Chapter One: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin © The Mcgraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2007 All Rights Reserved
Chapter One: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin © The Mcgraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2007 All Rights Reserved
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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Litigants
Disputes over value in the firm
Debt Investors
Probability of default Determination of lending rates Covenant violations
Customers
Security of supply
Governments
Policy making Regulation Taxation Government contracting
Management
Strategic planning Investment in operations Evaluation of subordinates
Competitors
Employees
Security and remuneration
Passive investing
Accept market price as value: no analysis
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Fundamental analysis
Requires work !
Prudence requires analysis: a defense against paying the wrong price (or selling at the wrong price)
The Defensive Investor
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Alpha technologies:
Passive investment needs a beta technology (except for index investing) Active investing needs a beta and an alpha technology
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What is a normal return for risk? A technology for pricing risk (asset pricing model) is needed
Premium for risk = Risk premium on risk factors x sensitivity to risk factors
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*
**
Source: Stocks bonds Bills and Inflation 1998 Yearbook, (Chicago: Ibbotson Associates, 1998).
Summary of Annual Returns on Stocks, Bonds, Treasury Bills and Changes in the Consumer Price Index, 1926-1995
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Fundamental Risk and Price Risk Fundamental risk is the risk that results from business operations Price risk is the risk of trading at the wrong price
Paying too much
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Investing in a Business
Operating Activities
Financing Activities
Investing Activities
Business investment and the firm: value is surrendered by investors to the firm, the firm adds or losses value, and value is returned to investors. Financial statements inform about the investments. Investors trade in capital markets on the basis of information on financial statements
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Business Activities Financing Activities: Raising cash from investors and returning cash to investors Investing Activities: Investing cash raised from investors in operational assets Operating Activities: Utilizing investments to produce and sell products
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The inside analyst evaluates plans to invest within the firm to generate value The outside analyst values the firm. The inside analyst values strategies for the firm.
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Value-Based Management
Test strategic ideas to see if they generate value
1. Develop strategic ideas and plans 2. Forecast payoffs from the strategy 3. Use forecasted payoffs to discover value creation
Applications:
Corporate strategy Mergers & acquisitions Buyouts & spinoffs Restructurings Capital budgeting
Manage implemented strategies by examining decisions in terms of the value added Reward managers based on value added
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Marketing process
Distribution channels Supplier network Cost structure Economies of scale
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Knowing the Business: Know the Political, Legal and Regulatory Environment
The firms political influence Legal constraints on the firm including the antitrust law, consumer law, labor law and environment law Regulatory constraints on the firm including product and price regulations Taxation of the business The firms ethical charter and the propensity for violating it Corporate governance mechanisms
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Classifying and Ordering Information Dont Mix What You Know With Speculation Order information in terms of how concrete it is: Separate concrete information from speculative information
Anchoring Valuation in the Financial Statements Value = Anchor + Extra Value For example,
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II III IV V
Analyzing Information Forecasting and Valuation Accounting Analysis Cost of Capital and Risk
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Sneak Preview
Dividend Capitalization:
P0
d1
d2
2 E
d3
3 E
....
Accounting:
Bt Bt 1 earnt dt
2 E
...
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0
180.00%
Forecast Period
4 Years
160.00%
140.00%
120.00%
100.00%
80.00%
60.00%
40.00%
20.00%
0.00%
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
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0
180.00%
Forecast Period
176.20%
4 Years
160.00%
140.00%
120.00%
100.00%
80.00%
63.30%
60.00%
40.00%
20.00%
10.30%
0.00%
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
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0
180.00%
Forecast Period
176.20%
4 Years
160.00%
140.00%
120.00%
100.00%
80.00%
63.30%
60.00%
40.00%
20.00%
10.30%
0.00%
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
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0
180.00%
Forecast Period
176.20%
4 Years
160.00%
140.00%
120.00%
100.00%
80.00%
63.30%
60.00%
40.00%
20.00%
10.30%
0.00%
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
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0
180.00%
Forecast Period
176.20%
4 Years
160.00%
140.00%
120.00%
100.00%
66.30%
80.00%
76.50%
60.00%
40.00%
16.70%
20.00%
10.30%
6.10%
0.00%
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
Dividends
Cash Flows
Residual Earnings
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CURRENT AND PAST FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (analysis of information, trends, comparisons, etc.)
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Cost of Capital
Cost of Capital
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Course Materials
Text Book:
Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation Third Edition by Stephen Penman)
Course Notes
on website
Accounting Clinics
on website
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A text on US GAAP:
Keiso, Weygandt, and Warfield, Intermediate Accounting, Wiley, 11th Edition, 2003.
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