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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Lesson
# 6
FUNDAMENTAL
STOCK ANALYSIS
VALUATION
PHILOSOPHIES:
In
much the same manner as
Republicans and Democrats have
inherent differences in
political
philosophy, security analysts also
may be grouped into two
camps: fundamental
and
technical analysts. The
fundamental analyst believes
that securities are priced
in a
rational
manner based on macroeconomic
information, industry news, and
the firm's
financial
statements. The technical analyst
believes that prices are
largely determined by
investor
behavior and by supply and demand, even
when demand may seem
irrational.
Technical
analysis is a controversial part of
finance and is covered in its
own chapter,
Chapter
Eight. Most investment
research firms have both
fundamental and technical
analysts
on the payroll. Despite their
philosophical differences, both
groups agree on
certain
things.
As we
enter a new millennium,
however, both fundamental and
technical analysts
wonder
whether
the old rules still
work. The proliferation of
seemingly high-priced Internet
and
technology
stocks made everyone wonder
whether the prices are reasonable.
Many
investors
cannot decide whether they
should remain on the
sideline or whether the
train is
about
to leave without them.
Forbes ASAP ran an article
with the tine "Is
Internet Wealth
Real7"1
in the same issue Forbes
listed 53 Internet executives
with a total wealth of
$48
billion,
which the writer calls a
"blurry snapshot of a moving target."
Ben Holmes, founder
of an
IPO research firm, says,
"This wealth isn't like
other wealth. On paper, Jay
Walker's
62
million shares of Price line
stock are worth about $4
billion, but nobody knows
what
they're
really worth."
Early
in the year 2000 The Wall
Street Journal ran a front
page article entitled "How
High
Is
Too High for Stocks That
Lead a Business Revolution?"2 The article
subtitle is "Whether
old
valuation rules can be ignored
for some is key to volatile
NASDAQ." As this
chapter
will
show, investors historically
have paid considerable attention to a
firm's price-earnings
ratio,
widely viewed as a useful
measure of relative value.
PEs around 15 or 20 used to
be
the
norm. In early 2000,
however, stocks with a PE ratio in
excess of 100 accounted
for
about
20 percent of the total
market value of the NASDAQ
market.
Value
comes from utility; utility
comes from a variety of
sources.
Fundamental
analysts believe securities are
priced according to fundamental
economic
data.
Technical analysts think
supply and demand factors play
the most important
role.
Investors'
Understanding of Risk
Premiums:
Investors
are almost always
risk-averse. Investors often
cannot explicitly define
risk, but
they
have an intuitive understanding of
it. They do not like
taking risks, but will do so
in
order
to increase potential investment
return- Preceding chapters have discussed
how
investors
can use the variance of
investment returns as a proxy
for risk. This
balance
between
risk and return is the
reason un-bonds have higher
yields to maturity than
U.S.
Treasury
bonds, and why some shares of
stock sell for more
than others.
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The
Time Value of
Money:
Everyone
agrees on this basic
principle, even those who
would not know a balance
sheet if
they
saw one. People postpone paying
bills and prefer a paycheck
now rather than one
later
Ever
tiling else being equal,
the longer someone must
wait for the payoff
from an
investment,
die less the investment is
worth today.
Suppose
a AAA-rated firm tries to
issue a zero coupon consol;
at what price might it sell7
It
might
have some collector's value,
but its investment value is
nil. What good is the right
to
receive
no interest forever? Similarly,
when Coca-Cola and Disney
issued the 100-year
bonds
described in an earlier chapter, why was
their initial market price
such a deep
discount
from par? The answer is
obvious: the return of the
par value is two
generations
from
now, and people are not
willing to pay much for a
cash flow that distant.
The bond's
current
value comes almost entirely
from the coupon stream.3 In 75 years
the eventual
return
of the principal will start to
matter, but in 1996 it had little
impact on the present
value
of the bond.
Everything
else being equal, the longer
someone must wait for the
payoff from an
investment,
the less the investment is
worth today.
The
Importance of Cash
Flows:
Start-up
companies often have zero
sales. It takes time to
develop products,
particularly
those
that are innovative and
brimming with technology.
