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Lecture 3 How to value bonds and common stocks

Lecture 3 How to value bonds and common stocks. Corporate Finance Lecturer: Quan, Qi Spring 2010. Homework for lecture 2. 1. As winner of a breakfast cereal competition, you can choose one of the following prizes: a. $100,000 now. b. $180,000 at the end of five years.

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Lecture 3 How to value bonds and common stocks

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  1. Lecture 3 How to value bonds and common stocks Corporate Finance Lecturer: Quan, Qi Spring 2010

  2. Homework for lecture 2 1. As winner of a breakfast cereal competition, you can choose one of the following prizes: • a. $100,000 now. • b. $180,000 at the end of five years. • c. $11,400 a year forever. • d. $19,000 for each of 10 years. • e. $6,500 next year and increasing thereafter by 5 percent a year forever. If the interest rate is 12 percent, which is the most valuable prize? 2

  3. Solution a. PV = $100,000 b. PV = $180,000/(1+0.12)5 = $102,137 c. A perpetuity: PV = $11,400/0.12 = $95,000 (a perpetuity) d. An annuity: PV = $19,000  [Annuity factor, 12%, t = 10] = $19,000  5.650 = $107,350 e. A growing perpetuity: PV = $6,500/(0.12 - 0.05) = $92,857 Prize (d) is the winner with the highest present value 3

  4. Question 2 You are considering the purchase of an apartment complex that will generate anet cash flow of $400,000 per year. You normally demand a 10 percent rate of return on such investments. Future cash flows are expected to grow with inflation at 4 percent per year. How much would you be willing to pay for the complex if it: • a. Will produce cash flows forever? • b. Will have to be torn down in 20 years? Assume that the site will be worth $5 million at that time net of demolition costs. (The $5 million includes 20 years’ inflation.) Now calculate the real discount rate corresponding to the 10 percent nominal rate. Redo the calculations for parts (a) and (b) using real cash flows. (Your answersshould not change.) 4

  5. Solution to question 2 With the nominal cash flows: a. Given the inflation rate of 4%, the cash flow in 1 year will be $416,000 and: PV = $416,000/(0.10 - 0.04) = $6,933,333 b. The nominal cash flows are growing annuity for 20 years, with an additional payment of $5 million at year 20: 5

  6. Second, with real cash flows: The real rate (r) is (1 + 0.10) = (1 + r)  (1.04)  r = 0.0577 = 5.77% • PV = $400,000/(0.0577) = $6,932,409 • Now, the real cash flows are $400,000 per year for 20 years and $5 million (nominal) in 20 years. In real terms, the $5 million dollar payment is: $5,000,000/(1.04)20 = $2,281,935 Thus, the present value of the project is: 6

  7. Topics Covered • How to value bonds • How to value common stocks 7

  8. How to value bonds • What is a bond • A certificate showing that a borrower owes a specified sum; the borrower agrees to make interest and principal payments on designated dates • Components of bonds: face value, coupon rate, maturity, how often the coupons are paid (annually or semiannually?) 8

  9. 9

  10. How to value bonds- Zero-coupon bond • Pure discount bond (zero-coupon bond): promises a single payment at a fixed future date • If the payment is one (two) year (s) from now, it is called a one-year (two year) discount bond • What is the PV of a zero-coupon bond that pays a face value of F in T years • Value of a zero-coupon bond • Example: A bond with a face value of 100 that matures in 20 years. Suppose the interest rate is 10% 10

  11. How to value bonds- Level-coupon bond • What are level-coupon bonds • These bonds offer cash payments not just at maturity, but also at regular times in between (e.g. payments on U.S. government issues and American corporate bonds are made every six months until the bond matures) • Example: There is a 5.375 percent bond with $100 face value maturing in January 2016. You receive an interest payment of 0.05375*100=$5.375, which is the bond’s coupon each year until 2016. When the bond matures in 2016 the government pays you the final $5.375 interest, plus the $100 face value. 11

  12. PV= PV (coupon payments) + PV (final payment) = (coupon*6-year annuity factor) + (final payment * discount factor) =5.375 [1/.038-1/0.38(1.038)6 ]+ 100/(1+0.038)6 = 28.36+79.95=108.31 12

  13. How to value bonds – Yield to maturity • If the price of the bond is 108.31, what return do investors expect? • This r is called the bond’s yield to maturity • How to find the yield to maturity? By trial and error • What if the yield falls to 2%? The price of the bond would go up to 118.90 • What if the yield rises to 10%? The price of the bond would fall to 79.86 13

  14. How to value bonds – Semiannual coupons and bond prices • A typical 6.25% U.S. Treasury bond of 2007 making coupon payments semi-annually • The bondholder gets 3.125 percent every half-year • The sixth monthly payment is 0.03125*1000 (face value)=31.25 • Suppose you could buy it on a yield of 2.16% in February 2004 • Since it is semiannually compounded, the yield over six months should be 2.16/2=1.08% • PV= 14

  15. How to value common stocks 15

  16. How to value common stocks • The discounted-cash-flow (DCF) formula for the present value of a stock is the same as that of any other asset • What do shareholders receive from the company? • A stream of dividends • PV(stock) = PV(expected future dividends) • Why does the formula say nothing about capital gains? 16

  17. How to value common stocks • What determines today’s price? • The cash payoff to owners of common stocks comes in two forms • 1) cash dividends 2) capital gains • The current price of a share is P0;the expected price at the end of a year is P1; the expected dividend per share is DIV1 Expected return= r = This expected return is often called the market capitalization rate If the P0=100, Div1=5 and P1=110, we have r=15% 17

