06 08 DCF Quiz Questions Basic PDF
06 08 DCF Quiz Questions Basic PDF
Answers in bold.
Table of Contents:
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d. Add together all the discounted cash flows to determine the NPV
i. Explanation: All of the above entail the steps necessary in
completing a DCF analysis. As mentioned before, the value of
the company consists of two components: ‘near future’ period
cash flows and ‘far future’ period cash flows. For the former we
can project these cash flows within a 5 to 10 year period. For the
latter, we need to approximate these cash flows by estimating
the Terminal Value. Once both ‘near future’ and ‘far future’ cash
flows are estimated, we calculate the appropriate discount rate
to determine their present values. Finally, once everything is
discounted to present value we add together the two figures to
obtain Enterprise (or Equity) value, depending on which type of
FCF we projected.
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4. All of the following equations below are the correct definition of Unlevered
Free Cash Flow (Free Cash Flow to Firm) EXCEPT:
a. EBIT * (1 – Tax Rate) + Non-Cash Charges – Change in Operating
Assets and Liabilities – CapEx
b. CFO + Net Interest Expense * (1 – Tax Rate) – CapEx
c. Net Income + Net Interest Expense * (1 – Tax Rate) + Non-Cash
Charges – Change in Operating Assets and Liabilities – CapEx
d. Net Income + Non-Cash Charges – Change in Operating Assets and
Liabilities – CapEx – Mandatory Debt Repayments
e. None of the above (i.e. these are all correct)
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is D. Unlevered Free
Cash Flow can be defined in more than one way, and answer
choices A, B, and C are all correct definitions of unlevered FCF.
Answer choice D, on the other hand, is NOT the definition of
Unlevered FCF but rather is the correct formula for Levered free
cash flow (since it includes interest payments and debt
repayment).
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8. All of the following are correct definitions of Levered Free Cash Flow (FCFE)
EXCEPT:
a. Net Income + Non-Cash Charges – Changes in Operating Assets and
Liabilities – CapEx – Mandatory Debt Repayments
b. (EBIT – Net Interest Expense) * (1 – Tax Rate) + Non-Cash Charges –
Changes in Operating Assets and Liabilities – CapEx – Mandatory
Debt Repayments
c. CFO – CapEx – Mandatory Debt Repayments
d. NOPAT + Non-Cash Charges – Changes in Operating Assets and
Liabilities – CapEx
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is D. Answer choices A
thru C are all correct, albeit slightly different, formulae that
result in Levered Free Cash Flow (FCFE). Answer choice D is a
trick question in that it substituted ‘NOPAT’ – namely, Net
Operating Profits After Tax – in place of the usual “EBIT * (1 –
tax rate)”; these two phrases are synonymous. The key mistake
with answer choice D is that the formula provided is for
unlevered – as opposed to levered – free cash flow, because
NOPAT excludes interest income and expense, as well as
mandatory debt repayments.
9. When calculating Unlevered Free Cash Flow (Free Cash Flow to Firm), all of
the following are “Non-Cash Charges” that need to be added back to EBIT *
(1 – Tax Rate) EXCEPT:
a. Depreciation & Amortization (D&A)
b. Stock-Based Compensation (SBC)
c. Goodwill Impairment Charges
d. Non-Cash Restructuring Charges
e. All of the charges above should be added back
i. Explanation: All of these constitute non-cash charges. D&A and
SBC are the most common ones that you see with 99% of all
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10. WACC should always be used as the Discount Rate, regardless of the type of
Free Cash Flow you’re using in a DCF analysis.
a. True
b. False
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is B. The weighted
average cost of capital – which includes both cost of equity and
cost of debt – should only be used when you’re using
Unlevered FCF as that cash flow is available to both debt and
equity investors. On the other hand, when calculating Levered
FCF one should use just the cost of equity (NOT WACC) to
discount such cash flows as they represent what is available
only to equity investors (i.e. they are after both interest expense
and debt repayments have been made).
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13. What does the “Cost of Equity” really mean? What does it actually “cost” a
company to issue equity to investors if there’s no interest expense or principal
repayment?
a. Dividend payments
b. After-tax dividend payments
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14. Which of the following inputs is NOT required to calculate Cost of Equity for
a company in the conventional way (i.e. by using the Capital Asset Pricing
Model)?
