Finance 8 - Part 2
Value of stock today
P0 - the PV of the dividend to be received in the first year (D1) plus the PV of the expected sales price in one year, P1
today's value =
PV of next year's dividend and price
PS pays
a constant dividend - Because the dividend does not change, the PS can be valued using the constant growth rate model with a zero growth rate expressed as P = D/I.
G2
a few years from now when we expect the firm to grow at a slower but more sustainable rate of growth
P/E model: relative value
a stock's pricey-ness measured relative to other stocks.
dividend discount model
a valuation approach based on future dividend income • Provides a useful theoretical basis because it illustrates the importance of dividends as a fundamental stock price determinant
constant-growth model
a valuation method based on constantly growing dividends. - Assumes that the growth rate is smaller than the discount rate. (Gordon growth model)
variable growth rate
a valuation technique used when a firm's current growth rate is expected to change some time in the future - combines PV cash flow and CGR model
PS prices thus tend to act like
bond prices. when interest rate rises, PS prices fall
growth stocks
companies expected to have above-average rates of growth in revenue, earnings and or dividends - People become too concerned with these, but they do not pay dividends and therefore are missing out on an important source of stable returns
CGR model does not work for
companies where g > 1
P/E ratio
current stock price divided by four quarters or earnings per share. - Represents the most common valuation yardstick in the investment industry.
expected return comes from
dividend yield and expected appreciation of the stock price (capital gain)
G1
first and higher growth rate which we expect to only last a few years
process
investor chooses two different growth rates for two stages of the analysis
difficult to apply this because
it requires that they estimate an infinite number of future dividends. • To use this model in practice, analysts make simplifying assumptions to make the model workable.
Dividend yield
last four quarters of dividend income expressed as a percentage of the current stock price. - higher for PS than CS because PS investors should expect a return from dividend payments only
using a longer holding period to estimate stock value
reduces some, but not all of the uncertainty - a 2 year holding period would be equal to today's stock value today's value = PV of next year's dividend, the second yrs dividend and the future price
focus on
stage 2 as long as G2 < 1, stage 2 can use the growth rate model in this case, change in dividend rate occurs in year 1 so we will use the value from year n
discount rate
used should reflect the investment risk level - high risk investments should be evaluated using higher interest rates
preferred stock
• A class of stock with fixed dividends. • Higher priority for receiving proceeds from bankruptcy proceedings than do common stockholders.
investors uses several methods to estimate a firm's growth rate for this model
They can project the dividend trend into the future and determine the implied growth rate - compute the past growth rate - or even consider a financial analyst's growth rate predictions.
we then
calculate each of the dividends
PS is largely
owned by other companies, rather than individual investors, because its dividends are mostly nontaxable income. - Don't have voting rights like CS, which prevents one company from controlling another through PS ownership
the zero growth rate version of the constant growth valuation model shows
that, since dividends are fixed, a PS price changes because of changes in the discount rate, i.
trailing P/E ratio
the P/E ratio computed using the past four quarters of earnings per share.
one way of determining what return stock investors require from a stock is to use
the constant growth rate model. - If the current stock price fairly reflects its value, then the discount rate should be the expected return for the stock.
one common assumption
the firm has a constant dividend growth rate, g. - If this is the case, next year's dividend is simply this year's dividend that grew one year at the growth rate.