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Lecture14 PDF

This document provides an overview of equity valuation models including dividend discount models and their limitations when valuing growth companies that do not pay dividends. It discusses different types of equity including common and preferred stock. It also covers the constant growth dividend discount model and multi-stage growth models as well as issues that arise when applying dividend discount models to companies that engage in share repurchases instead of dividends.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views23 pages

Lecture14 PDF

This document provides an overview of equity valuation models including dividend discount models and their limitations when valuing growth companies that do not pay dividends. It discusses different types of equity including common and preferred stock. It also covers the constant growth dividend discount model and multi-stage growth models as well as issues that arise when applying dividend discount models to companies that engage in share repurchases instead of dividends.

Uploaded by

kate ng
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FE 445 – Investment Analysis and Portfolio

Management
Fall 2020

Farzad Saidi

Boston University | Questrom School of Business


Lecture 14: Dividend discount
models
Equity basics

Definition of equity:

• Issued by corporations
• Public: traded on exchange
• Private: closely held, including private equity
• Residual claim on company cash flow: limited liability

Different from non-corporate business (proprietor):

• Equity allows for more risk taking


• Equity allows for companies to be widely held

1
Common vs. preferred stock

Common stock:

• Owner of company with voting rights


• Stockholders elect board of directors
• Proxy votes: someone can vote for you
• Management might own quite a bit of the company

Preferred stock:

• No voting rights
• Fixed dividend senior to common stock dividends
⇒ like a perpetuity (infinite lifetime bond)
• Embedded options: callable

2
Dividends

• DIV = 4 × last quarterly dividend


• Dividend yield = D/P(annual)
• Many companies do not pay dividends

3
Models of equity valuation

Fundamental stock analysis:

• Basic types of models to compute prices


• Balance sheet models
• Dividend discount models
• Free cash flow models
• Find relative bargains using comparables
• P/E ratios or other ratios using sales, etc.

Company data on the internet:

• SEC filings: www.sec.gov/edgar.shtml


• finance.yahoo.com

4
Balance sheet methods

Book value ⇒ benchmark only

• Value of common equity on the balance sheet


• Based on historical values of assets and liabilities
• May not reflect current values
• Assets such as brand name not on a balance sheet

Liquidation value

• Amount realized from sale of assets net of debt


• Floor to market value
• Becomes takeover target if valued less than this

5
Balance sheet methods

Replacement cost method:


Market value
Tobin’s Q =
Replacement cost

• Use replacement cost of the assets less the liabilities


• Q should tend toward 1 over time
• Ceiling on market value in the long run
• Q > 1 will attract new entrants into the market
• Can you easily build a similar company?

6
Required return

Expected return:
Cash dividends and capital gains or losses

E (D1 ) + (E (P1 ) − P0 )
E (r ) = E (HPR) =
P0
Required return or market capitalization rate:
According to the CAPM

k = rf + β (E (rM ) − rf )

If the stock is priced correctly, then

E (r ) = k

7
Intrinsic value

Intrinsic value: V0

• Discounted PV of expected cash flow from stock


• For a one year holding period:

E (D1 ) + E (P1 )
V0 =
1+k

• Cash flows: dividend D1 and resale price P1


• Value is ex-dividend: D0 has already been paid

Remarks:

• If V 0 > P0, buy stock


• If V 0 < P0, sell stock
• In efficient markets, stock is fairly priced: V0 = P0

8
Example: intrinsic value

You expect the price of ABC stock to be $59.77 next year. Its current
market price is $50, and you expect the dividend next year to be $2.15

a) If the stock has a beta of 1.15, the risk-free rate is 6% per year and
the expected rate of return on the market portfolio is 14% per year,
what is the required rate of return on ABC?
b) What is the intrinsic value of ABC and how does it compare to the
current market price?