a. Expected yield on a 20-year US (or other government) Treasury Bond
b. Beta of the company’s stock (historical or estimated)
c. The difference between expected returns in the relevant stock market
index (e.g. the S&P 500 or the FTSE 100 in Europe) and a “risk-free”
Treasury Bond
d. None of the above – you need all of them to calculate Cost of Equity
i. Explanation: According to CAPM, Cost of Equity = Risk-free
rate + Equity Risk Premium * Beta. Answer choice A is a proxy
for the risk-free rate part of the formula (note: it doesn’t have to
be a 20 year Treasury...it could easily be a 10 year Treasury or
something else – this tends to be bank specific and group
specific). You also need Beta to measure the riskiness and
expected returns of the stock relative to the rest of the market,
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15. When calculating the Cost of Equity, we always need to go through the
process of un-levering Beta for each comparable company, finding the
median, and then re-levering based on the company’s own capital structure.
a. True
b. False
i. Explanation: There is no absolute requirement that you have to
do this, but it is the most common method for estimating Beta in
the Cost of Equity formula. The logic is that you get “more
accurate” numbers by factoring in the median “inherent
business risk” of all the comparable companies than you do by
only looking the riskiness of the company you’re valuing.
However, you could just use the historical Beta of the
company you’re valuing. It’s not necessarily “wrong,” and the
two numbers are often very close, especially in highly
fragmented markets with lots of similar competitors.
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17. When you discount Unlevered Free Cash Flows, you use Unlevered Beta in
the Cost of Equity calculation, but when you discount Levered Free Cash
Flows you use Levered Beta.
a. True
b. False
i. Explanation: This is a trick question intended to confuse you
and test whether you really understand the concepts. To
discount Unlevered FCF, you use WACC and to discount
Levered FCF you use Cost of Equity… but the Cost of Equity
calculation itself never changes regardless of which Discount
Rate you use. The reason it never changes is that Debt and
Equity both make an impact on the overall riskiness of a
company regardless of whether you’re looking at Unlevered or
Levered FCF. So effectively you always have to use Levered
Beta when calculating Cost of Equity – Unlevered Beta is just a
by-product of an intermediate step in the process.
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19. Consider the values for Beta listed below. With which value would a stock
move in the OPPOSITE direction from the overall market?
a. Beta = 1.0
b. Beta = 0.5
c. Beta = -1.0
d. Beta = 2.0
e. Beta = 0.0
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is C. The Beta of the
market as a whole is assumed to be 1.0, so answer choice A
would move directly in proportion to the overall market. A Beta
of less than 1.0 would indicate the stock is less volatile than the
market as a whole; however, the stock would still move in the
same direction as the overall market. The same applies for B
and D, only they move less or more in that same direction.
Answer E corresponds to a stock that is completely independent
of the overall market. Only a stock with a negative Beta would
move in the OPPOSITE direction as the overall market, thereby
making answer choice C the correct answer. Negative Betas are
theoretically possible, but are extremely rare to nonexistent for
normal stocks and you usually only see them for other types of
assets such as certain commodities.
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20. ACME Co. had a Cost of Equity of 11% before a prolonged recession began. If
all else remains equal and the company’s financial performance continues as
expected, what might its Cost of Equity change to once the recession starts?
a. 13%
b. 9%
c. 11% – No changes
d. Impossible to say without knowing its capital structure
i. Explanation: Think about the individual components here: Cost
of Equity = Risk-Free Rate + Equity Risk Premium * Beta. It is
reasonable to assume that the risk-free rate (as measured by the
rate on a long dated Treasury bond) would drop once the
economy enters into a recession. However, the other two
components of Cost of Equity would almost certainly increase
more than enough to offset the drop in risk-free rate – because
in a recession, stocks fluctuate far more and investors become
willing to pay a premium for superior performance and returns.
There’s another way to think about this as well: in a recession,
all else being equal, does a company’s Equity Value increase or
decrease? Since 99% of companies’ stock prices decline,
resulting in lower Equity Values, that implies that the Cost of
Equity has increased since that’s what you use when
discounting cash flows in a Levered DCF to arrive at Equity
Value. D is incorrect because Debt and Preferred Stock do not
affect Cost of Equity, only WACC.
Terminal Value
21. You are valuing ACME Co., a highly cyclical basic materials manufacturer.
You have calculated the Unlevered Free Cash Flows for the next five years.
Now you need to calculate the Terminal Value. Currently the sector is in an
“expansion” phase where valuations tend to be higher, but in 6 years you
expect the market to reverse and enter the “contraction” phase of the cycle.
Which method should you use to calculate ACME Co.’s Terminal Value?
a. Terminal Multiple Method
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23. ACME Co. is based in the US or another developed country with a long-term
GDP growth rate of 2-3%. Historically, ACME Co. has grown its Free Cash
Flow year-over-year by over 10%. You have projected the Free Cash Flows for
the next 5 years and are using the Gordon Growth method to calculate its
Terminal Value. ACME Co. has consistently outperformed its peers and is
ahead of every other company in the industry by a longshot. What would be
a reasonable assumption for the long-term growth rate you use when
calculating Terminal Value in the DCF?
a. 2-3%
b. 9-10%
c. 5-7%
d. Unable to determine this without looking at FCF growth from peer
companies
i. Explanation: Regardless of how quickly the company has
grown historically, you should never use a long-term growth
rate far in excess of the country’s GDP growth rate or the rate of
inflation. Think about the math for a second there: if you
assume that the company grows faster than the economy as a
whole far into the future, eventually the company itself will be
bigger than the economy of the entire country, which is
impossible. So 9-10% is far too high, and even 5-7% is too high.
