MGMT 310 Exam 2 Review
Depreciation
- Non-cash expense - Add back when computing operating cash flow - Does impact taxes, relevant for capital budgeting
Constant dividend growth
A (risky) growing perpetuity
Price = Benchmark PE * EPS = 2.08 * 12.7 = $26.42
A tech company has an earnings per share of $2.08. The tech industry as a whole has a price-to-earnings ratio of 12.7. Based on this information, what do you estimate the price of the company's shares should be?
NPV = -500,000 + 200,000/1.12 + 200,000/1.12^2 + 200,000/1.12^3 = -19,634
An investment project has the following cash flows: CF0 = -500,000; CF1, CF2, CF3 = 200,000 (e.g., upfront cost of -500,000 and cash flows of $200,000 in years 1, 2, and 3). If the required rate of return is 12%, what decision should be made using NPV?
Coupon
Ana just received the semiannual payment of $35 on a bond sheowns. This is called the ______ payment. - Coupon - Face value - Discount - Call premium - Yield
Annuities are investments that make payments for a set duration of time. Perpetuities are investments that make payments indefinitely
Annuity vs perpetuity
Constant dividend growth: Pt = D1 / (R - g) = $12.5 billion / (10% - 5%) = $250 billion
Apple is expected to pay a dividend of $12.5 billion next year. Furthermore, its dividends are forecasted to grow at 5% per year for the foreseeable future. Assuming a constant expected return of 10% per year, what should Apple be worth today?
Standalone principle
Assumption that evaluation of a project is based on the project's incremental cash flows
A decrease in all stock values
Based on the Gordon Growth model: if you expect the market rate of return to increase across the board for all equity securities, you should also expect: • An increase in all stock values • All stock values to remain constant • A decrease in all stock values
fall
Bond prices ____ when interest rates rise
rise
Bond prices fall when interest rates ____
OCF - NCS - Change in NWC
CFFA formula
New equipment cash flow - counterfactual cash flow
Calculate incremental cash flow
Irrelevant cash flows
Cash flows that would occur regardless of standalone principle
No, it is a sunk cost
Cerda Diagnostics spent $5,000 last week repairing equipment. This week the company is trying to decide whether the equipment could be better utilized by assigning it to a proposed project. Should the $5,000 be included in the cash flows for the project?
Incremental cash flows
Change in cash flows that result from decision
Effective Annual Rate
Compounded annual interest rate
Expected cash flow = 0.60*$200 + 0.40*$50 = $140 NPV = -100 + $140/(1+R)^5 IRR: 0 = -100 + $140/(1+R)^5 R = (140/100)^(1/5) -1 = 6.9%
Consider a project that you pay $100 to start today. In 5 years, the project will pay you $1000 with 60% probability and $50 with 40 percent probability, with no intermediate cash flows. What is the IRR of the project?
Present value = sum of expected cash flows discounted at constant rate
DCF approach to valuation
interest rate; risk
Discount rates reflect the _______ as well as the ______ associated with cash flows
P(t+5) = D6 / (R - g) = $2 / 14% - 4% = $20 Pt = P(t+5) / (1 + R)^5 = $20 / (1 + 0.14)^5 = $10.39
Drogon Corp. currently pays no dividend. But you think the CEO will initiate a dividend of $2 per share in 6 years. You expect a growth rate of 4% on this dividend, and the required return on this stock is 14%. What is the value?
Salvage value
Estimated value of an asset at the end of its life
Annuity
Finite series of equal payments that occur at regular intervals
Capital budgeting
Firm must make decisions on how to allocate capital as it is a scarce resource - Major long-term investment decisions which can have a significant impact on the value of the firm's assets
Annuity due
First payment occurs at the beginning of the time period
Ordinary annuity
First payment occurs at the end of the time period
less
For Gordon growth formula to make sense, need expected growth rate g to be ____ than expected return/discount rate R
better; higher
For depositing, a greater effective annual rate (EAR) means a (better/worse) and (higher/lower) rate of return. For borrowing, a lower EAR means a lower (better, cheaper) cost of borrowing.
