Title: Real Options Approach to Capital Budgeting and capital structure
1Real Options Approach to Capital Budgeting (and
capital structure)
- Traditional NPV does not take into account
potential flexibility (i.e. possibility to react
to changing conditions) hence, systematically
underestimates project values - Decision Trees approach accounts for flexibility
but does not answer at what rate to discount cash
flows - ROA the way to properly account for managerial
flexibility. Relying on the arbitrage argument
(replicating portfolio) it properly finds
Certainty Equivalents of future cash flows (or
values) that are to be discounted at the riskless
rate.
2Types of real options
- Options of call type
- Increase payoff in the good state of nature
- Normally require large investment
- Option to defer investment
- Option to expand
- Option to enter (a new market)
- Options of put type
- Decrease loss in the bad state of nature
- Often require selling the asset or part of it for
salvage value - Option to contract
- Option to abandon for salvage value
3- Compound options (options on options)
- Call option on the equity of a levered firm
(simultaneous compound option) - Phased investments (sequential compound options)
- RD project
- New product development
- Exploration and production
4A bit more details
- ?????? ?? ??????? / ???????????? ??????????
(option to defer) - ?????? ????? ????????? ??????? ??????, ?? ???
??????? ??????? ?????? - ????????????? ???????, ??????? ?? ?????????
??????????? ??????????, ???????? ?? ??????????
??????? - ?????????? ??????, ?? ??????????? ??
????????????????, ?? ???????? ?????????????
??????? ?????? - ?????? ?? ?????????? ???????????? (option to
expand) - ??????????? ??????? ???????, ????? ?????
???????????? upside (?.?. ??? ?????????????
???????????) - ???????? ?????????? ??? ???? ?????????? ???????
- ????????????? ???????, ??????? ?? ?????????
status quo, ??????????
5- ?????? ?? ?????????? ??????? (option to abandon
for salvage value) - ??????????? ??????, ????? ?????????? ????, ??? ??
?? ???????? ??????? - ????? ???????????? ???????? ?? ???????? ?
????????? ?????? ?? ?????????? ????????? - ????????????? ???????, ??????? ?? ?????????
???????????, ??????????? ???????????? - ?????? ?? ?????????? ???????????? (option to
contract) - ????????? ??????? ???????, ????? ??????????????
?????? - ????? ??? ??????? ? ?????????? ??????????????
?????????? - ????????????? ???????, ??????? ?? ?????????
status quo, ??????????
6??? ???? ???????? ????????
- ????? ?????!
- ????????, ??????? ??????????????
- ????????????
- ????????????????
- ??????????????
- ????????? ????????
- ...
- ...
7Option to expand
??????????? ???????? (?????? ????? ???, ????????
????????????, ????? ??? ???? ????? ? ?.?.)
8- ? ??????? ????? ?? ?????? ? ??????? ?????
???????? ?? ????? - ?? ????? ???????? ??????????? ? ???????????? 20
- ?????????? ???? ???????? ???????????
????????????? ?? ???? ?????? - ??????? ????? ?????????
- ????? ???????? ????????
9Analogy between real and financial options
- Underlying asset the project (PV of future cash
flows) - Exercise price investment cost or
- Time to expiration time until opportunity
disappears
10Approaches to valuing real options
- Analytical
- Binomial model
- Black-Scholes formula
- Simulations
11Binomial model
Vu2V
q
VuV
q
1-q
V-udV
V
q
1-q
V- dV
1-q
V--d2V
- V the gross value of the project (expected
value of subsequent CF) - d 1/u
- There exists a twin security that can be
traded, which price S is perfectly correlated
with V. - If there is an option on the project, we use
replicating portfolio technique (or risk
neutral probabilities, which is the same) to
determine its value
12Previous lectures example (option to defer
investment)
V180, S36
u 1.8 d 0.6 r 8
q0.5
V100, S20I0104
0.5
V-60, S-12
I1112.321041.08
- E NS - (1r)B,
- E- NS- - (1r)B
- ? N (E - E-)/(S - S-), B (NS- E-)/(1r)
- ? the risk-neutral valuation
- E0 NS B (pE (1-p)E-)/(1r)
- where p ((1 r)S S-)/(S - S-)
risk-neutral probability (in Copeland-Weston-Sha
stri its the other way round risk neutral prob.
is denoted q, and the actual one is denoted p)
13- At the end p depends only on u, d and r
- p ((1 r)S S-)/(S - S-) (1 r d)/(u
- d) (since S- dS, S uS) - In fact, p can be found from the following
- S (puS (1-p)dS)/(1r),
- i.e. p must be such that the risk-neutral
valuation of the twin security yields its
actual price. - Thus
- p does not depend on the actual probability of
going up q. Reason q is already incorporated in
the price S. - Given the tree, p does not depend on the
particular option (in particular on where we are
in the tree) - For our tree (u 1.8, d 0.6) and r 8 p
0.4
14Example Option to abandon for salvage value or
switch use
Current project. Values of V
Alternative use. Values of V
191
324
127.5
180
102
108
85
100
68
60
54.4
36
- We should switch at such points (If the option
is to switch any time we want, we switch the
first time we get to such a node)
15What is the value of the option to switch in year
1?