Some of the great success
stories
of
recent years, like Microsoft,
Yahoo and Apple, all
involved a period of time
when the
firms
spent money at a steady pace while
little was coming in.
Investors understand
this
process
arid and are willing to put
up seed capital to help new
ventures get off the
ground.
The
market's patience is not unlimited,
however. Eventually, the shareholders
expect to see
their
investment lead to product sales and to
profits from those sales.
Share price
appreciation
and cash dividends stem directly
from the profitability of
the company.
The
importance of earnings never
subsides. In fact, most
investment research
deals
primarily
with predicting future
earnings. The link between
earnings, dividends, and
price
appreciation
is well established, and all analysts
know that good earnings are
important.
While
earnings are clearly
important, it is less clear
how important dividends are
to the
contemporary
investor. At one time many
investors selected a stock
largely on the basis
of
its
expected dividends; the average
yield was about 5% in the
early 1980s. There was a
bird-
in-the-hand
argument that placed a high
priority on cash receipts now,
with a much lesser
emphasis
on growth in corporate equity.
This is much less true
today. About 80% of
the
stocks in
the SP 500 index paid a dividend in
1999. Of the top I5
performers for die
year,
however,
14 paid no dividend. Many highly
successful, and popular, companies pay
no
dividends
and have no plans to do so: Microsoft,
Cisco Systems, AOL, MCI WorldCom,
and
Oracle are ready examples.
It is also true that the
average dividend yield has
been
falling
for two decades. Growth of
the Internet and changing
attitudes toward
technology
are
influencing the investment
process in many ways,
perhaps including our
attitude toward
dividend
checks.
Most
investment research deals with
predicting future corporate
earnings.
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The
Tax Factor:
Taxes
are supposedly "one of the
two certainties in life.
Investors also know that,
in
addition
to being a certainty, the
tax code is complicated and
not all investments are
taxed
equally.
For this reason, municipal bonds
(paying tax-free interest) can
sell with a lower
expected rate of
return than a taxable
corporate bond of equal
risk, and some investors
will
favor
growth stocks (with tax
deferral of appreciation) over
income stocks (with
immediate
taxation
of dividends).
EIC
Analysis:
The
traditional approach to security
selection involves EIC
analysis, which stands
for
economy,
industry, and company. The
analyst first considers conditions in
the overall
economy,
and then determines which
industries are most
attractive in light of the
economic
conditions,
and finally identifies the
most attractive companies within
the attractive
industries.
1.
Economic Analysis:
Every
issue of common stock has a
common characteristic: susceptibility to
market risk.
This
tendency of stocks as a group means
that they move together as
economic conditions
improve
or deteriorate.
Stock
prices react favorably to earnings
growth, low inflation,
increasing gross
national
product,
a better balance of trade, and other
positive macroeconomic news. Signs
that
inflation
is picking up, that
unemployment is rising, or that
earnings estimates are
being
revised
downward will and to depress stock
prices.
In
fact, this relationship is
sufficiently reliable that
the Standard & Poor's 500 stock
index (a
popular
market indicator) is one of the
U.S. Commerce department's leading
indicators of
the
U.S. economy. The stock
market will anticipate a recession or
economic boom well in
advance of signs
visible to the average
citizen. Research by the Federal Reserve
Bank of
New
York found that the slope of
the yield curve is the
best predictor of economic
growth
more
than three months out. A
positive slope is good, while a
negative slope predicts a
recession.
To
the investor, the
implications of market risk
should be obvious. When the
economy
appears
to be moving into a recession, stocks as a
group are going to be c
hurt. All
companies,
whether they are high
performing or lackluster, will suffer
the effects of the
recession.
When the economy is surging
ahead, most stocks will follow
suit. During 1999,
for
instance, the overall stock
market advanced sharply, and few
investors lost money
in
stocks.
This positive performance was
not because the year's crop
of CEOs was
exceptionally
good, but principally
because of a strong economy.
The shared market
risk
characteristic
tended to pull up the price of
most stocks, even those with
substandard
management.
2.
