

4
What is (advanced) corporate finance?
  • Corporate Finance Any decision involving the
    use of money by a business (everything a
    business does)
  • AdvancedApplied getting your hands dirty(work,
    work, work)

5
What is it about?
  • 1)Investment decisions of companies
  • ROI versus a hurdle rate (WACC)
  • 2)Financing decisions of companies
  • Lowest WACC and target capital structure
  • 3)In case the company has enough cash but not
    enough good ideashow and what of cash to return
    to shareholders
  • Essentially all of these decisions have to do
    with valuationthe value you can put on a
    business

6
Fresh Up your knowledge
  • You did FINC5000
  • You learned Financial Ratios
  • You learned Time Value of Money
  • Risk and Return
  • Valuation-WACC and FCF
  • Capital Budgeting (NPV-IRR and PBP)

7
Finance is about Value!
8
Value of what?
9
The Firm including LT debt
10
Class Assignment What is the Firm value and
Equity value?
11
Equity Value is the same
12
Valuation in steps
13
The simplified model
14
Equity valuation model
15
Equity valuation using FCFs
16
Firm Valuation Basic Model
17
Estimating WACC
18
Rf (10 year T-bond yield)
19
Rf differs per country and in time
20
Here are some historical Rfs
21
Risk premium of the market (market spread)
22
Implied premiums
23
Calculation example
24
Market spread (Rm-Rf) over time
25
Taxes on capital gains and dividends
26
What spread to use?
27
Getting the beta right
28
What business are you in?
29
Operational leverage
30
Financial leverage (Hamada)
31
Cost of debt in the WACC
32
Rating your company
33
Rating Table
34
WACC completion
35
WACC
36
FCF ?
37
Equity or Firm approach?
38
Operating Cash Flow
39
Cash flow from investments
40
Be careful
41
WC investments
42
Dividend policy
43
Potential dividends
44
Calculating FCF (estimated)
45
Growth?
46
Growth in EPS
47
The professionals
48
How good?
49
Note
50
ROE usage
Note below!
Note ROCE/(ED)ROED/(ED)(1-t)ROD
(RODi)
51
Other growth estimations
52
Other growth estimates
53
Now value
54
Tsingtao illustrated
55
Tsingtao illustrated
56
Tsingtao illustarted
57
Tsingtao illustrated valuation
58
Terminal value
59
So now you can do it
60
Value
61
What to do with the income earned? (ch. 15)
  • How much do we distribute to shareholders?
  • Cash dividend or Buy backs?
  • Stable pattern of payments over time?

62
The big picture of finance.
63
Dividends or capital gains?
  • Maximize shareholders value
  • What do shareholders prefer?
  • Cash dividend now or..
  • Plough back of money earned to generate future
    earnings?
  • Remember PoD1/(Ks-g)
  • Increasing D1 would lower g(rowth)
  • Thus the outcome Po should be the same
  • The point is now to find the balance between a
    sustainable D and g-level

64
Do it now assignment
  • Apply the former formula to a company that you
    know
  • Take D1 as current dividend level fill in Po
    (todays share price) what is g?
  • Now alter the companies D1 (dividend policy)
    lower or higher it
  • Fill in Po again
  • What is g now after you made this change?

65
Bird in the hand theory
  • Gordon-Lintner theory
  • The required rate of return Ks will decreases if
    the dividend payout is increased
  • The future capital gains are less certain then
    received dividend payments now

66
FORTUNE (november 2004)
  • CASH PAYOUTS Cashing In On Dividend Stocks Long
    derided as dowdy, shares with payouts are
    outperforming those without. Maybe the widows and
    orphans were right, after all.
  • Okayso it ain't Google. But what's one of the
    best ways to outperform the market? The answer
    dividend stocks.

67
  • Dividend supremacy may be here to stay. For
    starters, corporations are sitting on mountains
    of cash. After slashing expenses and improving
    profits in recent years, SP 500 companies are
    reporting a 19 uptick in earnings this year, and
    cash flow has soared.