9
Dividend discount model

Assumption:

• Markets are efficient all the time: V = P


• Allows us to plug in the following for P1 :
E (D2 ) + E (P2 )
E (P1 ) = V1 =
1+k
This yields:
E (D1 ) + E (P1 ) E (D1 ) E (D2 ) E (P2 )
V0 = = + 2 + 2
1+k 1+k (1 + k) (1 + k)
General dividend discount model: Do the above steps indefinitely

X E (Dt )
V0 = t
t=1
(1 + k)

Problem: intractable, so need further assumptions


10
No-growth model

Assumption:

• Constant dividends D over time:


D
V0 =
k
• Expected return k and value (price) inversely related

Example:

• Preferred stock: D= $2.00 and k=10%


• In practice, we have to adjust price for the value of embedded
options.

11
Microsoft dividends

0.45

0.4

0.35

0.3
in USD

0.25

0.2

0.15

0.1

0.05
Jan2005 Jul2007 Jan2010 Jul2012 Jan2015 Jul2017

• You can get dividends under “Historical Prices:”


finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=MSFT+Historical+Prices
• Microsoft started paying dividends in 2005
12
Constant-growth model

Assumption:

• Dividends expected to grow at rate g forever:

Dt = Dt−1 × (1 + g ) = D0 × (1 + g )t

Constant growth DDM:

• Assume k > g :

D0 × (1 + g ) D1
V0 = =
k −g k −g

13
Examples

• D0 = $2.00, β = 1, E (rM ) = 10%, r = 2% and g = 4%


• What is the intrinsic value?
• k = .........
• V0 = . . . . . . . . .
• What if β = 1.2 (riskier firm)?
• k = .........
• V0 = . . . . . . . . .
• Are riskier firms worth more or less? . . . . . . . . .
• What if β = 1 but growth increases to g = 5%?
• V0 = . . . . . . . . .
• Higher growth makes the firm worth more or less?

14
Multi-stage growth models

• Over a firm’s life cycle, growth rates usually vary


• Two-stage growth model
• Plug Dt and PT into:
T
X Dt 1
V0 = t + P
T T
t=1
(1 + k) (1 + k)

to yield:
T
X (1 + g1 )t 1 DT (1 + g2 )
V0 = D0 + ×
t=1
(1 + k)t (1 + k)T k − g2

• g1 = first growth rate


• g2 = second growth rate
• T = number of periods of growth at g1

15
Example

• D0 = $2.00
• k = 15%
• Growth g1 = 20% up to year T = 3 then slows to g2 = 5%
• What is the value of the company?
• Thus dividends are:

D1 = ......... D2 = . . . . . . . . .
D3 = ......... D4 = . . . . . . . . .
V0 = .........

16
Problem with the DDM

• Do companies always pay dividends?


• Growth firms usually do not pay dividends
• Share repurchases: use earnings not reinvested to buy back your own
shares and then “shred them”
• The reverse of issuing equity (raising capital)
• Cash is only returned to those selling the stock
• If you keep your share, you own a larger and larger fraction of the
company

Problem: If stock never pays dividends, DDM claims V = 0

17
Equity repurchases vs. dividends

B. Larrain and M. Yogo: “Does firm value move too much to be justified
by subsequent changes in cash flow?” Journal of Financial Economics
(2008)

18
Possible solutions

• Value the whole company


• Treat share repurchases as “dividends”
• Divide value by number of shares to get price per share
• Free cash flow model
• Replace dividends by free cash-flow to equity: FCFE
• Firms finance dividends and repurchases from FCFE
• FCFE is cash flow available to shareholders after:
• Taxes
• Net payments to debtholders
• Investments

19
So how do I value a company?

In theory:

• All valuation models should give you the same value if all
assumptions are right

In practice:

• Various approaches often differ substantially


• Calculate it different ways
• Get a plausible range of values
• All models use simplifying assumptions:
• Think deeply about which are the most reasonable
• No model assumption will be correct exactly

⇒ Equity valuation is more “art” than science

20
Summary

This class:

• Calculate P for dividend paying stocks

Next class:

• Price-earnings ratios
• Look at the aggregate stock market

21

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