Valuation 101: How To Do A Discounted Cashflow Analysis
Valuation 101: How To Do A Discounted Cashflow Analysis
Valuation 101: How To Do A Discounted Cashflow Analysis
What is a DCF Valuation?
Discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis is a method of valuing the intrinsic value of a company (or asset). In simple terms,
discounted cash flow tries to work out the value today, based on projections of all of the cash that it could make available to
investors in the future. It is described as "discounted" cash flow because of the principle of "time value of money" (i.e. cash in the
future is worth less than cash today).
The advantage of DCF analysis is that it produces the closest thing to an intrinsic stock value - relative valuation metrics such as
price-earnings (P/E) or EV/EBITDA ratios aren't very useful if an entire sector or market is overvalued. In addition, the DCF
method is forward-looking and depends more on future expectations than historical results. The method is also based on free
cash flow (FCF), which is less subject to manipulatio than some other figures and ratios calculated out of the income statement or balance sheet.
DCF does however have its weaknesses as an approach. As it is a mechanical valuation tool, it is subject to the principle of "garbage in, garbage out". In particular, small
changes in inputs can result in large changes in the value of a company, given the need to project cash-flow to infinity. James Montier argues that, "while the algebra of DCF is
simple, neat and compelling, the implementation becomes a minefield of problems" (he cites, in particular, problems with estimating cash flows and estimating discount rates).
Despite the issues, DCF analysis is very widely used and is perhaps the primary valuation tool amongst the financial analyst community. As part of Stockopedia PRO, we
provide pre-baked DCF valuation models for all stocks, which you can then modify with your own assumptions.
1. Estimate Cashflows
2. Estimate Growth Profile (1 stage, 2 stage, 3 stage etc) & Growth Rates
3. Calculate Discount Rate
4. Calculate the Terminal Value
5. Calculate fair value of company and its equity
We explain each of these steps in more detail below.
For that reason, the best option is to focus on free cash flow - there are two main such definitions:
i) Free Cash Flow to the Firm (FCFF). This is the cash available to bond holders and stock holders after all expense and investments have taken place. It is defined as:
EBIT * ( 1 - tax rate) - (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) - Change in Working Capital.
ii) Free Cash Flow to the Equity (FCFE). This is the cash is available to pay to a company's equity shareholders after accounting for all expenses, reinvestment, and debt
repayment. It is defined as:
Net Income - (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) - Changes in non-cash Working Capital - (Principal Repayments - New Debt Issues) OR alternatively
Cash From Operations - (Capital Expenditures - Depreciation) + Net Borrowing.
If we are looking to value the equity, then the most obvious option is to use FCFE. FCFF is preferred if the company is unstable or has huge amount of debt because the FCFE
might be very low or negative in this case. Basically, the drawback of FCFE is that it will change if the capital structure changes. That is, FCFE will go up if the company replaces
debt with equity (an action that reduces interest paid and therefore increases CFO) and vice versa.
Once this is decided, there are three basic ways of estimating growth for any firm:
i) Extrapolate from historic growth - One option is to use historic growth rates, but unfortunately these rates tend to have considerable noise associated with them. In an study
of the relationship between past growth rates and future growth rates, Little (1960) coined the term 'Higgledy Piggledy Growth" because he found little evidence that firms that
grew fast in one period continued to grow fast in the next period. In addition, measurement is not straightforward - growth rates can be different depending the period selected or
they may be complicated by the presence of negative earnings.
ii) Trust the Analysts - The second approach is to trust the equity research analysts that follow the firm to come up with the right estimate of growth for the firm, and to use that
growth rate in valuation. However, the evidence suggests that analysts are very poor forecasters, especially over the long-term. Work by James Montier found that the average
24-month forecast error is around 94%, and the average 12-month forecast error is around 45%.