68
Dividend irrelevance theory
  • Miller and Modigliani-theory
  • The value of the firm only depends on its basic
    earnings power and business risk
  • Shareholders can construct their own dividend
    policy by selling shares for cash

69
Tax Preference Theory
  • There are some reasons from a tax point of view
    why shareholders do not like too much dividend
    now
  • Dividends are taxed at up to 39,6 and capital
    gains at maximum 20
  • Taxes on capital gains are only paid when the
    shares are sold
  • If the shares are hold until you die no tax is
    due at all!

70
So if Payout is increased from 0 to 100
  • Lintner/Gordon (bird in hand) say the share price
    will increase!
  • Modigliani/Miller (irrelevance) say the share
    price will not change
  • Tax preference model says the share price will
    decrease!
  • What is true/What does practice tell us?

The Experiment
71
Empirical evidence shows
  • For a valid statistical test we need to be able
    to use the CP assumption
  • In practice CP conditions do not hold
  • The cost of equity remains difficult to assess..
  • Shareholders preferences differ highly for the
    same shareholdings

72
Assignment Dividend Yield
  • Go on the internet and find the dividend yield of
    the SP 500
  • Draw your findings and show it to the class
  • When was it high when was it low?
  • Is there a relation with economic growth of the
    US in these periods?
  • Are there any other events that cause the pattern
    that you found you think?
  • What are these and why?

73
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76
Shareholders like dividend policy consistency
  • Dividend policy changes trigger hefty reactions
    on a shares price
  • Dividend policy that shows constant growth in
    line with sales and earnings is always preferred
  • Shareholders do not like surprises but
    predictable dividend levels

77
Dividends
  • Are sticky. They do not change much over time
  • Depend on earnings long term

78
How to set the dividend target?
  • Keep in mind Companies need to maximize
    shareholders value
  • Retaining earnings instead of paying out in
    dividends is only wise if management thinks that
    the retained earnings will have better returns
    then when if the dollars are paid out as
    dividend
  • Some companies have a lot of cash and not enough
    profitable plans to spend it on

79
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80
The Residual Dividend Model
  • Set the capital budget (say M USD 60)
  • Plan net earnings (say M USD 60)
  • Use the target D/E ratio (say 40/60)
  • Calculate retained earnings (60 of 60 M USD is
    36 M USD)
  • Calculate what is left (residual) for paying out
    dividends(60 M USD 36 M USD 24 M USD)
  • Disadvantage the paid out dividends can be very
    volatile over years..
  • In practice therefore companies take a LT view
    and calculate averages over 5-10 years to base
    their target levels on

81
Assignment Earnings, FCF and Dividends
  • EPS can be volatile over years
  • And therefore FC/PS can be volatile
  • But DPS (dividend per share) normally follows a
    stable pattern
  • Take your companys EPS, and Cash Flow/share over
    the past say 10 years
  • Also determine the DPS
  • Calculate DPS EPS
  • Calculate DPS Cash Flow/share
  • Which one is more stable?
  • Draw your findings/be able to present

82
Dividend dates
  • Declaration date announcement of payout of
    dividend and date of payment
  • Holder-of-record-date point in time date and
    exact time, that it is checked who is the holder
    of the shares and is entitled to the dividend
  • Ex-dividend-date the date when the right to the
    dividend no longer goes with that share on this
    date normally the share price falls with the
    amount of the dividendpaid out
  • Payment date date that the company sends out the
    checks to the holders of record

83
Dividend Reinvestment Plans (DRIPs)
  • Shareholders can reinvest their cash dividends in
    shares of the company
  • The company is to decide to issue new stock or
    old stock
  • A bank acts as trustee to handle this and see to
    it that all shareholders interested in DRIP get
    their pro rata portion of shares
  • The advantage that these shares can be offered at
    a 3-5 discount
  • The disadvantage is that shareholders have to
    still pay income tax over the cash dividends