Industry Analysis:
While
all stocks carry market risk
and are hurt by a recession, they will
not suffer to the
same
degree. As pointed out
earlier, a defensive stock
(like a retail food chain)
will be hurt
less
than a cyclical stock (like
a steel company). Once the
economy bottoms out,
the
cyclical
stocks are precisely the place to
be, because their sales and
profits are closely
tied
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Investment
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to
overall economic activity-
Determining which industries
are likely to fare best in
the
anticipated
economic environment is the
essence of industry
analysis.
A standard
approach to industry analysis is the
competitive strategy analysis
framework
proposed
by Michael Porter in 1980.
Threats of new entrants
measure the barriers to
entry
into
the industry and the expected
reaction of existing competitors to
new competitors. In
some
industries a new company
would have great difficulty in
competing successfully.
Consider
the difficulty a new
automobile manufacturer would
have going up against
Ford,
General
Motors, and Daimler Chrysler.
The last such effort, by De
Lorean, was an ex-
pensive
failure. In other industries,
such as financial planning,
entry is easier. New
businesses
simply hang out their
shingle, put an ad in the
yellow pages, do some
local
advertising,
and begin to build a customer
base while politics is not
exactly an industry; it is
a good
example of how the reaction
of existing competitors can be important.
Most states
have
their own set of "existing
competitors" for public
office. A newcomer is often
looked
upon
with great suspicion. Consider
the negative reaction by
both Democrats and
Republicans
to the Ross Perot presidential
bid.
The
rivalry among existing
competitors, if intense, will slow
industry growth and tend
to
level
the playing field among
the competitors. Profit
margins can be depressed as firms
seek
to
gain market share at the
expense of current earnings.
Much greater opportunity
for
product
differentiation and enhanced profits
exists in industries where
the rivalry is modest
or
even friendly. Heavy
competition is good for the
consumer, but not
necessarily good for
the
investor in the firm.
Consider the frequent fare
price wars in the airline
industry. In this
industry
the competition for
customers is intense. When one
airline cuts prices, the
other
airlines
are obligated to do the same
to keep customers.
A
substantial threat of substitutes
means that firms are
not free to raise their
prices as they
might
wish. Too high a price
means that buyers will
simply choose an alternate
product
providing
essentially the same
Junction- Consider, for
instance, video games such
as Sega
and
Nintendo, These brands are direct
competitors. If Sega unilaterally
raises its prices,
new
video
game customers will be favorably
inclined toward Nintendo. A
potential investor is
concerned
when a firm faces a high
degree of this risk of
product substitution. It puts
a
damper on
future earnings
growth.
The
buyer's bargaining power is
strong when a buyer accounts
for a substantial
percentage
of a
seller's sales. In such a
case, profit margins tend to
be low. The seller really
cannot
afford
to lose the customer and might be
forced to make concessions in order to
keep the
business.
Consider the case of a
ship-building company for
whom the U.S. Navy is
the
principal
customer. The firm may
only produce two or three
ships per year, and the loss of a
navy
contract would be disastrous- On the
other hand, when a business
has many small
customers,
as in department stores, the loss of any
particular customer is not
cause for
concern.
Customers don't have much
bargaining power at JC Penney
(JCP, NYSE}, but
they
do at Boeing (BA,
NYSE).
This
industry factor need not be
limited to a capital-intensive industry
like ship building
Consider
the need for consultants in
a retail computer sales
store. While a need
will
probably
always exist for computer
technicians to help people with
their system
problems,
consumers
in general are more sophisticated
about personal computers
than they were
must
five
years ago. They are better
informed and more willing to make
their own decisions
about
their hardware and software
needs. In essence, they have
more power when
they
approach
the sales staff.
A
firm facing powerful
supplier groups encounters
more difficulty negotiating
favorable
contract
terms. The firm needs
the products supplied and
has little control over
their costs. If
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Investment
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the
firm is unable to raise the
price of its finished goods
because of the presence
of
substitutes
or powerful buyer groups,
its profit margin and
earnings are tenuous.
The
potential
investor views the presence
of powerful supplier groups
negatively.
By
considering each of these
five elements of industry
structure, a financial analyst
will
develop
a better estimate of how the
industry is likely to fare in
the forthcoming
economic
environment.
