Title: 331NS-1
1FIN 331 in a Nutshell
- Financial Management I Review
-
2FIN 331 in a Nutshell - Index
- Financial Statements, Ratios, AFN
- Time Value of Money
- Bond Valuation
- Risk Return (SML/CAPM)
- Stock Valuation
- WACC
- NPV, IRR, MIRR
- Cash Flow Estimation
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3Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes
- Key Financial Statements
- Balance sheet
- Income statements
- Statement of cash flows
Index
4The Annual Report
- Balance sheet
- Snapshot of a firms financial position at a
point in time - Income statement
- Summarizes a firms revenues and expenses over a
given period of time - Statement of cash flows
- Reports the impact of a firms activities on cash
flows over a given period of time
5Sample Balance Sheet
Assets Liabilities Owners Equity
6Sample Income Statement
Net incomeDividends Retained earnings
7Allied Food Products
8Allied 2005 Per-Share Ratios
Ratio Formula Calculation
Earnings per Share (EPS)
Dividends per Share (DPS)
Book Value per Share (BVPS)
Cash flow per Share (CFPS)
9Statement of Cash Flows
- Provides information about cash inflows and
outflows during an accounting period - Required since 1988
- Developed from Balance Sheet and Income Statement
data
10Statement of Cash Flows
Reconciles the change in Cash Equivalents
11(No Transcript)
12 Statement of Cash Flows
Why is it important???
- Reconciles the Income Statement and Balance Sheet
to the flow of cash - The Matching Principle requires estimates and
accruals to prepare Financial statements - Financial Analysis is concerned with Cash Flow
13Statement of Cash Flows
- A positive net income on the income statement
is ultimately insignificant unless a company can
translate its earnings into cash, and the only
source in financial statement data for learning
about the generation of cash from operations is
the statement of cash flows
14Deficits
Covered by new debt and cash
15Net Operating Working Capital
If the Asset side had included Short-term
investments they would have been excluded as
well.
16Operating Capital (also called Total Net
Operating Capital)
- Operating Capital
- NOWC Net fixed assets
- Operating Capital
- (2005) 800 1,000 1,800 million
- (2004) 650 870 1,520 million
- Net Investment in Operating Capital
- Op Cap (2005) Op Cap (2004)
- 1,800 - 1,520 280 million
17Net Operating Profit after Taxes (NOPAT)
Operating Cash Flow
- NOPAT EBIT(1 - Tax rate)
- NOPAT05 283.8(1 - 0.4) 170.3 m
- OCF05 NOPAT Deprec Amort
- 170.3 100
- 270.3
18Free Cash Flow (FCF) for 2005
- EBIT 283.8 m T 40 Depreciation
100 m - Capital Expenditures ?FA Deprec 130100
230 - ?NOWC 800 - 650 150 m
- FCF 283.8(1-.4)100 230-150
- -109.7 m
19Analysis of Financial Statements
- Ratio Analysis
- Limitations of ratio analysis
- Qualitative factors
Index
20Five Major Categories of Ratios
- Liquidity
- CR - Current Ratio
- QR - Quick Ratio or Acid-Test
- Asset management
- Inventory Turnover
- DSO Days sales outstanding
- FAT - Fixed Assets Turnover
- TAT - Total Assets Turnover
- Debt management
- Debt Ratio
- TIE Times interest earned
- EBITDA coverage (EC)
21Five Major Categories of Ratios
- Profitability
- PM - Profit margin on sales
- BEP Basic earning power
- ROA Return on total assets
- ROE Return on common equity
- Market value
- P/E Price-Earnings ratio
- P/CF Price cash flow ratio
- M/B Market to book
22Liquidity Ratios
- CR Current Ratio
- CA/CL
- QR Quick Ratio or Acid-Test
- (CA-INV)/CL
23Asset Management Ratios
- Inventory Turnover Sales/Inventories
- DSO Days sales outstanding
- Receivables /(Annual sales/365)
- FAT Fixed Assets Turnover
- Sales/Net Fixed Assets
- TAT Total Assets Turnover
- Sales/Total Assets
24Debt Management Ratios
- Debt Ratio Total Liabilities/Total Assets
- TIE Times interest earned
- EBIT/Interest
- EBITDA coverage EC
- (EBITDA lease pmts) .