84
Stock splits
  • Help to find the optimal value and EPS for a
    company (share price 20-80 range)
  • Help small investors to acquire shares in the
    company
  • In general increases trade in the share boosting
    value
  • Normally at announcement creates equity
    value/share price increases

85
Stock repurchases
  • Enhance shareholders value
  • Are becoming more popular
  • The company has too much equity outstanding
  • Acquiring shares to distribute shares to
    employees with options excercised
  • Stocks repurchased are also called Treasury Stock
  • Capital gains are substituted for dividends
  • Since nr. Shares outstanding decrease all ratios
    improve like EPS, cash flow/share, thus
    increasing value per share

86
Share repurchases
  • Signal that management think the share is
    undervalued
  • Often is better then increasing dividends because
    this raises expectations in the longer run
    whereas a repurchase could be the result of a ST
    cash excess
  • If the repurchase follows a LT policy the
    dividend expectation can be reduced by increasing
    the dividend with small portions
  • Repurchases can adjust the D/E towards target
    levels in a fast way

87
Assignment Share Buy backs
  • Go on the internet and find some companies that
    did a share buy back
  • Indicate the size of the buy back
  • The date of the buy back
  • How the share price reacted to the buy back after
    the announcement
  • If the companys share price has benefited up to
    now from that buy back program.
  • Be able to present your findings

88
Assignments Who pays dividends?
  • Go on the internet
  • Select about 10 companies from the SP that pay
    dividends
  • Pick these companies from different sectors
    (industries, TMT, etc)
  • Calculate their dividend yield
  • Rank these companies by dividend yield high
    yield first
  • Can you draw conclusions on the relation industry
    type and level of dividends paid out?

Announces dividend pay out
89
Dividends paid out
  • Have been reduced over the years in general
  • This is consistent with lower interest rates
    (why?)
  • And consistent with lower Cost of Equity

90
Earnings and dividend (1960-2003)
91
Understanding your company
  • Takes a lot of reading
  • Comparing
  • Research and
  • Analysis
  • But it is fun!
  • Make sure you take a company/product you like
    very much or are curious to know more about.

Global Understanding
92
KEY assignment 1 Business Analysis
  • In order to be able to make a correct valuation
    of your company you will have to start to make a
    Business Analysis
  • You need to apply your knowledge of FINC5000 and
    MRKT5000
  • The Business Analysis includes
  • External Analysis
  • Economic Environment of the company
  • Customer analysis
  • Competitor assessment
  • Government/Regulatory assessment
  • Internal Analysis
  • The Vision and Mission of the company
  • Products and services
  • Product life cycles
  • Pricing and differentiation
  • Marketing and selling strategies
  • Supply chain
  • Human resources
  • Investment priorities
  • Finance and Accounting

93
Key Assignment 1 (continued)
  • The financial analysis includes
  • A full list of up to date financial ratios of
    your company ( that is including Q2 2006)
  • A financial ratio comparison with its main
    competitors
  • The position in its industry analysis includes
  • A 5 forces analysis (Porter)
  • BCG Matrix analysis
  • SWOT analysis

Big trouble for Merck
94
Where to get information
  • Website of your company (search for investor
    relations)
  • Download the financial statements of your company
    over the past 5 year but preferably longer
  • Balance sheets
  • Income statements
  • Cash flow statements
  • Use Yahoo Finance http//finance.yahoo.com/
  • You need help? Financial Statement Analysis a
    valuation approach, Leonard Soffer, Prentice
    Hall, isbn7-302-08257-X (China publication 46
    RMB)
  • Gather the latest information on your company
    also in the press and keep track of it

95
US dropsChina shops!
  • A sharp slowdown in the American economy could be
    offset by the growing and largely unrecognized
    power of Asia's consumers .

96
Profits and prophecies
  • Chinese companies earn higher returns than is
    commonly claimed
  • based on figures reported to China's National
    Bureau of Statistics (NBS) by more than 200,000
    state-owned and private companies, the profits of
    industrial companies have soared by an average of
    36 a year since 1999.
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