IBanking Interview - Equity Value Enterprise Value Guide
IBanking Interview - Equity Value Enterprise Value Guide
IBanking Interview - Equity Value Enterprise Value Guide
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The previous owner left lots of furniture we can save some money!
We need to make significant repairs or improve the landscaping.
There are unpaid bills or other obligations that we need to pay off.
So the actual cost of buying that house may be much different from the sticker
price.
In the same way, the actual cost of buying a company may also be much
different from its sticker price its Equity Value:
The company might have Debt that needs to be repaid upon acquisition.
The company might have Excess Cash that we can claim for ourselves.
The company might have Unfunded Pension Obligations and other
Liabilities that well have to repay at some point.
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Why bother with this extra math to calculate the Diluted Equity Value of a
company?
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For the same reason we calculate Enterprise Value: to see what it would really
cost to acquire a company.
When you buy another company, the purchase agreement normally states that
any in-the-money dilutive securities get cashed out or get converted into an
equivalent number of the buyers securities. Either of those scenarios would cost
the buyer something when it acquires the company in question.
So its more accurate to calculate the Diluted Equity Value when youre
determining the Enterprise Value otherwise youre underestimating how much
the company would truly cost to acquire.
Cash: This saves you cash right away because its yours once you buy the
company; technically you should only subtract excess cash (i.e. the amount
over the minimum they need to operate) but normally you subtract the
entire amount.
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Now lets go through a few examples of items that you add because they
normally require immediate repayment in an acquisition scenario:
Debt: Its added because the acquirer normally has to repay it upon
completing the acquisition.
Preferred Stock: Its similar to Debt because of the required dividends,
which act as interest expense; also, normally it must also be repaid upon
acquisition.
Then there are items that get added because they must be repaid in the future,
but wouldnt necessarily come from the companys normal cash flows:
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Lets say that your revenue is $100, and you own 70% of another company that
has $50 in revenue. On your statements, you show $150 in revenue because you
consolidate 100% of the statements (see the Accounting section of the guide).
But Equity Value, by itself, only reflects the 70% of the other company that you
own. An Enterprise Value / Revenue multiple would be wrong because we
would have 100% of the other companys revenue, but only 70% of its value.
As a result, we need to add the Noncontrolling Interests line item that reflects the
30% we do not own that way, were including 100% of the other companys
value in Enterprise Value.
Do you need to know all the explanations above in an interview?
No, not really these more advanced items are unlikely to come up in entry-level
interviews. But its good to have some intuition behind why items get added or
subtracted when calculating Enterprise Value.
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Interest (and
possibly Debt
Payments)
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There are more valuation multiples, but the ones above are the more common
ones.
When in doubt, think: Does this include interest income and expense, i.e. do we
subtract interest expense and add interest income to get to this metric?
If it does, use Equity Value; if it does not, use Enterprise Value.
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This is a simplified formula that you can usually get away with in interviews
for a more complete version see the More Advanced questions below.
4. Why do you need to add Noncontrolling Interests to Enterprise Value?
Whenever a company owns over 50% of another company, it is required to
report 100% of the financial performance of the other company as part of its own
performance.
So even though it doesnt own 100%, it reports 100% of the majority-owned
subsidiarys financial performance.
You must add the Noncontrolling Interest to get to Enterprise Value so that your
numerator and denominator both reflect 100% of the majority-owned subsidiary.
If you did not do that, the numerator would reflect less than 100% of the
company, but the denominator would reflect 100%.
5. How do you calculate diluted shares and Diluted Equity Value?
Take the basic share count and add in the dilutive effect of stock options and any
other dilutive securities, such as warrants, convertible debt, and convertible
preferred stock.
To calculate the dilutive effect of options and warrants, you use the Treasury
Stock Method (see the Calculations questions below).
6. Why do we bother calculating share dilution? Does it even make much of a
difference?
We do it for the same reason we calculate Enterprise Value: to more accurately
determine the cost of acquiring a company.
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Net Operating Losses Because you can use these to reduce future taxes;
may or may not be true depending on the company and deal.
Short-Term and Long-Term Investments Because theoretically you can
sell these off and get extra cash. May not be true if theyre illiquid.
Equity Investments Any investments in other companies where you
own between 20% and 50%; this one is also partially for comparability
purposes since revenue and profit from these investments shows up in the
companys Net Income, but not in EBIT, EBITDA, and Revenue (see the
Accounting section).
Capital Leases Like Debt, these have interest payments and may need to
be repaid.
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Theres no correct answer for which one to use here. Some people argue that
you should use Options Outstanding because typically, all non-exercisable
Options become exercisable in an acquisition, so thats the more accurate way to
view it.
Others argue that Options Exercisable is better because you dont know whether
or not the non-exercisable ones will become exercisable until the acquisition
happens.
However you treat it, you need to be consistent with all the companies you
analyze.
Calculation Questions
1. Lets say a company has 100 shares outstanding, at a share price of $10.00
each. It also has 10 options outstanding at an exercise price of $5.00 each what
is its Diluted Equity Value?
Its basic equity value is $1,000 (100 * $10 = $1,000). To calculate the dilutive effect
of the options, first you note that the options are all in-the-money their
exercise price is less than the current share price.
When these options are exercised, 10 new shares get created so the share count
is now 110 rather than 100.
However, that doesnt tell the whole story. In order to exercise the options, we
had to pay the company $5 for each option (the exercise price).
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In total, there are 1,100 additional shares outstanding. The diluted share count is
therefore 11,100.
The Diluted Equity Value is 11,100 * $20.00, or $222,000.
5. This same company also has Cash of $10,000, Debt of $30,000, and
Noncontrolling Interests of $15,000. What is its Enterprise Value?
You subtract the Cash, add the Debt, and then add Noncontrolling Interests:
Enterprise Value = $222,000 $10,000 + $30,000 + $15,000 = $257,000.
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