Question 1
Question 1
Question 1
The following are earnings and dividend forecasts made at the end of 2012 for a
firm with $20.00 book value per common share at that time. The firm has a
required equity return of 10 percent per year.
a. Forecast return of common equity (ROCE) and residual earnings for each year,
2013- 2015.
b. Based on your forecasts, do you think this firm is worth more or less than book
value? Why?
Question 2
The following are ROCE forecasts made for a firm at the end of 2010.
ROCE is expected to continue at the same level after 2013. The firm reported book
value of common equity of $3.2 billion at the end of 2010, with 500 million shares
outstanding. If the required equity return is 12 percent, what is the per-share value of
these shares?
Question 3
An analyst presents you with the following pro forma (in millions of dollars) that
gives her forecast of earnings and dividends for 2013-2017. She asks you to value the
1,380 million shares outstanding at the end of 2012, when common shareholders'
equity stood at $4,310 million. Use a required return for equity of 10 percent in your
calculations.
a. Forecast book value, return on common equity (ROCE), and residual earnings for
each of the years 2013- 2017.
b. Forecast growth rates for book value and residual earnings for each of the years
2014- 2017.
c. Calculate the per-share value of the equity from this pro forma. Would you call
this a Case 1, 2, or 3 valuation?
d. What is the premium over book value given by your calculation? What is the P/B
ratio?
Question 4
The following forecasts of earnings per share (EPS) and dividend per share (DPS)
were made at the end of 2012 for a firm with a book value per share of $22.00:
a. Calculate the residual earnings that are forecast for each year, 2013 to 2017.
b. What is the per-share value of the equity at the end of 2012 based on the residual
income valuation model?
c. What is the forecasted per-share value of the equity at the end of the year 2017?
Question 5
Black Hills Corporation is a diversified energy corporation and a public utility holding
company. The following gives the firm's earnings per share and dividends per share
for the years 2000-2004.
Suppose these numbers were given to you at the end of 1999, as forecasts, when the
book value per share was $9.96, as indicated. Use a required return of 11 percent for
calculations below.
a. Calculate residual earnings and return of common equity (ROCE) for each year,
2000-2004.
Question 6
In September 2008 the shares of Dell, Inc., the computer maker, traded at $20.50
each. In its last annual report, Dell had reported book value of $3,735 million with
2,060 million shares outstanding. Analysts were forecasting earnings per share of
$1.47 for fiscal year 2009 and $1.77 for 2010 Dell pays no dividends. Calculate the
per-share value of Dell in 2008 based on the analysts' forecasts, with an additional
forecast that residual earnings will grow at the anticipated GDP growth rate of 4
percent per year after 20l0. Use a required return of 10 percent.
Question 7
In April 2005, General Motors traded at $28 per share on book value of $49 per share.
Analysts were estimating that GM would earn 69 cents per share for the year ending
December 2005. The firm was paying an annual dividend at the time of $2.00 per
share.
a. Calculate the price-to-book ratio (P/B) and the return on common equity (ROCE)
that analysts were forecasting for 2005.
c. An analyst trumpeted the high dividend yield as a reason to buy the stock.
(Dividend yield is dividend/price.) "A dividend yield of over 7 percent is too juicy to
pass up," he claimed. Would you rather focus on the ROCE or on the dividend yield?
Answer :
1. a. Given Book Value = $20.00 Required Equity Return = 10% We know, Residual
Incomet, RIt = EPSt - ROE x Bt-1 RI2010 = 3.0 - 0.1 x B2009 = 3.0 - 0.1x20 = 3.0 - 2.0
=$1.0 B2010 = Opening
b.
2.
a. Forecasted book values, ROCE, and residual earnings are given in the
completed pro forma above. Book value each year is the prior book value
plus earnings and minus dividends for the year. So, for 2014 for example,
The starting book value (in 2012) is 4,310. Residual earnings for each year
is earnings charged with the required return in book value. So, for 2014,
c. The growth rate in residual earnings is 5% after 2015. Assuming this growth
rate will continue into the future, the valuation is a Case 3 valuation with the
d.
(d) The expected premium at 2017E is zero because subsequent residual income
is expected to be zero. Knowing this, you can calculate the expected price at
2017E as equal to the expected book value at that date: $35.42. This is a
(e) The dividend discount formula can be applied because we now have a basis
for calculating its terminal value. The terminal value is the expected terminal
price, and this can be calculated at the end of 2014E because, at this point,
TV2002 = 27.60
Note that, as price is expected to equal book value at the end of 2014E, then we can
also get the current value by taking the present value of the cum-dividend terminal
book value:
As
V1999E = Cum-dividend 2001 value/1.122
and as
then
PV = 29.72/1.122 = 23.69
6. The pro forma for 2009 and 2010 and the value it implies is as follows :
2008 2009 2010
EPS 1.47 1.77
DPS 0.00 0.00
BPS 1.813 3.283 5.053
RE (10%) 1.289 1.442
Discount rate 1.10 1.21
PV of RE 1.172 1.192
Total PV to 2010 2.364
Continuing value 24.99
1.442 x 1.04
1.10 – 1.04
PV of continuing value 20.66
Value per share 24.84
Note: BPS at the end of fiscal-year 2008 = $3,735/2,060 shares = $1.813.