- (Interest principal pmts lease pmts)
25Profitability Ratios
- PM Profit margin on sales
- NI/Sales
- BEP Basic earning power
- EBIT/Total Assets
- ROA Return on total assets
- NI/Total Assets
- ROE Return on common equity
- NI/Common Equity
26Market Value Metrics
- P/E Price-Earnings ratio
- Price per share/Earnings per share
- P/CF Pricecash flow ratio
- Price per share/Cash flow per share
- M/B Market to book
- Market price per share
- Book value per share
27The 5 Major Categories of Ratios and What
Questions They Answer
Ratio Category Questions Answered
Liquidity Can we make required payments?
Asset Management Right amount of assets vs. sales?
Debt Management Right mix of debt and equity?
Profitability Do sales prices exceed unit costs Are sales high enough as reflected in PM, ROE, and ROA?
Market Value Do investors like what they see as reflected in P/E and M/B ratios
28Potential Problems and Limitations of Ratio
Analysis
- Comparison with industry averages is difficult if
the firm operates many different divisions - Average performance ? necessarily good
- Seasonal factors can distort ratios
- Window dressing techniques
29Problems and Limitations (Continued)
- Different accounting and operating practices can
distort comparisons - Sometimes difficult to tell if a ratio value is
good or bad - Different ratios give different signals
- Difficult to tell, on balance, whether a company
is in a strong or weak financial condition
30Qualitative Factors
- Revenues tied to a single customer?
- Revenues tied to a single product?
- Reliance on a single supplier?
- Percentage of business generated overseas?
- Competitive situation?
- Legal and regulatory environment?
31Financial Planning and Forecasting
- Forecasting sales
- Projecting the assets and internally generated
funds - Projecting outside funds needed
- Deciding how to raise funds
Index
32The AFN Formula
- If ratios are expected to remain constant
- AFN (A/S0)?S - (L/S0)?S - M(S1)(RR)
Required ? Assets
? Retained Earnings
Spontaneously ? Liabilities
33Variables in the AFN Formula
- A Assets tied directly to sales
- S0 Last years sales
- S1 Next years projected sales
- ?S Increase in sales (S1-S0)
- L Liabilities that spontaneously
increase with sales
34Variables in the AFN Formula
- A/S0 assets required to support sales
- Capital Intensity Ratio
- L/S0 spontaneous liabilities ratio
- M profit margin (Net income/sales)
- RR retention ratio percent of net
- income not paid as dividend
35Key Factors in AFN
- ?S Sales Growth
- A/S0 Capital Intensity Ratio
- L/S0 Spontaneous Liability Ratio
- M Profit Margin
- RR Retention Ratio
36Time Value of Money
- Timelines
- Future Value
- Present Value
- Present Value of Uneven Cash Flows
37Time Lines Timing of Cash Flows
0
1
2
3
I
CF0
CF1
CF3
CF2
- Tick marks occur at the end of periods
- Time 0 today
- Time 1 the end of the first period or the
beginning of the second period
CF Cash INFLOW -CF Cash OUTFLOW PMT
Constant CF
38Basic Definitions
- Present Value (PV)
- The current value of future cash flows discounted
at the appropriate discount rate - Value at t0 on a time line
- Future Value (FV)
- The amount an investment is worth after one or
more periods. - Later money on a time line
39Future Value General Formula
FV PV(1 I)N
- FV future value
- PV present value
- I period interest rate, expressed
- as a decimal
- N number of periods
- Future value interest factor (1 I)N
- Note yx key on your calculator
40Texas Instruments BA-II Plus
- FV future value
- PV present value
- PMT periodic payment
- I/Y period interest rate
- N number of periods
One of these MUST be negative
N I/Y PV PMT FV
41Excel Spreadsheet Functions
- FV(rate,nper,pmt,pv)
- PV(rate,nper,pmt,fv)
- RATE(nper,pmt,pv,fv)
- NPER(rate,pmt,pv,fv)
- Use the formula icon (ƒx) when you cant remember
the exact formula
42Future Values Example
- Suppose you invest 100 for 5 years at 10
- How much would you have?
Formula Solution FV PV(1I)N 100(1
.10)5 100(1.6105) 161.05
43Future Value Example
- Suppose you invest 100 for 5 years at 10. How
much would you have?
- Calculator Solution
- 5 N
- 10 I/Y
- -100 PV
- 0 PMT
- CPT FV 161.05
44Future ValueImportant Relationship 1
- For a given interest rate
- The longer the time period,
- The higher the future value
-
- FV PV(1 I)N
For a given I, as N increases, FV increases
45Future Value Important Relationship 2
- For a given time period
- The higher the interest rate,
- The larger the future value
FV PV(1 I)N
For a given N, as I increases, FV increases
46Present Values
- The current value of future cash flows discounted
at the appropriate discount rate - Value at t0 on a time line
- Answers the questions
- How much do I have to invest today to have some
amount in the future? - What is the current value of an amount to be
received in the future?