future prices
For non-constant growth questions (e.g., Q9 on the practice exam), helpful to think of cash flow in terms of ________
stock price should be proportional; (1 + g) / (R - g); expected dividend growth rate g
Gordon Growth Model: • Dividend growth model implies that ____________ to current period dividend • Price-dividend ratio should be constant and given by: _________ • This means that the expected growth rate of the stock price should be equal to the ___________
Pay zero dividends today
Gordon growth formula does not make sense for stocks that:
increasing
Gordon growth formula, all else equal: • Stock price should be _______ in dividend growth rate g (so long as g < R)
decreasing
Gordon growth formula, all else equal: • Stock price should be ________ in expected return R (so long as R > g)
>
Gordon growth formula, all else equal: • Stock price should be decreasing in expected return R (so long as R >,<,= g)
<
Gordon growth formula, all else equal: • Stock price should be increasing in dividend growth rate g (so long as g >,<,= R)
expected cash flows
In valuation, we use _________ for risk
Spillovers/externalities
Indirect effects of the project that may affect the profits of other business activities of the firm
Perpetuity
Infinite sum of constant payments each period PV = C/r Growing: PV = C / (r-g)
rise
Inflation generally causes interest rates to _____
Annual Percentage Rate
Interest rate per time period multiplied by number of periods per year
Sunk costs, financing costs
Irrelevant cash flows
Incremental sales = $24,000 Erosion = 25% * $24,000 = $6,000 CF = $24,000 - $6,000 = $18,000
Linksys plans to introduce a new wireless router namedHomeNet, whose sales are expected to increase the firm's cashflows by $24,000 per year. If 25% of these sales come from customers who would have purchased an existing Linksys wireless router if Home Net were not available, how much are the actual annual incremental cash flows for the HomeNet project?
Pt = Dt * (1 + g))/(R - g) P9 = D10 / (R - g) P9 = $11 / (0.12 - 0.04) = $137.50 P0 = $137.50 / 1.12^9 = $49.58
Metallica Bearings, Inc., is a young start-up company. No dividends will be paid on the stock over the next nine years. The company will pay a $11 per share dividend 10 years from today and will increase the dividend by 4% per year there after. If the required return on this stock is 12%, what is the current share price?
Common stock
No fixed dividend amount, voting rights
Discounted value of dividends + the stock price you will receive in the future
Non-constant growth: Stock price today should reflect ___________ + ___________
Market price of the bond will decrease
Olivares, Incorporated, bonds mature in 17 years and have acoupon rate of 5.4 percent. If the market rate of interest increases, then the: Coupon rate will also increase Current yield will decrease Market price of the bond will decrease Coupon payment will increase
Net present value
Present value of all present and future net cash flows produced by an investment decision
Interest rate risk
Price of _______ is reflected in bond yields
Bond yields
Price of interest rate risk is reflected in _________
Discount rates
Reflect the interest rate as well as the risk associated with cash flows
--
Relationship between discount rates, dividend growth, and stock prices
Incremental cash flows
Relevant cash flows
Opportunity costs, side effects/spillovers, change to net working capital, changes in taxes paid
Relevant cash flows
Yield/Yield-to-maturity
Required return / market rate / discount rate for the bond. For many bonds, this will be different than the interest rate.
Constant dividends
Risky perpetuity
$439,500 - 14,200 = $425,300
Seven years ago, you paid $324,800 to purchase a rental house. The maintenance expenses average $200 a month and property taxes are $4,800 annually. The house was recently appraised at $439,500. If you sell the house you will incur $14,200 in selling costs. If you decide to use the house as your office, what salvage value should you assign it?
expected return
Since expected future cash flows are discounted at the rate R, the terms ____________ and discount rate are used synonymously
discounted cash flow approach
Standard approach to evaluate NPV
Preferred stock
Stated dividend amount paid before common stockholders, no voting rights
Coupon
Stated dollar interest payment on the bond
𝑃𝑡 = 𝔼(𝐷𝑡+1) / (1 + 𝑅) + 𝔼(𝐷𝑡+2) / (1 + 𝑅)^2 + 𝔼(𝑃𝑡+2) / (1 + 𝑅)^2 = ($2 * 1.25)/(1+0.20) + ($2*1.25*1.20)/(1+0.20)^2 + ($2*1.25*1.20*1.05)/(0.20-0.05)/(1+0.20)^2 = $18.75
Suppose a company is expected to increase dividends by 25% next year and 20% the following year. After that, the dividends will increase at 5% indefinitely. If the most recent dividend was $2 and the required return is 20%, what is the value of the stock?