Having determined which
industries currently seem
attractive, the next step
is
recommending
specific firms within the
industry.
Porter's
competitive strategy analysis
helps evaluate industry
prospects.
3.
Company:
Most
of the rest of this chapter
deals with the last
part of EIC analysis:
choosing specific
companies.
Some people refer to this
activity as stock picking,
or, more formally, as
security
analysis- Many different
schools of thought offer
methods on how to go about
this
task.
We now review this topic in
some detail.
VALUE
VS GROWTH INVESTING:
The
two factions within the
fundamental analysts' camp are
the value investors and
the
growth
investors. These terms became
popular in the 1980s and are
now a standard part of
the
investment lexicon.
The
Value Approach to
Investing:
A
value investor believes that
securities should be purchased only
when the underlying
fundamentals
(macroeconomic information, industry
news, and a firm's
financial
statements)
justify the purchase, even
when these fundamentals seem
to be inconsistent with
the
belief of the overall
marketplace. Value investors
consider financial
statement
information
such as the price to book
ratio, return on assets, and
return on equity.7
Value
players
evaluate earning growth
within a particular industry,
many of which have
low
growth
rates. They attempt to spot those companies
that have above-average
earnings
growth
in that industry. The value
investor is willing to wait to
reap the rewards from
his or
her
research-Value investors often
seek out new corporate
ventures with sound ideas
and
experienced
management, but they prefer
not to chase pie-in-the-sky
ideas or subscribe to
the
bandwagon approach to investing. They
don't mind sitting out
the next dance if
they
view
it as a passing fad with no
long-term prospects.
Value
investors also believe in a regression to
the mean. They think
securities have long-
term
expected returns that are
consistent with the level of
risk associated with
them.
Suppose
you live in an area where
the average annual
temperature is 59°. If the
current
temperature
were 75°, in the absence of
any other information you
would predict that
temperatures will
fall over the next
few months. Similarly, if it is
currently 25° outside,
your
long-range
forecast should be for
rising temperatures. Value
investors subscribe to this
logic
with
stock prices and the associated
returns- When a stack's
returns have been below
their
expected
long-term level, the stock
is likely to make up the difference in
the future, rising
more
than other securities
Conversely, returns that
have been unusually good
probably will
not
persist; instead, future re- A
turns are likely to be
depressed until the
long-term average
is back in
line with the associated
level of risk.
Stated
another way, a security may
perform unusually well for a
while, but this
over-
performance
will likely be subdued in subsequent periods when
the returns are less
than
expected.
The trick is to find
securities mat are currently
below their long run
trend and buy
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them.
Similarly, a value investor
would consider selling securities
that are performing
above
their
long-run expected rate of return. Figure
illustrates this
concept.
A
study in the Financial
Analysts Journal looked at
the performance of 29 companies
identified
in the best-selling book In
Search of Excellence: Lessons
from America's Best-
Run
Companies, by Thomas Peters and Robert
Waterman. Using the same
financial ratios
as in
the book, the author of
the FAJ article found
that the financial health of
these firms
began
to decline once the book
identified them. At the same
time, a control group
of
companies
that ranked low according to
the Peters and Waterman
criteria showed
substantial
improvement over the subsequent
five years-These results are
consistent with the
notion
of security performance reverting to
some long-term mean
value.
Value
investors are willing to
wait.
The
Growth Approach to
Investing:
In
the investment community,
the term growth is used as
both an investment objective
and
as an
investment style. In this
latter case, a growth
investor seeks steadily
growing
companies.
The two factions within
the growth investor camp are
the information trader
and
the
true growth investor.
The
Information Trader:
The
information trader is in a hurry and
believes that profits are to
be made by processing
the
news better than the
next person. The information
trader also believes that
information
differentials
characterize the marketplace.
That is, some people have
access to better
quality
information
than others, and some people
are better at processing the
available information.
By
using more complete
information and using it more
effectively than the next
person, an
information
trader believes that above-average
profits are possible.11 As an example,
one of
Wall
Street's most widely watched
statistics is the weekly
unemployment figure,
released
every
Friday morning at 8:30 EST.