47Present Values
- FV PV(1 I)N
- Rearrange to solve for PV
- PV FV / (1I)N
- PV FV(1I)-N
- Discounting finding the present value of one
or more future amounts
48Present Value One Period Example
- You need 10,000 for the down payment on a new
car - You can earn 7 annually.
- How much do you need to invest today?
1 N 7 I/Y 0 PMT 10000 FV CPT PV -9345.79
PV 10,000(1.07)-1 9,345.79
PV(0.07,1,0,10000)
49Present ValueImportant Relationship 1
- For a given interest rate
- The longer the time period,
- The lower the present value
For a given I, as N increases, PV decreases
50Present Value Important Relationship 2
- For a given time period
- The higher the interest rate,
- The smaller the present value
For a given N, as I increases, PV decreases
51The Basic PV Equation - Refresher
- PV FV / (1 I)N
- There are four parts to this equation
- PV, FV, I and N
- Know any three, solve for the fourth
- If you are using a financial calculator, be sure
and remember the sign convention
CF Cash INFLOW -CF Cash OUTFLOW
52Multiple Cash FlowsPresent Value
- The Basic Formula
- The TI BA II
- Using the PV/FV keys
- Using the Cash Flow Worksheet
- Excel
53Multiple Uneven Cash Flows Present Value
- You are offered an investment that will pay
- 200 in year 1,
- 400 the next year,
- 600 the following year, and
- 800 at the end of the 4th year.
- You can earn 12 on similar investments.
- What is the most you should pay for this
investment?
54What is the PV of this uneven cash flow stream?
-1,432.93 PV
55Present Value of an Uneven Cash Flow Stream
Formula
56Multiple Uneven Cash Flows PV
- Year 1 CF 1 N 12 I/Y 200 FV CPT PV
-178.57 - Year 2 CF 2 N 12 I/Y 400 FV CPT PV
-318.88 - Year 3 CF 3 N 12 I/Y 600 FV CPT PV
-427.07 - Year 4 CF 4 N 12 I/Y 800 FV CPT PV
-508.41 - Total PV -1,432.93
57Multiple Uneven Cash Flows Using the TI BAIIs
Cash Flow Worksheet
- Clear all
- Press CF
- Then 2nd
- And CLR WORK (above CE/C)
- CF0 is displayed and is 0
- Enter the Period 0 cash flow
- If it is an outflow, hit /- to change the sign
- To enter the figure in the cash flow register,
press ENTER
58TI BAII Uneven CFs
- Press the down arrow (?) to move to the next cash
flow register. - Enter the cash flow amount, press ENTER and then
down arrow to move to the cash flow counter (Fn). - The default counter value is 1.
- To accept the value of 1, press the down arrow
again. - To change the counter, enter the correct count,
press ENTER and then the down arrow.
59TI BAII Uneven CFs
- Repeat for all cash flows, in order.
- To find NPV
- Press NPV I appears on the screen
- Enter the interest rate, press ENTER and the down
arrow to display NPV. - Press compute CPT
60TI BAII Uneven Cash Flows
- CF
- C00 0 ENTER ?
- C01 200 ENTER ?
- F01 1 ENTER ?
- C02 400 ENTER ?
- F02 1 ENTER ?
- C03 600 ENTER ?
- F03 1 ENTER ?
- C04 800 ENTER ?
- F04 1 ENTER ? NPV
- I 12 ENTER ?
