Free Cash Flow Valuation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Free Cash Flow Valuation

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Free Cash Flow Valuation Intro to Free Cash Flows Dividends are the cash flows actually paid to stockholders Free cash flows are the cash flows available for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Free Cash Flow Valuation


1
Free Cash Flow Valuation
2
Intro to Free Cash Flows
  • Dividends are the cash flows actually paid to
    stockholders
  • Free cash flows are the cash flows available for
    distribution.
  • Applied to dividends, the DCF model is the
    discounted dividend approach or dividend discount
    model (DDM). This chapter extends DCF analysis to
    value a firm and the firms equity securities by
    valuing its free cash flow to the firm (FCFF) and
    free cash flow to equity (FCFE).

3
Intro to Free Cash Flows
  • Analysts like to use free cash flow valuation
    models (FCFF or FCFE) whenever one or more of the
    following conditions are present
  • the firm is not dividend paying,
  • the firm is dividend paying but dividends differ
    significantly from the firms capacity to pay
    dividends,
  • free cash flows align with profitability within a
    reasonable forecast period with which the analyst
    is comfortable, or
  • the investor takes a control perspective.

4
Intro to Free Cash Flows
  • Common equity can be valued by either
  • directly using FCFE or
  • indirectly by first computing the value of the
    firm using a FCFF model and subtracting the value
    of non-common stock capital (usually debt and
    preferred stock) to arrive at the value of
    equity.

5
Defining Free Cash Flow
  • Free cash flow to equity (FCFE) is the cash flow
    available to the firms common equity holders
    after all operating expenses, interest and
    principal payments have been paid, and necessary
    investments in working and fixed capital have
    been made.
  • FCFE is the cash flow from operations minus
    capital expenditures minus payments to (and plus
    receipts from) debtholders.

6
Valuing FCFE
  • The value of equity can also be found by
    discounting FCFE at the required rate of return
    on equity (r)
  • Since FCFE is the cash flow remaining for equity
    holders after all other claims have been
    satisfied, discounting FCFE by r (the required
    rate of return on equity) gives the value of the
    firms equity.
  • Dividing the total value of equity by the number
    of outstanding shares gives the value per share.

7
Single-stage, constant-growth FCFE valuation model
  • FCFE in any period will be equal to FCFE in the
    preceding period times (1 g)
  • FCFEt FCFEt1 (1 g).
  • The value of equity if FCFE is growing at a
    constant rate is
  • The discount rate is r, the required return on
    equity. The growth rate of FCFF and the growth
    rate of FCFE are frequently not equivalent.

8
Computing FCFF from Net Income
  • This equation can be written more compactly as
  • FCFF NI Depreciation Int(1 Tax rate)
    Inv(FC) Inv(WC)
  • Or
  • FCFF EBIT(1-tax rate) depreciation Cap.
    Expend. change in working capital change in
    other assets

9
Finding FCFE from NI or CFO
  • Subtracting after-tax interest and adding back
    net borrowing from the FCFF equations gives us
    the FCFE from NI or CFO
  • FCFE NI NCC Inv(FC) Inv(WC)
  • Net borrowing
  • FCFE CFO Inv(FC) Net borrowing

10
Forecasting free cash flows
  • Computing FCFF and FCFE based upon historical
    accounting data is straightforward. Often times,
    this data is then used directly in a single-stage
    DCF valuation model.
  • On other occasions, the analyst desires to
    forecast future FCFF or FCFE directly. In this
    case, the analyst must forecast the individual
    components of free cash flow. This section
    extends our previous presentation on computing
    FCFF and FCFE to the more complex task of
    forecasting FCFF and FCFE. We present FCFF and
    FCFE valuation models in the next section.

11
Forecasting free cash flows
  • Given that we have a variety of ways in which to
    derive free cash flow on a historical basis, it
    should come as no surprise that there are several
    methods of forecasting free cash flow.
  • One approach is to compute historical free cash
    flow and apply some constant growth rate. This
    approach would be appropriate if free cash flow
    for the firm tended to grow at a constant rate
    and if historical relationships between free cash
    flow and fundamental factors were expected to be
    maintained.

12
Forecasting FCFE
  • If the firm finances a fixed percentage of its
    capital spending and investments in working
    capital with debt, the calculation of FCFE is
    simplified. Let DR be the debt ratio, debt as a
    percentage of assets. In this case, FCFE can be
    written as
  • FCFE NI (1 DR)(Capital Spending
    Depreciation)
  • (1 DR)Inv(WC)
  • When building FCFE valuation models, the logic,
    that debt financing is used to finance a constant
    fraction of investments, is very useful. This
    equation is pretty common.

13
Preferred stock in the capital structure
  • When we are calculating FCFE starting with Net
    income available to common, if Preferred
    dividends were already subtracted when arriving
    at Net income available to common, no further
    adjustment for Preferred dividends is required.
    However, issuing (redeeming) preferred stock
    increases (decreases) the cash flow available to
    common stockholders, so this term would be added
    in.
  • In many respects, the existence of preferred
    stock in the capital structure has many of the
    same effects as the existence of debt, except
    that preferred stock dividends paid are not tax
    deductible unlike interest payments on debt.

14
Nonoperating assets and firm value
  • When calculating FCFF or FCFE, investments in
    working capital do not include any investments in
    cash and marketable securities. The value of cash
    and marketable securities should be added to the
    value of the firms operating assets to find the
    total firm value.
  • Some companies have substantial non-current
    investments in stocks and bonds that are not
    operating subsidiaries but financial investments.
    These should be reflected at their current market
    value. Based on accounting conventions, those
    securities reported at book values should be
    revalued to market values.

15
Nonoperating assets and firm value
  • Finally, many corporations have overfunded or
    underfunded pension plans. The excess pension
    fund assets should be added to the value of the
    firms operating assets. Likewise, an underfunded
    pension plan should result in an appropriate
    subtraction from the value of operating assets.
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