E180
E0?
E-68
E0 (pE (1-p)E-)/(1r) - I0 0.44 (we can
use the same probabilities p as before)
If we had no option to switch, the project would
have NPV -4 (previous lecture) Hence, the value
of the option is 4.44
16Black-Scholes Pricing Formula(no dividend case,
call option)
- C0 the value of a European option at time t
0 - r the risk-free interest rate
- S the price of the underlying asset (or twin
security) - N(.) cumulative standard normal distribution
function
17Adjusting for dividends (i.e. if the project
generates cash flows before the option
expiration date)
Assume a constant dividend yield (i.e. constant
cash flow) every year. Then
18Some caveats the real options approach
- Black-Scholes formula presumes a diffusion Wiener
process for underlying (twin) security - Is it always the case?
- Can we always find a twin security? If not,
people do market asset disclamer assumption
the project itself is a twin security as if it
could be traded.
19Analogy between the Black-Scholes and binomial
models
- At the limit, as the time period length in the
binomial model goes to zero, the binomial process
converges to the corresponding Wiener process.
Thus, the Black-Scholes formula is nothing else
but a binomial risk-neutral pricing formula (or
riskless hedge formula) but in continuous time
(for comparison see e.g. Copeland-Weston, pp. 264
- 269) - An example of two techniques yielding close
results even when a two-period binomial
approximation is used Copeland-Weston, pp. 269
273.
20Example venture project
???????????? ??????
300
8
6
5
7
????????? ?????????? ??????
????????? ?????????? ??????
(1500)
21Venture project (continued)
- ?????? ??????????????? (????????? ????????) 20
- ????????? ?????? ???????? ? ???????NPV - 56???
- ?? ????????? ????????? ???????????? ??????
(????????????? ?????? ? ??????? ????????) - Ex ante (? ??????? ???????), ???????????? ??????
???? ? ??????? ???????? NPV -356/1.24 -81
??? - ?????? ???????????????? ???????????? ????????
??????? ?? ????????????? ??????? ?????????? ?
?????? 4, ? ????? ?? ????? ????????? ?????
???????? - ????????? ?????? ???????, ??? ??? ???????????
??????????? ???????????? ?????? ????? ?????. ???
???????? ????
22Venure project (continued)
- ?????????? ????????? ??????? ?????? ?? ??????????
????????????? ??????? - ???????????????? ???????????? ?????????? ???????
? ?????? ? 5 ?? 8 ??. ?????????? ????? ??????????
?????????? ??????? - ?????? ????? ??????? ? ???????? ????????????,
?????? ???? ?? ????? ??????? - ??? ??????????? ?????? (?????????? ????? 4 ????,
???? ?????????? 1500 ???, ?? ????? ? ?????????
?????? 300, 600, 900, 300) - ??????????? ????????????? ? 0.35, ???????????
?????? ???????? r0.10 - ????? ?? ??????? ?????-?????? ?????? ????? 71
??? - ????? ???????, ????????? ?????? ???????
- ?????? 56 ???
- ?? ???? ?????? ?????????? 71 ???
- ????? NPV15 ???
23Equity as a Call Option on the Firm
- The equity in a firm is a residual claim, i.e.,
equity holders lay claim to all cash flows left
over after other financial claim-holders (debt,
preferred stock etc.) have been satisfied. - If a firm is liquidated, the same principle
applies, with equity investors receiving whatever
is left over in the firm after all outstanding
debts and other financial claims are paid off. - The principle of limited liability, however,
protects equity investors in publicly traded
firms if the value of the firm is less than the
value of the outstanding debt, and they cannot
lose more than their investment in the firm.
24Equity as a call option
- The payoff to equity investors, on liquidation,
can therefore be written as - Payoff to equity on liquidation V - D if V gt
D - 0 if V ? D,
- where
- V Value of the firm
- D Face Value of the outstanding debt
- A call option, with a strike price of K, on an
asset with a current value of S, has the
following payoffs - Payoff on exercise S - K if S gt K
- 0 if S ? K
25Application to valuation A simple example
- Assume that you have a firm whose assets are
currently valued at 100 million and that the
standard deviation in this asset value is 40. - Further, assume that the face value of debt is
80 million (It is zero coupon debt with 10 years
left to maturity). - If the ten-year treasury bond rate is 10,
- how much is the equity worth?
- how much is the debt worth?
26Model Parameters
- Value of the underlying asset S Value of the
firm 100 million - Exercise price K Face Value of outstanding
debt 80 million - Life of the option t Life of zero-coupon debt
10 years - Variance in the value of the underlying asset
s2 Variance in firm value 0.16 - Riskless rate r Treasury bond rate
corresponding to option life 10
27Valuing Equity as a Call Option
- Based upon these inputs, the Black-Scholes model
provides the following - d1 1.5994 N(d1) 0.9451
- d2 0.3345 N(d2) 0.6310
- Value of the call Value of equity
- 100 (0.9451) - 80 exp(0.1010) (0.6310)
75.94 million - Value of the outstanding debt 100 - 75.94
24.06 million