- NPV CPT
- 1432.93
Cash Flows CF0 0 CF1 200 CF2 400 CF3 600
CF4 800
61Excel PV of multiple uneven CFs
62Bonds and Their Valuation
- Interest rates
- Bond valuation
- Measuring yield
Index
63Nominal vs. Real rates
- r Any nominal rate
- r The real risk-free rate
- T-bill rate with no inflation
- Typically ranges from 1 to 4 per year
- rRF Rate on Treasury securities
- Proxied by T-bill or T-bond rate
64r r IP DRP LP MRP
- Here
- r Required rate of return on a debt
security - r Real risk-free rate
- IP Inflation premium
- DRP Default risk premium
- LP Liquidity premium
- MRP Maturity risk premium
rRF
65Premiums Added to r for Different Types of Debt
Debt Instrument IP DRP MRP LP
- ST Treasury ST IP
- LT Treasury LT IP MRP
- ST Corporate ST IP DRP LP
- LT Corporate LT IP DRP MRP LP
66Discount Rate YTM
- The discount rate (YTM) is
- The opportunity cost of capital
- The rate that could be earned on alternative
investments of equal risk - Required return
- For debt securities
- YTM r IP LP MRP DRP
67Bond Value
- Bond Value PV(coupons) PV(par)
- Bond Value PV(annuity) PV(lump sum)
- Remember
- As interest rates increase present values
decrease as YTM ? ? PV ? - As interest rates increase, bond prices decrease
and vice versa
68The Bond-Pricing Equation
PV(lump sum)
PV(Annuity)
C Coupon payment F Face value
69Texas Instruments BA-II Plus
- FV future value/face value/par value
- PV present valuebond value/price
- I/Y period interest rate YTM
- N number of periods to maturity
- PMT coupon payment
70Spreadsheet Functions
- FV(Rate,Nper,Pmt,PV,0/1)
- PV(Rate,Nper,Pmt,FV,0/1)
- RATE(Nper,Pmt,PV,FV,0/1)
- NPER(Rate,Pmt,PV,FV,0/1)
- PMT(Rate,Nper,PV,FV,0/1)
- Inside parens (RATE,NPER,PMT,PV,FV,0/1)
- 0/1 Ordinary annuity 0 (default)
- Annuity Due 1 (must be entered)
71Pricing Specific Bonds
- TI BA II
- Bond Worksheet 2nd BOND
- SDT CPN RDT RV ACT 2/Y YLD PRI
- Excel
- PRICE(Settlement,Maturity,Rate,Yld,Redemption,
Frequency,Basis) - YIELD(Settlement,Maturity,Rate,Pr,Redemption,
Frequency,Basis) - Settlement and maturity need to be actual dates
- Redemption and Pr need to given as of par value
72Yield to Maturity (YTM)
- The market required rate of return for bonds of
similar risk and maturity - The discount rate used to value a bond
- Return earned if bond held to maturity
- Usually coupon rate at issue
- Quoted as an APR
- The IRR of a bond
73What is the YTM on a 10-year, 9 annual coupon,
1,000 par value bond, selling for 887?
- Must find the rd that solves this model
74Using a financial calculator to solve for the YTM
- YTM 10.91
- Bond sells at a discount because YTM gt coupon rate
10
90
1000
- 887
INPUTS
N
I/YR
PMT
PV
FV
OUTPUT
10.91
75Solving for YTM
YTM on a 10-year, 9 annual coupon, 1,000 par
value bond selling for 887
Using the calculator N 10 PV -887 PMT
90 FV 1000 CPT I/Y 10.91
- Coupon rate 9
- Annual coupons
- Par 1,000
- Maturity 10 years
- Price 887
RATE(10,90,-887,1000)
76Find YTM, if the bond price is 1,134.20
- YTM 7.08
- Bond sells at a premium because YTM lt coupon rate
10
90
1000
-1134.2
INPUTS
N
I/YR
PMT
PV
FV
OUTPUT
7.08
77Solving for YTM
YTM on a 10-year, 9 annual coupon, 1,000 par
value bond selling for 1,134.20
- Coupon rate 9
- Annual coupons
- Par 1,000
- Maturity 10 years
- Price 1,134.20
Using the calculator N 10 PV -1134.20 PMT
90 FV 1000 CPT I/Y 7.08
RATE(10,90,-1134.20,1000)
78Semiannual bonds
- Multiply years by 2 number of periods 2N.
- Divide nominal rate by 2 periodic rate (I/YR)
rd / 2. - Divide annual coupon by 2 PMT ann cpn / 2.
2N
rd / 2
cpn / 2
OK
OK
INPUTS
N
I/YR
PMT
PV
FV
OUTPUT
79What is the value of a 10-year, 10 semiannual
coupon bond, if rd 13?
- Multiply years by 2 N 2 10 20
- Divide nominal rate by 2 I/YR 13 / 2 6.5
- Divide annual coupon by 2 PMT 100 / 2 50
20
6.5
50
1000
INPUTS
N
I/YR
PMT
PV
FV
OUTPUT
- 834.72
80Valuing a Semiannual Bond
- Coupon rate 10
- Annual coupons
- Par 1,000
- Maturity 10 years
- YTM 13
Using the calculator N 20 I/Y 6.5 PMT
50 FV 1000 CPT PV -834.72
Using the formula
PV(0.065, 10, 50, 1000)
81YTM with Semiannual Coupons
- Suppose a bond with a 10 coupon rate and
semiannual coupons, has a face value of 1000, 20
years to maturity and is selling for 1197.93. - Is the YTM more or less than 10?