2-3% is more reasonable because that is in-line with the
country’s GDP growth rate. D is incorrect because we know that
the company has outperformed its peers, so getting their FCF
growth rates would not make a big difference here.
24. When using the Terminal Multiple method to determine Terminal Value,
how should you determine the appropriate range of multiples to use in the
analysis?
a. Base it on the range of multiples for the Public Comps
b. Base it on the range of multiples for the Precedent Transactions
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c. Base it on the range of multiples for the Public Comps, but use
slightly lower multiples to account for the fact that multiples decline
over time
d. You should come up with reasonable long-term growth rate
assumptions first, use the Gordon Growth Method, and then work
backwards to come up with the equivalent multiples.
i. Explanation: B is incorrect because multiples tend to be higher-
than-normal for Precedent Transactions since buyers must pay a
control premium when acquiring sellers, and in a DCF analysis
we want to be as conservative as possible. A is the right idea,
but we want to be even more conservative than that to account
for the fact that valuation multiples will decline into the future
as companies grow and earn higher revenue and EBITDA, so C
is the best option here. D is not “wrong,” but you would use the
method in D if you already have the Terminal Value via the
Gordon Growth method and you want to double-check your
work by seeing what the implied valuation multiples are.
25. The Gordon Growth method for calculating Terminal Value can always be
used as a substitute to the Terminal Multiple method in all situations.
a. True
b. False
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is B. Most of the time,
either method can be used and in practice you can move from
one to the other by working backwards. However, given the
way the mathematics of the Gordon Growth Model (GGM) are
set up, if the Discount Rate happens to be lower than the
terminal period growth rate, the GGM will produce a negative
value for Terminal Value (as the denominator would result in a
negative number), thereby making the value meaningless.
Another scenario that can render the GGM less meaningful is
when the difference between the Discount Rate and the
perpetuity growth rate is big; in this scenario, you would get
outsized Terminal Values. Finally, if you lack sufficient
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26. Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding the ‘intuition’ behind
Terminal Value when calculated using the Gordon Growth method?
a. It represents the present value of Free Cash Flows generated into
perpetuity
b. It represents the ‘capitalized’ value of ongoing Free Cash Flow
generation at a constant growth rate into infinity
c. Given a constant cash payment received and required return rate on
our part, it represents the amount we can “afford” to pay up front now
for future steam of cash (e.g. we can pay $100 now if we’re aiming for a
10% return over 5 years from a set of cash flows)
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is D. All of the above
statements are true reflections of the ‘intuition’ behind the
Gordon Growth Method (GGM) of calculating Terminal Value
(TV). Basically the GGM is a mathematical simplification to a
complex problem of having to project Free Cash Flows beyond
our 5-year projection period. As described in the DCF Guide,
these Free Cash Flows into perpetuity represent a ‘geometric
series’ in which we can determine the value of that entire stream
of FCF in the ‘far future’ period by applying the GGM formula.
The GGM formula is Yr. 5 FCF * (1 + Growth Rate) / (Discount
Rate – Growth Rate). Mathematically, what this formula is
doing is taking the final period FCF projected and growing it by
the steady state growth rate. It then takes that figure and
‘capitalizes’ it by dividing by the appropriate discount rate less
that same steady state growth rate. The concept is difficult to
grasp at first but it is basically a mathematical ‘short-cut’
solution to the messy problem of projecting FCF from year 5 to
infinity. If you look at the questions and answers included in
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27. You’ve calculated the present value of Terminal Value and the present value
of Free Cash Flows in a DCF. Which of the following values would be LEAST
likely for the Present Value of Terminal Value as a percentage of Enterprise
Value?
a. 10%
b. 75%
c. 50%
d. 90%
i. Explanation: Most often in a DCF analysis, the present value of
the Terminal Value comprises a huge percentage of the
company’s implied Enterprise Value. Percentages of up to 75%
and even beyond that, up to 90%, are not unusual. In fact,
sometimes bankers go back and modify assumptions if the
value there is too high. 10% would be very unusual and the least
likely outcome here, because effectively it’s saying that 90% of a
company’s value comes from the next 5 years, but only 10% of
its value comes from Year 6 into infinity – which doesn’t make
intuitive sense. This percentage is almost always at least 50%,
and sometimes much higher than that.