When the actual statistic
deviates from what was
expected,
the bond market reacts
instantly because of the
implications for
inflationary
pressure
on the economy. As an example,
the keynote speaker for
the annual Chicago
Board
of
Trade/Chicago Board Options
Exchange Risk Management
conference is often at
the
podium
when the unemployment data
are released. The audience of
portfolio managers and
risk
managers is extremely interested in
"the number," and at about
8:32 an exchange
employee
hands the speaker a note to
read containing the
just-released statistic. If
the
number
is a surprise, some people scurry
out of the conference in
their rush to get to a
phone.
Information
traders are in a hurry; they
believe information differentials in
the
marketplace
can be profitably exploited.
The
True Growth
Investor:
The
true growth trader is more
willing to wait than the
information trader, but
shares the
belief
that good investment managers can earn
above-average returns for their
clients. A
growth
trader often focuses on companies that
are currently in favor in
the financial
community.
The proliferation of home
computers and information
superhighway
developments
led to significant price
rises for firms like
Intel, Microsoft, and
Gateway
(GTW,
NYSE). Sometimes the notion of
whether the existing level
of earnings is sufficient
to
justify a particularly high
stock price is unclear.
Growth traders are willing to
pay more
than
might seem reasonable
because they like the
stack's future prospects; they
are buying
future
earnings that may or may
not develop.
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How
Price Relates to
Value:
Categorizing
an investment approach as either growth
or value oriented is not
really a new
idea.
The book that holds
the distinction as all-time
best seller in the
investment business is
probably
Security Analysis by Benjamin
Graham and David Dodd. In
this book, the
authors
describe
a precursor to the present-day
value-versus-growth dichotomy called
historical
optimism
and growth selectivity. Graham and
Dodd state:
"The
principle of selectivity was an
old and obvious guidepost in Wall Street. It
was no
more
than the truism that some
companies are better than
others, and hence some
stocks
will
fare better than others in
the market- In the 1920s, however,
selectivity took on a
new
character
by reason of the overshadowing placed on expected
future growth as the
prime
criterion
of an attractive investment."
A
remarkable thing about
investment theory in the
early days of the market is
the minor role
that
price played, Graham and
Dodd summarize the attitude
in one statement: "A stock
with
good
long-term prospects is always a good
investment" As the stock
market soared in the
late
1920s, the primary determinant of
value, in the minds of many
people at least, was its
growth
potential. A stock that experienced
high earnings growth was a
quality stock, and no
external
factor could change that,
not even a stock price
run-up to exorbitant
levels.
The
Great Crash of 1929 and resulting
depression changed a lot of minds
about the source
of
value. Firms whose equity
was reasonably backed by assets and a
popular product fared
far
better than firms peddling
fanciful visions of what
might some-day be.
Since
the Depression, the economy
has traversed both
recessions and economic
expansions.
The
stock market severely
penalizes growth stocks without a
firm foundation during
the
recessions,
but falls in love with
them during boom times.
Most of today's
investment
managers
look favorably upon a
history of earnings and dividend
growth, but also look
at
the
firm's financial statements to see if
future growth can reasonably be expected.
Unlike
their
predecessors, though, contemporary
analysts understand that
value is inextricably
intertwined
with price, and that the
most efficient and productive
company in the world is
a
poor
investment if the stock
price is too high.
The
modern perspective: Value is inextricably
intertwined with price.
The
most efficient and productive
company in the world is a poor
investment if the
stock
price
is too high.
Value
Stocks and Growth
Stocks:
How
to Tell by Looking:
No
precise definition of value
stock or growth stock will
satisfy everyone. However,
a
firm's
price to book ratio and its
price-earnings ratio play
important roles in this
segregation.
Morningstar
Mutual Funds is a
popular source of information on public
investment
portfolios
called mutual funds the
principal topic of Chapter
Nineteen. This service
sorts
mutual
funds into three groups;
value, blend, and growth.