- What is the semiannual coupon payment?
- How many periods are there?
82YTM with Semiannual Coupons
- Suppose a bond with a 10 coupon rate and
semiannual coupons, has a face value of 1000, 20
years to maturity and is selling for 1197.93. - N 40
- PV -1197.93
- PMT 50
- FV 1000
- CPT I/Y 4
- YTM 42 8
- ? Result ½ YTM
NOTE Solving a semi-annual payer for YTM will
result in a 6-month YTM answer
Calculator solves what you enter.
83Risk and Rates of Return
- Stand-alone Risk
- Portfolio Risk
- Risk Return CAPM / SML
Index
84The Expected Rate of Return
r hat expected return ri expected return in
ith state of the economy Pi Probability of
ith state occurring
85Calculating the Expected Return
86The Standard Deviation of Returns
s Standard deviation
s v Variance v s2
87Standard deviation for each investment
88Standard Deviation of HTs Returns
89Risk versus ReturnDo we know enough now?
Security Expected return, r Risk, s
T-bills 5.5 0.0
HT 12.4 20.0
Coll 1.0 13.2
USR 9.8 18.8
Market 10.5 15.2
90Coefficient of Variation (CV)
- CV Standard deviation/expected return
- Risk per unit of return
-
91Portfolio Expected Return
rp weighted average wi of portfolio in
stock i ri return on stock i
92Portfolio Expected Return
- Assume a two-stock portfolio is created with
- 50,000 invested in both HT and Collections
rp 0.5(12.4) 0.5(1.0) 6.7
93Portfolio Return
Portfolio (50 x HT) (50 x
Coll) Portfolio Return Prob x Portfolio
94Portfolio Risk
- Portfolio Standard deviation is NOT a weighted
average of the standard deviations of the
component assets
95Calculating portfolio standard deviation and CV
96Portfolio Standard Deviation
97Portfolio Risk Return
?
- sp 3.4 is much lower than the s of either
stock - sp 3.4 is lower than the weighted average of
HT and Coll.s s (16.6) - ?The portfolio provides the average return of
component stocks, but lower than the average risk - Why? Negative correlation between stocks
98Covariance of Returns
- Measures how much the returns on two risky assets
move together
99Covariance vs. Variance of Returns
100Covariance
Covariance (HTColl) -0.0264
101Correlation Coefficient
- Correlation Coefficient ? (rho)
- Scales covariance to -1,1
- -1 Perfectly negatively correlated
- 0 Uncorrelated not related
- 1 Perfectly positively correlated
102Two-Stock Portfolios
- If r -1.0
- Two stocks can be combined to form a riskless
portfolio - If r 1.0
- No risk reduction at all
- In general, stocks have r 0.35
- Risk is lowered but not eliminated
- Investors typically hold many stocks
103s of n-Stock Portfolio
- Subscripts denote stocks i and j
- ri,j Correlation between stocks i and j
- si and sj Standard deviations of stocks i and j
- sij Covariance of stocks i and j
104Portfolio Risk-n Risky Assets
- i j for n2
- 1 1 w1w1?11 w12?12
- 1 2 w1w2?12
- 2 1 w2w1?21
- 2 2 w2w2?22 w22?22
- ?p2 w12?12 w22?22 2w1w2 ?12
105Portfolio Risk-2 Risky Assets
106Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
- Links risk and required returns
- Security Market Line (SML)
- A stocks required return equals the risk-free
return (rRF) plus a risk premium (RPM x ?) that
reflects the stocks risk after diversification - Primary conclusion
- The relevant riskiness of a stock is its
contribution to the riskiness of a
well-diversified portfolio.