28. When calculating Terminal Value, how can you check your calculations and
ensure that the number you’ve calculated is not completely wrong?
a. Use both the Terminal Multiple method and Gordon Growth method
and compare the numbers
b. Work backwards to determine the implied Long-Term growth rate,
based on the Terminal Value calculated with the Multiples method
c. Work backwards to determine implied Terminal EBITDA multiple,
based on the Terminal Value calculated with the Gordon Growth
method
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29. Assume ACME Co. has a 10% revenue growth rate over a 5-year period, and
a WACC of 10%. Which will have a bigger impact in a DCF: reducing the
revenue growth rate to 9% or reducing WACC to 9%?
a. Reducing revenue growth by 1%, to 9% rather than 10%
b. Reducing WACC by 1%, to 9% rather than 10%
c. Both will have same effect
d. It’s impossible to guess without additional information
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is B. The key concept
here is that even small changes in the discount rate will have an
enormous impact on the model, much more so than small
changes in revenue growth. In terms of valuation, a reduced
WACC has a much greater effect on total value than a 100 basis
point drop in revenue growth rate, because the latter will affect
our Free Cash Flow calculations slightly, whereas the lower
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30. Assume ACME Co. has a revenue growth rate of 10% over a 5-year period
and a Cost of Equity of 10%. Which will have a greater impact on Equity
Value: reducing the revenue growth rate TO 1% or reducing the Cost of
Equity TO 9%?
a. Reducing the revenue growth rate TO 1%
b. Reducing the Cost of Equity TO 9%
c. It depends on the company in question
d. You can’t determine the impact with Cost of Equity, only with WACC
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is A. In this case, we are
reducing the revenue growth rate by 90% versus only lowering
the Cost of Equity (aka ‘discount rate’) by 10%. In this scenario
the final Equity Value would most likely be impacted more by
the revenue growth rate reduction because that lower revenue
growth rate affects Free Cash Flows over the near future period
as well as the Terminal Value. Normally, the discount rate tends
to have a bigger impact, but when you’re looking at a 90%
change in revenue growth vs. a 10% change in the discount rate,
the revenue growth rate change will almost always have a
bigger impact. It would be much tougher to assess if it were,
say, a 40% change in revenue growth vs. a 20% change in the
discount rate, and in that case it really could go either way. D is
incorrect because it’s clear that we’re using a Levered FCF
analysis here due to the “Equity Value” reference, so WACC
isn’t even relevant.
31. Assume ACME Co. is financed 100% with equity and decides to change its
capital structure to 90% equity and 10% debt. What would happen to its
overall WACC?
a. WACC would decrease
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32. Assume ACME Co. is financed 100% with equity and decides to recapitalize
itself to have 25% debt and 75% equity in its capital structure. What would
happen to the Cost of Equity?
a. Cost of Equity would decrease
b. Cost of Equity would increase
c. Cost of Equity would stay the same since it’s not dependent on the
capital structure or the amount of debt the company has
d. Need more information to determine the answer
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is B. Think about the
formula for Cost of Equity: Risk-Free Rate + Equity Risk
Premium * Levered Beta. The Risk-Free Rate and Equity Risk
Premium would not change here. However, Levered Beta
would increase if the company raises additional Debt because
its overall risk is higher. And yes, the normal equity investors
(shareholders) are still impacted by Debt because it increases
risk for them as well: the company has a higher chance of going
bankrupt, for example. So C is incorrect because Cost of Equity
IS, in fact, impacted by capital structure. A is incorrect because
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33. Company A and B generate the same total Free Cash Flow over 5 years. But
Company A generates 90% of its FCFs in the initial 2 years, whereas
Company B generates 20% in each year. Assuming the same discount rate,
which company’s FCFs have a higher NPV?
a. Company A
b. Company B
c. Both have the same NPV
d. It depends on the discount rate – you can’t tell with the information
given
i. Explanation: The correct answer choice is A. The concept here is
that Free Cash Flows generated earlier are worth more than the
same amount generated in later periods. This comes back to the
time value of money: money today is worth more than money
tomorrow because you could re-invest money today and earn
interest on it. In a DCF context, if both companies have identical
cash flows but one produces higher cash flows upfront, the
NPV of those cash flows will be higher because cash flows in
earlier periods have less of a discount applied. D is incorrect
because the discount rate is irrelevant as long as you’re using
the same rate for both companies – this is about the concept of
the time-value of money, not the specific numbers.
34. Now let’s extend this same scenario. Which company would MOST likely
have the higher Terminal Value in a DCF analysis under the same conditions?
a. Company A
b. Company B
c. Can’t tell without additional information
d. Both would have the same Terminal Value since the total FCFs for each
one are the same
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