Risk Questions and Answers
Fundamental analysis - answerrelies on fundamental financial characteristics (like
earnings) of the firm and its corresponding industry that are expected to influence stock
values
Technical analysis - answerrelies on stock price trends to determine stock values
Price-earnings method - answerapplies the mean price-earnings (PE) ratio (based on
expected earnings rather than recent earnings) of all publicly traded competitors in the
respective industry to the firm's expected earnings for the next year
*assumes:
--future earnings are an important determinant of a firm's value
--growth in earnings in future years will be similar to that of the industry
Reasons for different valuations with the PE method - answerthe PE method has
several variations, which can result in different valuations
*investors may use different forecasts for the firm's earnings or the mean industry
earnings over the next year
*investors disagree on the proper measure of earnings
Limitation of the PE method - answer*may result in an inaccurate valuation of a firm if
errors are made in forecasting the firms future earnings or in choosing the industry
composite used to derive the PE ratio
*some firms may use creative accounting methods to exxagerate their earnings in a
particular period, but be unable to sustain that earnings level in the future
*investors disagreeing on the proper measure of earnings can be a limitation as well
(some investors may prefer to use operating earnings or excluded some unusually high
expenses that result from one-time events)
*investors may disagree on which firms represent the industry norm that should be used
when applying PE ratio to a firms earnings (narrow industry composite V broad industry
composite)
*stock buybacks by firms can distort a firms earnings, in turn, distort a valuation derived
form those earnings --> complicate the stock valuation process bc they reduce the
, number of shares outstanding but increase EPS even when the company's total
earnings have not increased
Dividend Discount Model (DDM) - answerthe model can account for uncertainty by
allowing Dt to be revised in response to revised expectations about a firms CFs or by
allowing k to be revised in response to changes in the required rate of return by
investors
*highly dependent of the required rate of return and growth rate
DDM relationship with PE ratio for valuing firms - answer*PE multiple is influenced by
the required rate of return on stocks of competitors and expected growth rate of
competitor firms
*the inverse relationship between rate of return and value exists in BOTH models
*the positive relationship between growth rate and value exists in both models
Limitations of Dividend Discount Model - answer*errors can be made in determining the
dividend to be paid, the growth rate, and the RRR
*errors are more pronounced for firms that retain most of their earnings, rather than
distributing them as dividends, bc the model relies on the dividend as the base for
applying the growth rate
*can only be used for firms that pay dividends --> not very accurate for firms that do not
Adjusted dividend model - answerdividend discount model can be adapted to asses the
value of any firm, even those firms that retain most of / all of their earnings
From an investors perspective the value of the stock is =:
1. the PV of the future dividends to be received plus
2. the PV of the forecasted price at which the stock will be sold at the end of the
investment horizon
Limitations of the adjusted DDM - answermay be inaccurate if errors are made in:
*deriving the pV of dividends over the investment horizon
*the PV of the forecasted price at which the stock can be sold at the end of the
investment horizon (FV)
^^bc RRR affects both of these factors, using the wrong RRR will lead to inaccurate
valuations