107The SML and Required Return
- The Security Market Line (SML) is part of the
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
-
- rRF Risk-free rate
- RPM Market risk premium rM rRF
-
108The Market Risk Premium (rM rRF RPM)
- Additional return over the risk-free rate to
compensate investors for assuming an average
amount of risk - Size depends on
- Perceived risk of the stock market
- Investors degree of risk aversion
- Varies from year to year
- Estimates suggest a range between 4 and 8 per
year
109Required Rates of Return
- Assume rRF 5.5 RPM 5
- rHT 5.5 (5.0)(1.32)
- 5.5 6.6 12.10
- rM 5.5 (5.0)(1.00) 10.50
- rUSR 5.5 (5.0)(0.88) 9.90
- rT-bill 5.5 (5.0)(0.00) 5.50
- rColl 5.5 (5.0)(-0.87) 1.15
110Expected vs Required Returns
Required by the market
Expected by YOU
Expected Required
Return Return
HT 12.40 12.10 Undervalued
Market 10.50 10.50 Fairly valued
USR 9.80 9.90 Overvalued
T-bills 5.50 5.50 Fairly valued
Coll 1.00 1.15 Overvalued
111Illustrating the Security Market Line
SML ri 5.5 (5.0) ?i
ri ()
SML
.
HT
.
.
rM 10.5 rRF 5.5
.
USR
T-bills
.
Risk, ?i
-1 0 1 2
Coll.
112Portfolio Beta
Where wi weight ( dollars invested in asset
i) ßi Beta of asset i ßp Portfolio Beta
113Stocks and Their Valuation
- Constant growth stock valuation
- Non-constant growth stock valuation
- Corporate value model
Index
114Constant growth stock
- Dividends expected to grow forever at a constant
rate, g - D1 D0 (1g)1
- D2 D0 (1g)2
- Dt D0 (1g)t
- Dividend growth formula converges to
115Constant Growth Model
Needed data D0 Dividend just paid D1 Next
expected dividend g constant growth rate rs
required return on the stock
116Expected Value at time t
Value at t0
Value at t
117Supernormal Growth
- What if g 30 for 3 years before achieving
long-run growth of 6? - Constant growth model no longer applicable
- But - growth constant after 3 years
118Valuing common stock with nonconstant growth
P
119Corporate Value Model
- Free Cash Flow method
- Value of the firm present value of the firms
expected future free cash flows - Free cash flow after-tax operating income less
net capital investment - FCF NOPAT Net capital investment
120Applying the corporate value model
- Market value of firm
- (MVF) PV(future FCFs)
- MV of common stock
- MVF MV of debt
- Intrinsic stock value
- MVCS / shares
121Issues regarding the corporate value model
- Often preferred to the dividend growth model
- Firms that dont pay dividends
- Dividends hard to forecast
- Assumes at some point free cash flow growth rate
will be constant - Terminal value (TVN) value of firm at the
point that growth becomes constant
122Firms Intrinsic Value
Long-run gFCF 6 WACC 10
123If the firm has 40 million in debt and has 10
million shares of stock, what is the firms
intrinsic value per share?
- MV of equity MV of firm MV of debt
- 416.94 - 40
- 376.94 million
- Value per share MV of equity / of shares
- 376.94 / 10
- 37.69
124Firm multiples method
- Often used by analysts to value stocks
- P / E Price-earning
- P / CF Price-cash flow
- P / Sales Price-sales
- Method
- Estimate appropriate ratio based on comparable
firms - Multiply estimate by expected metric to estimate
stock price
125The Cost of Capital
- Cost of equity
- WACC
- Adjusting for risk
Index
126WACCWeighted Average Cost of Capital
Where wD of debt in capital structure wP
of preferred stock in capital structure wC
of common equity in capital structure rD
firms cost of debt rP firms cost of preferred
stock rC firms cost of equity T firms
corporate tax rate
Weights
Component costs
127Three ways to determine the cost of equity, rs
1. DCF rs D1/P0 g 2. CAPM rs rRF
(rM - rRF)ßi rRF (RPM)ßi 3. Own-Bond-Yiel
d-Plus-Risk Premium rs rd Bond RP
128DCF Approach Inputs
- Current stock price (P0)
- Current dividend (D0)
- Growth rate (g)
129Four Mistakes to Avoid
- Current (YTM) vs. historical (Coupon rate) cost
of debt - Mixing current and historical measures to
estimate the market risk premium - Book weights vs. Market Weights
- Use Target weights
- Use market value of equity
- Book value of debt reasonable proxy for market
value. - Incorrect cost of capital components
- Only investor provided funding
130Should the company use the composite WACC as the
hurdle rate for each of its projects?
- NO!