  18. How to value common stocks • You can also predict today’s price like this Price=P0= • How do we decide on r? • All securities in an equivalent risk class are priced to offer the same expected return • P0=(5+100)/(1+0.15)=100 What if today’s price is higher (lower) than 100? 18

  19. How to value common stocks • What determines next year’s price? • P1= 19

  20. How to value common stocks • How far can we look if we continue working like this? • As time goes by, the dividend stream accounts for an increasing proportion of present value. If the horizon is infinite, we have 20

  21. Estimating the cost of equity capital • Suppose the expected dividends grow at a constant rate • What does that remind you of? • Like a growing perpetuity • Constant-growth DCF formula P0 = • Cautions about using this formula: g must be less than r; g cannot be abnormally high forever 21

  22. Estimating the cost of equity capital • Can we use this growing perpetuity formula to derive r, the discount rate (market capitalization rate)? r= DIV1/P0+g There are two parts in the formula: Dividend yield (DIV1/P0) and the expected rate of growth in dividends (g) 22

  23. Estimating the cost of equity capital • Example: The Cascade Natural Gas company The stock price is $22.35 at the beginning of 2004. Dividends payments for the next year were expected to be $1.03 per share First part of the formula: Dividend yield= DIV1/P0=1.03/22.35=4.6% What about g? Analysts were forecasting an annual growth of 5.7%. Given this estimate, r=4.6%+5.7%=10.3% 23

  24. Estimating the cost of equity capital • The alternative approach to estimating long-run growth with payout ratio • Payout ratio: the ratio of dividends to earnings per share (EPS) • If the payout ratio for Cascade is 66%, then the plowback ratio would be 1-66% = 44% • If ROE = EPS/book equity per share = 12% • Dividend growth rate = g = plowback ratio*ROE=.44*.12=.53 • r= DIV1/P0 + g = 4.6% + 5.3% = 9.9% • Different methods could give different answers • Normally we take an average of r for similar firms 24

  25. DCF valuation with varying growth rates • Two-stage DCF valuation model • P0 = PV(first-stage dividends) + PV(second-stage dividends) 25

  26. The link between stock price and earnings per share • Growth stocks vs. income stocks • Growth stocks: with low or even no dividends, you buy them for the expectation of capital gains • Income stocks: you buy them primarily for the cash dividends • Imagine a company that does not grow at all. All the earnings are paid out as dividends • Expected return = dividend yield = earnings-price ratio • If the dividend is $10 and the price is $100, then the expected return would be 10% • The company decides to invest $10 per share next year and the project would earn $1 in addition in each subsequent year • NPV per share at year 1 = -10 + 1/0.1=0 • The decision would have no impact on the stock price 26

  27. The link between stock price and earnings per share • The earnings-price ratio (EPS) equals the market capitalization rate (r) only when the new project’s NPV=0 • If the company reinvests earnings at below r, the earnings may increase but the share value is reduced 27

  28. Calculate the present value of growth opportunities • In general, we can think of stock price as the capitalized value of average earnings under a no-growth policy, plus PVGO, the net present value of growth opportunities • Example: how to value a growth stock using this model? 28

  29. Calculate the present value of growth opportunities • Suppose A company’s market capitalization rate, r, is 15% and it is expected to pay a dividend of $5 in the first year. Also, the constant growth rate of the dividend is 10% 29

  30. Calculate the present value of growth opportunities • Suppose the earnings per share is 8.33 • If there is a no-growth policy, the capitalized value per share would be EPS1/r=8.33/0.15=55.66 How to account for the difference between 55.66 and 100? • Payout ratio= DIV1/EPS1=5/8.33=.6, suppose ROE=25% • Growth rate = g =plowback ratio*ROE=0.4*25%=10% • The cash generated by this investment is 0.25*3.33=0.83 • NPV1= -3.33+0.83/0.15=2.22; NPV2=-3.67+(0.83*1.10)/0.15=2.44 • Present value of growth opportunities=PVGO=NPV1/(r-g)=44.44 • Share price= present value of level stream of earnings + present value of growth opportunities=55.66+44.44 30

  31. Practice question Pigeon express currently plows back 40 percent of its earnings and earns a return of20 percent on this investment. The dividend yield on the stock is 4 percent. a.Assuming that Crecimiento can continue to plow back this proportion of earningsand earn a 20 percent return on the investment, how rapidly will earnings anddividends grow? What is the expected return on Crecimiento stock? b. Suppose that management suddenly announces that future investment opportunities have dried up. Now Crecimiento intends to pay out all its earnings. How will the stock price change? c. Suppose that management simply announces that the expected return on new investment would in the future be the same as the market capitalization rate. Now what is Crecimiento’s stock price? 31

  32. a.g = plowback ratio  ROE=0.40  0.20=8% Using r = dividend yield + growth rate = 0.04 + 0.08 = 0.12 = 12.0% b. Since the dividend yield = 4%, we have DIV1/P0 = 0.04 and DIV1=0.04*P0 A plowback ratio of 0.4 implies a payout ratio of 0.6, and we have DIV1/EPS1 = 0.6 DIV1 = 0.6  EPS1 Equating these two expressions for DIV1 gives a relationship between price and earnings per share: 0.04  P0 = 0.6  EPS1 EPS1/P0 = 0.066 Also, we know that: With (EPS1/P0) = 0.066 and r = 0.12, the ratio of the present value of growth opportunities to price is 44.4 percent. Thus, if there are suddenly no future investment opportunities, the stock price will decrease by 44.4 percent. 32

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