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Equity Valuation Bodie, Kane and Marcus Essentials of Investments 9 th Global Edition 1 3

Equity Valuation

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Equity Valuation. 13. Bodie, Kane and Marcus Essentials of Investments 9 th Global Edition. 13.1 Equity Valuation. Book Value Net worth of common equity according to a firm’s balance sheet Limitations of Book Value - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Equity Valuation

Equity Valuation

Bodie, Kane and MarcusEssentials of Investments 9th Global Edition

13

Page 2: Equity Valuation

13.1 EQUITY VALUATIONBook Value

Net worth of common equity according to a firm’s balance sheet

Limitations of Book ValueLiquidation value: Net amount realized by

selling assets of firm and paying off debtReplacement cost: Cost to replace firm’s

assetsTobin’s q: Ratio of firm’s market value to

replacement cost

Page 3: Equity Valuation

TABLE 13.1 MICROSOFT FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS, JAN 2012

Price per share $28.25Common shares outstanding (billion) 8.41Market capitalization ($ billion) 237.6

Latest 12 MonthsSales ($ billion) 71.12EBITDA ($ billion) 30.15Net income ($ billion) 23.48Earnings per share $2.75

Valuation MicrosoftIndustry

AvgP/E ratio 10.3 17.5Price/Book 4.0 10.5Price/Sales 3.3 2.7Price/Cash flow 13.9 20.5PEG 1.1 1.2

ProfitabilityROE (%) 44.16 24.9ROA (%) 17.33Operating profit margin (%) 38.78 8.58Net profit margin (%) 33.01 23.2

Page 4: Equity Valuation

13.2 INTRINSIC VALUE VERSUS MARKET PRICE

= expected dividend per share = current share price = expected end-of-year price

Page 5: Equity Valuation

13.2 INTRINSIC VALUE VERSUS MARKET PRICE

Intrinsic Value Present value of firm’s expected future net cash flows

discounted by required RoR Market Capitalization Rate

Market-consensus estimate of appropriate discount rate for firm’s cash flows

Page 6: Equity Valuation

13.2 INTRINSIC VALUE VERSUS MARKET PRICE

•  

Page 7: Equity Valuation

13.3 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODELS•  

Page 8: Equity Valuation

13.3 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODELS•  

Page 9: Equity Valuation

13.3 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODELS•  

Page 10: Equity Valuation

13.3 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODELS

Page 11: Equity Valuation

13.3 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODELS Life Cycles and Multistage Growth Models

Two-stage DDMDDM in which dividend growth assumed to level off only at future date

Multistage Growth Models Allow dividends per share to grow at several different

rates as firm matures

Page 12: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS•  

Page 13: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS

1999200020012002200320042005200620070

5

10

15

20

25

P/E Ratios

NBKKFHZain

Page 14: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

-20%

-10%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

Growth Rate

NBKKFHZain

Page 15: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS•  

Page 16: Equity Valuation

TABLE 13.3 EFFECT OF ROE AND PLOWBACK ON GROWTH AND P/E RATIO

Page 17: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS

The P/E ratio of any company that’s fairly priced will equal its growth rate. I’m talking here about growth rate of earnings…if the the P/E ratio of Coca-Cola is 15, you’d expect the company to be growing at about 15% per year, etc. But if the P/E ratio is less than the growth rate, you may have found yourself a bargain.

Page 18: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS•  

Page 19: Equity Valuation

FIGURE 13.3 P/E RATIO OF S&P 500 AND INFLATION

1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 20100

10

20

30

40

50

60

P/E ratioInflation rate

Page 20: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS Pitfalls in P/E Analysis

Earnings ManagementPractice of using flexibility in accounting rules to improve apparent profitability of firm

Large amount of discretion in managing earnings

Page 21: Equity Valuation

FIGURE 13.6 P/E RATIOS

BiotechBusiness software

Heavy constructionTrucking

Auto manufacturersRestaurants

Food productsAsset management

Application softwareChemical products

PharmaceuticalsHome improvement

Electric utilitiesIndustrial metalsTelecom services

Computer systemsHealth care plans

Money center banksIntegrated oil & gasAerospace/defense

0 10 20 30 40 50 6057.8

34.732.4

28.025.3

21.421.1

17.517.517.417.2

16.515.6

14.914.7

13.211.8

11.010.2

8.5

P/E ratio

Page 22: Equity Valuation

KSE

Oil & Gas

Basic

Materia

ls

Indus

trials

Cons

umer

Goo

ds

Health

Care

Cons

umer

Servi

ces

Telec

ommun

icatio

nsBan

ks

Insur

ance

Real E

state

Finan

cial S

ervic

es

Tech

nolog

y

Paral

lel0

5

10

15

20

25

30

P/E as of end of 2012

Page 23: Equity Valuation

13.4 PRICE-EARNINGS RATIOS Combining P/E Analysis and the DDM

Estimates stock price at horizon date Other Comparative Valuation Ratios

Price-to-book: Indicates how aggressively market values firm

Price-to-cash-flow: Cash flow less affected by accounting decisions than earnings

Price-to-sales: For start-ups with no earnings Creative ratios

Page 24: Equity Valuation

FIGURE 13.7 VALUATION RATIOS FOR S&P 500

Page 25: Equity Valuation

13.5 FREE CASH FLOW VALUATION APPROACHES

•  

Page 26: Equity Valuation

13.5 FREE CASH FLOW VALUATION APPROACHES

•  

Page 27: Equity Valuation

13.5 FREE CASH FLOW VALUATION APPROACHES

•  

Page 28: Equity Valuation

13.5 FREE CASH FLOW VALUATION APPROACHES

•  

Page 29: Equity Valuation

13.5 FREE CASH FLOW VALUATION APPROACHES

Comparing Valuation Models Model values differ in practice Differences stem from simplifying assumptions

Problems with DCF Models DCF estimates are always somewhat imprecise Investors employ hierarchy of valuation

Real estate, plant, equipmentEconomic profit on assets in placeGrowth opportunities

Page 30: Equity Valuation

13.6 THE AGGREGATE STOCK MARKET

Forecasting Aggregate Stock Market Earnings multiplier applied at aggregate level

Forecast corporate profits for periodDerive estimate of aggregate P/E ratio based on long-term interest rates

Some analysts use aggregate DDM

Page 31: Equity Valuation

FIGURE 13.8 EARNINGS YIELD OF S&P 500 VERSUS 10-YEAR TREASURY BOND YIELD

1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 20100%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16% Treasury yieldEarnings yield

Page 32: Equity Valuation

TABLE 13.4 S&P 500 FORECASTSPessimistic

ScenarioMost Likely

ScenarioOptimistic Scenario

Treasury bond yield 3.6% 3.1% 2.6%

Earnings yield 6.5% 6.0% 5.5%

Resulting P/E ratio 15.4 16.7 18.2

EPS forecast 93 93 93

Forecast for S&P 500 1431 1550 1691