- A firms composite WACC reflects the risk of an
average project - WACC hurdle rate for an average risk project
- Different divisions/projects may have different
risks - Division or project WACC should be adjusted to
reflect appropriate risk
131Divisional and Project Costs of Capital
- Using the WACC as the discount rate is only
appropriate for projects that are the same risk
as the firms current operations - If considering a project that is NOT of the same
risk as the firm, then an appropriate discount
rate for that project is needed - Divisions also often require separatediscount
rates
132Using WACC for All Projects - Example
- What would happen if we use the WACC for all
projects regardless of risk? - Assume the WACC 15
133Divisional Risk and the Cost of Capital
Rate of Return
()
Acceptance Region
WACC
WACC
H
Acceptance Region
Rejection Region
WACC
F
Rejection Region
WACC
L
Risk
0
Risk
Risk
L
H
134Subjective Approach
- Consider the projects risk relative to the firm
overall - If project risk gt firm risk ? project discount
rate gt WACC - If project risk lt firm risk ? project discount
rate lt WACC
135Subjective Approach - Example
Risk Level Discount Rate
Very Low Risk WACC 8 7
Low Risk WACC 3 12
Same Risk as Firm WACC 15
High Risk WACC 5 20
Very High Risk WACC 10 25
136The Basics of Capital Budgeting
- Independent vs. mutually exclusive CFs
- Normal vs. non-normal CFs
- NPV
- IRR
- MIRR
- PB
- DPB
Index
137Steps to capital budgeting
- Estimate CFs (inflows outflows)
- Assess riskiness of CFs
- Determine appropriate cost of capital
- Find NPV and/or IRR
- Accept if NPVgt0 and/or IRRgtWACC
138Independent vs. Mutually Exclusive Projects
- Independent
- The cash flows of one are unaffected by the
acceptance of the other - Mutually Exclusive
- The acceptance of one project precludes
acceptance of the other
139NPV Sum of the PVs of all cash flows.
NOTE t0
Cost often is CF0 and is negative
140TI BAII Uneven Cash Flows
- CF
- C00 100 /- ENTER ?
- C01 10 ENTER ?
- F01 1 ENTER ?
- C02 60 ENTER ?
- F02 1 ENTER ?
- C03 80 ENTER ?
- F03 1 ENTER? NPV
- I 10 ENTER ?
- NPV CPT
- 18.78
-
Cash Flows CF0 -100 CF1 10 CF2 60 CF3 80
141Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
- IRR discount rate that forces PV of inflows
equal to cost, and NPV 0 - Solving for IRR with a financial calculator
- Enter CFs in CFLO register
- Press IRR
142NPV vs IRR
NPV Enter r, solve for NPV
IRR Enter NPV 0, solve for IRR
143Modified Internal Rate of Return (MIRR)
- MIRR discount rate which causes the PV of a
projects terminal value (TV) to equal the PV of
costs - TV inflows compounded at WACC
- ?MIRR assumes cash inflows reinvested at WACC
144Normal vs. Non-normal Cash Flows
- Normal Cash Flow Project
- Cost (negative CF) followed by a series of
positive cash inflows - One change of signs
- Non-normal Cash Flow Project
- Two or more changes of signs
- Most common Cost (negative CF), then string of
positive CFs, then cost to close project - For example, strip mine
145Multiple IRRs
- Descartes Rule of Signs
- Polynomial of degree n?n roots
- 1 real root per sign change
- Rest imaginary (i2 -1)
146The Pavillion ProjectNon-normal CFs and MIRR
1
2
0
-800,000
5,000,000
-5,000,000
PV outflows _at_ 10 -4,932,231.40
TV inflows _at_ 10 5,500,000.00
MIRR 5.6
147MIRR versus IRR
- MIRR correctly assumes reinvestment at
opportunity cost WACC - MIRR avoids the multiple IRR problem
- Managers like rate of return comparisons, and
MIRR is better for this than IRR
148When to use the MIRR instead of the IRR? Accept
Project P?
- When there are nonnormal CFs and more than one
IRR, use MIRR. - PV of outflows _at_ 10 -4,932.2314.
- TV of inflows _at_ 10 5,500.
- MIRR 5.6.
- Do not accept Project P.
- NPV -386.78 lt 0.
- MIRR 5.6 lt WACC 10.
