II. The Two-Stage FCFE Model
II. The Two-Stage FCFE Model
The Model
The value of any stock is the present value of the FCFE per year for the
extraordinary growth period plus the present value of the terminal price at the end of the
period.
= PV of FCFE + PV of terminal price
Value FCFE t Pn
=∑ +
(1 + k e ) (1 + k e )n
t
where,
FCFEt = Free Cashflow to Equity in year t
Pn = Price at the end of the extraordinary growth period
ke = Cost of equity in high growth (hg) and stable growth (st) periods
The terminal price is generally calculated using the infinite growth rate model,
FCFE n +1
Pn =
r − gn
where,
gn = Growth rate after the terminal year forever.
The beta and debt ratio may also need to be adjusted in stable growth to reflect the
fact that stable growth firms tend to have average risk (betas closer to one) and use more
debt than high growth firms.
equity will be 15% in stable growth, the equity reinvestment rate would need to
be:
Equity reinvestment rate = g/ ROE = 5%/15% = 33.33%
Net Capital expenditures in year 6 = Equity reinvestment rate * Earnings per
share
= 0.3333* $ 6.53 = $2.18
FCFE in year 6 = $6.53 - $2.18 = $4.35
Estimates
We will begin by estimating the cost of equity for Nestle during the high growth
period in Swiss francs. We will use the 10-year Swiss Government Sfr bond rate of 4% as
the riskfree rate. To estimate the risk premium, we used the breakdown of Nestle’s
revenues by region in Table 14.4.
Table 14.4: Risk Premium for Nestle: Regional Breakdown
Region Revenues Weight Risk Premium
North America 20.21 24.82% 4.00%
South America 4.97 6.10% 12.00%
Switzerland 1.27 1.56% 4.00%
Germany/France/UK 21.25 26.10% 4.00%
Italy/Spain 7.39 9.08% 5.50%
Asia 6.70 8.23% 9.00%
Rest of W. Europe 15.01 18.44% 4.00%
Eastern Europe 4.62 5.67% 8.00%
Total 81.42 100.00% 5.26%
The risk premiums for each region represent an average of the risk premiums of the
countries in the region. Using a bottom-up beta of 0.85 for Nestle, we estimated a cost of
equity of
Cost of Equity = 4% + 0.85 (5.26%) = 8.47%
To estimate the expected growth rate in free cash flows to equity, we first computed the
free cash flows to equity in the current year.
FCFE
= Net Income-(Cap Ex – Depreciation) – Change in working capital + Net Debt Issues
= 5763 – (5058 –3330) –368 + 272 = Sfr 3,939 million
23
Valuation
The first component of value is the present value of the expected FCFE during the
high growth period, assuming earnings, net capital expenditures and working capital grow
at 7.27% and33.92 % of reinvestment needs come from debt:
Table 14.5: Estimated Free Cash Flows to Equity: Nestle
Earnings Change in Equity
per Net Cap Working Reinvestment Present
Year Share Ex/Share Capital/share Reinvestment/share Share FCFE/share Value
1 159.12 47.71 10.89 58.60 38.72 120.39 110.99
2 170.69 51.18 11.68 62.86 41.54 129.15 109.76
3 183.10 54.90 12.53 67.44 44.56 138.54 108.55
24
Note that the change in working capital each year is computed based upon the current
working capital of Sfr 149.74 per share. The present value of FCFE is computed using the
cost of equity of 8.47%.
To estimate the terminal value, we first estimate the free cash flows to equity in
year 11.
Expected Earnings per share in year 11 = EPS10 (1 + g ) = 299.32(1.04) = 311.30
The stock was trading 3390 Sfr per share in May 2001, at the time of this valuation.
25
.FCFE2st..xls: This spreadsheet allows you to value a firm with a temporary period
of high growth in FCFE, followed by stable growth.
Keeping all of our other assumptions intact, this results in an increase in the estimated
value of equity per share to 4144 Sfr per share.