Basic
What are the 3 major valuation methodologies? – answer Comparable Companies,
Precedent Transactions and Discounted Cash Flow Analysis.
Rank the 3 valuation methodologies from highest to lowest expected value. – answer In
general, Precedent Transactions will be higher than Comparable Companies due to the
Control Premium built into acquisitions.
Beyond that, a DCF could go either way and it's best to say that it's more variable than
other methodologies. Often it produces the highest value, but it can produce the lowest
value as well depending on your assumptions.
When would you not use a DCF in a Valuation? – answer You do not use a DCF if the
company has unstable or unpredictable cash flows (tech or bio-tech startup) or when
debt and working capital serve a fundamentally different role. For example, banks and
financial institutions do not re-invest debt and working capital is a huge part of their
Balance Sheets - so you wouldn't use a DCF for such companies.
What other Valuation methodologies are there? - answerOther methodologies include:
• Liquidation Valuation - Valuing a company's assets, assuming they are sold off and
then subtracting liabilities to determine how much capital, if any, equity investors receive
• Replacement Value - Valuing a company based on the cost of replacing its assets
• LBO Analysis - Determining how much a PE firm could pay for a company to hit a
"target" IRR, usually in the 20-25% range
• Sum of the Parts - Valuing each division of a company separately and adding them
together at the end
• M&A Premiums Analysis - Analyzing M&A deals and figuring out the premium that
each buyer paid, and using this to establish what your company is worth
• Future Share Price Analysis - Projecting a company's share price based on the P/E
multiples of the public company comparables, then discounting it back to its present
value
When would you use a Liquidation Valuation? - answerThis is most common in
bankruptcy scenarios and is used to see whether equity shareholders will receive any
capital after the company's debts have been paid off. It is often used to advise
struggling businesses on whether it's better to sell off assets separately or to try and sell
the entire company.
When would you use Sum of the Parts? - answerThis is most often used when a
company has completely different, unrelated divisions - a conglomerate like General
Electric, for example.
, If you have a plastics division, a TV and entertainment division, an energy division, a
consumer financing division and a technology division, you should not use the same set
of Comparable Companies and Precedent Transactions for the entire company.
Instead, you should use different sets for each division, value each one separately, and
then add them together to get the Combined Value.
When do you use an LBO Analysis as part of your Valuation? - answerObviously you
use this whenever you're looking at a Leveraged Buyout - but it is also used to establish
how much a private equity firm could pay, which is usually lower than what companies
will pay.
It is often used to set a "floor" on a possible Valuation for the company you're looking at.
What are the most common multiples used in Valuation? - answerThe most common
multiples are EV/Revenue, EV/EBITDA, EV/EBIT, P/E (Share Price / Earnings per
Share), and P/BV (Share Price / Book Value).
What are some examples of industry-specific multiples? - answerTechnology (Internet):
EV / Unique Visitors, EV / Pageviews Retail / Airlines: EV / EBITDAR (Earnings Before
Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, Amortization & Rent)
Energy: P / MCFE, P / MCFE / D (MCFE = 1 Million Cubic Foot Equivalent, MCFE/D =
MCFE per Day), P / NAV (Share Price / Net Asset Value)
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs): Price / FFO, Price / AFFO (Funds From
Operations, Adjusted Funds From Operations)
Technology and Energy should be straightforward - you're looking at traffic and energy
reserves as value drivers rather than revenue or profit.
For Retail / Airlines, you often remove Rent because it is a major expense and one that
varies significantly between different types of companies.
For REITs, Funds From Operations is a common metric that adds back Depreciation
and subtracts gains on the sale of property. Depreciation is a non-cash yet extremely
large expense in real estate, and gains on sales of properties are assumed to be non-
recurring, so FFO is viewed as a "normalized" picture of the cash flow the REIT is
generating.
When you're looking at an industry-specific multiple like EV / Scientists or EV /
Subscribers, why do you use Enterprise Value rather than Equity Value? - answerYou
use Enterprise Value because those scientists or subscribers are "available" to all the
investors (both debt and equity) in a company. The same logic doesn't apply to