iii) Fundamental Determinants - With both historical and analyst estimates, growth is treated as an exogenous variable that affects value but is divorced from the operating
details of the firm. As Professor Damodaran notes, the alternative way of incorporating growth into value is to make it endogenous, i.e., to make it a function of how much a
firm reinvests for future growth and the quality of its reinvestment. When a firm has a stable return on capital, its expected growth in operating income (and therefore cashflow) is
a product of the reinvestment rate, i.e., the proportion of the after-tax operating income that is invested in net capital expenditures and non-cash working capital, and the quality
of these reinvestments, measured as the return on the capital invested. The formula is:
Reinvestment Rate * Return on Capital where Reinvestment Rate = Capital Expenditure - Depreciation + Change in Non-cash WC and Return on
Capital = EBIT (1-t) / Capital Invested
Option iii) is probably the best option but may feel a bit involved. A simpler approach would be to look at historic growth over the past several years, take an average, and then
reduce that in stages. A three-stage model might take the last 3-years' growth rate, apply it to the next five years, chop it in half for the next five years, and then reduce it to 3%
(the long term rate of inflation, e.g. no "real" growth) from then on.
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CAPM
There are various models for doing so, the most commonly accepted of which is the Capital Asset Pricing Model, or CAPM where:
Cost of Equity (Re) = Risk Free Rate (Rf) + Beta * Equity Risk Premium.
i) Risk-Free Rate - This is the amount obtained from investing in securities considered free from credit risk, such as US government bonds.
ii) ß - Beta - This measures how much a company's share price moves against the market as a whole. A beta of one, for instance, indicates that the company moves in line with
the market. If the beta is in excess of one, the share is amplifying the market's movements;; less than one means the share is more stable.
iii) Equity Market Risk Premium - The equity market risk premium represents the returns investors expect, over and above the risk-free rate, to compensate them for taking
extra risk by investing in the stock market. In other words, it is the difference between the risk-free rate and the market rate. Practitioners never seem to agree on the premium;; it
is sensitive to how far back you go in history, what bonds you use as a reference point, and whether you use geometric or arithmetic averages.
While widely used, CAPM has been widely criticised as being empirically flawed - according to Montier, "CAPM woefully under predicts the returns to low beta stocks, and
massively overestimates the returns to high beta stocks. Over the long run there has been essentially no relationship between beta and return" - as well as being based on a
highly unrealistic set of assumptions. For that reason, it may be better to just adopt a discount rate that seems intuitively consistent with both the riskiness and the type of
cashflow being discounted.
Interestingly, Buffett uses something like the thirty-year U.S. treasury bond rate but without a risk premium on the basis that he avoids risks. "I put a heavy weight on certainty. If
you do that, the whole idea of a risk factor doesn't make any sense to me. Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing." (although, presumably, as a value investor, he
builds a significant margin of safety elsewhere).
Final Projected Year Cash Flow X (1+Long-Term Cash Flow Growth Rate) / (Discount Rate – Long-Term Cash Flow Growth Rate).
Another possibility of determining terminal value of the company is to use multipliers of income or cash flow measures (net income, net operating profit, EBITDA, operating cash
flow or FCF), which are determined with reference to comparable companies on the market.
The TV often represents a large percentage of the total DCF valuation. As Montier notes:
"If we assume a perpetual growth rate of 5% and a cost of capital of 9% then the terminal multiple is 25x. However, if we are off by one percent on either
or both of our inputs, then the terminal multiple can range from 16x to 50x!".
Valuation, in such cases, can unfortunately become largely dependent on TV assumptions rather than operating assumptions for the business or the asset.
Conclusions
Although Montier argues that DCF "should be consigned to the dustbin of theory, alongside the efficient markets hypothesis, and CAPM", this seem a little harsh. It is a useful
tool, provided that its constraints are clearly understood (e.g. the sensitivity to inputs), and it is best used with other tools such as Earnings Power Value and Relative Value
techniques as a sense check. In order to use DCF most effectively, the target company should generally have positive and predictable free cash flows (i.e. typically it's best with
mature firms that are past the growth stages). DCF works less well when a company's operations lack "visibility" - i.e, when it's difficult to predict revenue and cost trends with
much certainty. DCF analysis also demands vigilance so if Company X delivers disappointing quarterly results, or if interest rates change dramatically, you may need to adjust
your assumptions.
Further Reading
Wikipedia on Discounted Cashflow
What is Free Cash Flow and how do I calculate it?
Investopedia on Discounted Cashflow
Estimating Cashflows
Macabacus on DCF
Schweser Notes on FCF Valuation
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