PV = 333,333.33[1 - 1/1.05^30] / 0.05 = $5,124,150.29
Suppose you win the Publishers Clearinghouse $10 million sweepstakes. The money is paid in equal annual installments of $333,333.33 over 30 years. If the appropriate discount rate is 5%, how much is the sweepstakes actually worth today?
Incremental cash flows
The amount by which the firm's cash flows are expected to change as a result of the investment decision
Coupon rate
The annual coupon divided by the face value of the bond
all dividends
The cash flow from purchasing a stock can be expressed in multiple equivalent ways: If you hold for forever, __________ (other stock pricing formulas)
Next period's dividend + price of stock next period
The cash flow from purchasing a stock can be expressed in multiple equivalent ways: If you hold for one period, then sell __________
Two dividends + price of the stock two periods from now
The cash flow from purchasing a stock can be expressed in multiple equivalent ways: If you hold for two periods, then sell __________
Face/par value
The principal amount of the bond that is repaid at the end of the term
Maturity
The specified date on which the principal amount of a bond is paid
Opportunity costs
The value a resource could have provided in its best alternative use
Company pays you a dividend or you sell the shares
Two ways to receive cash flows if you buy a share of stock
- Have to convert everything to semi-annual units (how often the payments happen), then can plug into the bond pricing equation. Semi-Annual yield: 7% 𝑎𝑛𝑛𝑢𝑎𝑙 𝑦𝑖𝑒𝑙𝑑 / 2 𝑝𝑎𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠 = 3.5% Semi-Annual Coupon payment: (5.5% 𝑎𝑛𝑛𝑢𝑎𝑙 𝑐𝑜𝑢𝑝𝑜𝑛 𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑒 / 2 𝑝𝑎𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠) × $1000 = $27.50 Number of periods: 10 𝑦𝑒𝑎𝑟𝑠 × 2 𝑝𝑎𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠 = 20 𝑝𝑒𝑟𝑖𝑜𝑑s - Yield-to-maturity is always quoted as an APR Bond price = $27.50 * ((1-(1/(1.035^20))/0.035) + 1000/(1.035^20) = $893.41
Werden Drilling offers 5.5 percent coupon bonds with semiannual payments and a yield to maturity of 7 percent. The bonds mature in 10 years. What is the market price per bond if the face value is $1,000?
Assuming a company's goal is to maximize shareholder wealth, they should choose to invest in projects which increase the firm's value
What is the method that is closest to the goal of financial management?
stabilizes; stock price
When dividend growth _______ in the future, you can use the Gordon growth formula, but that will give you the _________ in the future
PV = $5000 / (1 + 0.10)^5 = $3104.61
You are considering a project that will pay $10,000 with 50% probability in five years and will pay you nothing with 50% probability. If your discount rate is 10%, what is the present value of the project?
$5000
You are considering a project that will pay $10,000 with 50% probability in five years and will pay you nothing with 50% probability. What is the expected cash flow from the project in five years?
PV1 = 1000 / (1.1)1 = $ 909.09 PV2 = 2000 / (1.1)2 = $1,652.89 PV3 = 3000 / (1.1)3 = $2,253.94 PV = 909.09 + 1,652.89 + 2,253.94 = $4,815.92
You are considering an investment that will pay you $1,000 in one year, $2,000 in two years and $3,000 in three years. If you want to earn 10% on your money, how much would you be willing to pay today?
Prefer the loan that makes payments every 6 months. Lower effective annual rate.
You are interested in borrowing money to buy a car and are comparing two loans for the same principal amount that havethe same APR. Loan A makes monthly payments and Loan B makes payments every 6 months. Which loan has a higher effective annual interest rate? Which loan would you prefer?
Sunk costs
costs that have not been or will be paid regardless of the decision whether or not the investment is undertaken
EAR
most effective for evaluating frequently compounding loans such as credit cards
APR
most useful for evaluating mortgage and auto loans
the present value of the future cash flows minus the initial cash outlay
project requires an initial cash outlay, and produces positive future cash flows, then NPV is:
APRs
yield-to-maturity / coupon payments are quoted as _____, but need to make appropriate conversions if payments are not annual
Two-stage growth
• Dividend growth not constant initially, but settles into a long-term growth rate eventually • Price is calculated using a multi-stage model
Constant dividend growth
• Firm will increase the dividend by a constant percent each time period • Price is calculated using the growing perpetuity formula
Constant dividend
• Firm will pay the same dividend forever • Preferred stocks usually fall into this category • Price is calculated using the perpetuity formula