149Excel Functions
150Cash Flow Estimation and Risk Analysis
- Relevant cash flows
- Net salvage value
- Inflation
- Sensitivity analysis
- Scenario analysis
- Real options
Index
151Relevant Cash FlowsIncremental Cash Flow for
a Project
- Projects incremental cash flow is
- Corporate cash flow with the project
- Minus
- Corporate cash flow without the project
152Relevant Cash Flows
- Changes in Net Working Capital Y
- Interest/Dividends .... N
- Sunk Costs .. N
- Opportunity Costs .Y
- Externalities/Cannibalism .. Y
- Tax Effects .... Y
153Tax Effect on Salvage
Net Salvage Cash Flow SP - (SP-BV)(T) Where
SP Selling Price BV Book Value T
Corporate tax rate
154Including inflation when estimating cash flows
- Nominal r gt real r
- The cost of capital, r, includes a premium for
inflation - Nominal CF gt real CF
- Nominal cash flows incorporate inflation
- If you discount real CF with the higher nominal
r, then your NPV estimate is too low
155INFLATION Real vs. Nominal Cash flows
Real
Nominal
156INFLATION Real vs. Nominal Cash flows
- 2 Ways to adjust
- Adjust WACC
- Cash Flows Real
- Adjust WACC to remove inflation
- Adjust Cash Flows for Inflation
- Use Nominal WACC
157Sensitivity Analysis
- Shows how changes in an input variable affect NPV
or IRR - Each variable is fixed except one
- Change one variable to see the effect on NPV or
IRR - Answers what if questions
158Sensitivity Analysis
159(No Transcript)
160Sensitivity Analysis
161Sensitivity Graph
Variable Cost
Unit Sales
Fixed Cost
162Sensitivity Ratio
14-162
- ?NPV (New NPV - Base NPV)/Base NPV
- ?VAR (New VAR - Base VAR)/Base VAR
- If SRgt0 ? Direct relationship
- If SRlt0 ? Inverse relationship
163Sensitivity Ratio
14-163
Change from Resulting NPV (000s)
Base Level Unit Sales FC VC
- -30 -62 54 266
- 0 20 20 20
-
- ?NPV (-62-20)/20 (54-20)/20
(266-20)/20 -4.1
1.7 12.3 - ?VAR -30 -30
-30 - SR 13.74
-5.72 -41.22 -
-
164Sensitivity Graph
Variable Cost -41.22
Unit Sales 13.74
Fixed Cost -5.72
165Results of Sensitivity Analysis
- Steeper sensitivity lines greater risk
- Small changes ? large declines in NPV
- The Variable Cost line is steeper than unit sales
or fixed cost so, for this project, the firm
should focus on the accuracy of variable cost
forecasts.
166Sensitivity AnalysisWeaknesses
- Does not reflect diversification
- Says nothing about the likelihood of change in a
variable - i.e. a steep sales line is not a problem if sales
wont fall - Ignores relationships among variables
167Sensitivity AnalysisStrengths
- Provides indication of stand-alone risk
- Identifies dangerous variables
- Gives some breakeven information
168Scenario Analysis
- Examines several possible situations, usually
- Worst case
- Base case or most likely case, and
- Best case
- Provides a range of possible outcomes
169Scenario Example
170(No Transcript)
171Problems with Scenario Analysis
- Only considers a few possible out-comes
- Assumes that inputs are perfectly correlated
- All bad values occur together and all good
values occur together - Focuses on stand-alone risk
172Monte Carlo Simulation Analysis
- Computerized version of scenario analysis using
continuous probability distributions - Computer selects values for each variable based
on given probability distributions
173Monte Carlo Simulation Analysis
- Calculates NPV and IRR
- Process is repeated many times (1,000 or more)
- End result Probability distribution of NPV and
IRR based on sample of simulated values - Generally shown graphically
174Histogram of Results
175Advantages of Simulation Analysis
- Reflects the probability distributions of each
input - Shows range of NPVs, the expected NPV, sNPV, and
CVNPV - Gives an intuitive graph of the risk situation
176Disadvantages of Simulation Analysis
- Difficult to specify probability distributions
and correlations - If inputs are bad, output will be badGarbage
in, garbage out
177Disadvantages of Sensitivity, Scenario and
Simulation Analysis
- Sensitivity, scenario, and simulation analyses do
not provide a decision rule - Do not indicate whether a projects expected
return is sufficient to compensate for its risk - Sensitivity, scenario, and simulation analyses
all ignore diversification - Measure only stand-alone risk, which may not be
the most relevant risk in capital budgeting
178Real Options
- When managers can influence the size and risk of
a projects cash flows by taking different
actions during the projects life in response to
changing market conditions - Alert managers always look for real options in
projects - Smarter managers try to create real options
179Types of Real Options
- Investment timing options
- Growth options
- Expansion of existing product line
- New products
- New geographic markets
- Abandonment options
- Contraction
- Temporary suspension
- Flexibility options
180FIN 331 in a Nutshell
- Financial Management I Review
-
Index