The placement criteria are
the
fund's
relative price to book and PE
ratios. For each fund,
its PE is divided by the
market
average
to produce a relative PE; an average
fund has a relative PE of
1.0. The same thing
is
done
with the price to book
ratio. Adding these two
values gives the magic
number. An
average
fund, by definition, has a
rating of 2.00. If a fund's
magic number is below
1.75,
Morningstar
classifies the fund as a
value fund. Ratings over
2-25 are growth funds,
with
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those in
between classified as blend
funds. While the Morningstar
system
is not definitive,
some
variant of it is probably used by
many value-oriented investors.
Morningstar
explains
their
rating rationale as
follows:
We
have opted to combine both
the price-earnings ratio
(PE) and the price to book
ratio for
each
of the funds, thus
emphasizing relative, rather
than absolute, numbers.
After all a PE of
15 can be
cheap in one market, but
dear in another; what's
really important is knowing
how
that
compares with other funds.
By combining each fund's
relative PE and price to
book
ratios,
we arrive at a multidimensional picture
of where each stock fund
stands on the
value/growth
spectrum.
Given
the importance of these two
ratios in determining the
value or growth style, we
now
look
at these statistics in
detail.
The
Price to Book
Ratio:
Book
value per share is an accounting
concept that measures what
shareholders would
receive
if all the firm's
liabilities were paid and all
its assets could be sold at
their balance
sheet
value. The term is
synonymous with equity per
share or net asset
value.
Share
price normally is not equal
book value. Depreciation
methods, a firm's method
of
allowing
for uncollectible debts, the
presence of goodwill, and a host of
other things can
distort
book value. The market
value of a building usually
appreciates, for instance,
while
the
owner often can depreciate
it. An apartment complex may
have a book value of
$250,000,
but a market value of $1
million. A value- 0 oriented
investor would be
favorably
inclined
toward a stock whose market
price was below its book
value. It might seem
curious
that
this would ever be the
case, but it frequently
occurs. Note in the
guidelines from
Graham
and Dodd the criterion that
price be less than
two-thirds of book value. Of
me
securities
in the Compustat data base,
nearly one-third traded below
book value at some
time.13
In October 1999, 471 of the
6,135 stocks covered in the expanded
Value Line
Investment
Survey traded below book
value.
Economic
obsolescence is another reason
market value and book value
may diverge.
Consider
the personal computer
market. Someone might begin
to depreciate a new,
$2,700
personal
computer over a three-year
period. After two years, its
book value will be
$900.
The
way technology is moving in
this industry, after two
years the computer may well
have
virtually
no resale value. If this is
the case, its book
value overstates the actual
market value.
Table
7-1 shows stocks selling at
less than half their
book value. The mere fact
that a stock
sells
below book value is
insufficient evidence that a
value investor would
recommend it.
Such
a stock is likely, however, to
attract the value investor's
attention. Additional
research
is
necessary to discover whether
any good reasons explain why
the stock is selling at such
a
seemingly
low price.
Another
problem is characteristic of the
price to book value ratio.
It stems from the
changing
nature of life in the 1990s
and the increasingly intangible
aspects of some
investment
value. Rich Karlgaard,
editor of Forbes ASAP,
states:
"As
an index, book value is dead as a
doornail, an artifact of the Industrial
Age. We live in
the
Information Age, of course, though
remarkably few people have
come to terms with
that
fact.
Failure to understand the declining
relevance of book value and the tangible
assets
that
form the ratio's numerator is
proof of this. Human intelligence and
intellectual
resources
are now any company's most
valuable assets."
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The
Price-Earnings Ratio:
The
price-earnings ratio (PE) is one of
the most widely followed
statistics about a
common
stock.
It is computed by dividing the
current stock price by the
firm's earnings per share.
There
are two versions of the PE
ratio. A trailing PE is the
current market price divided
by
the
company's reported earnings per
share from the past
year. The stock market is
much
more
concerned about what' will happen in
the future than what
happened in the past,
so
some
analysts prefer to compute
the PE based on expected earnings
rather than on
actual,
realized
earnings. Although a PE calculated
this way has no particular
name, it is indicated
by statements
such as the stock sells at
15 times estimated earnings." This
description
means
the current market price
divided by the earnings estimate
for the next year equals
15.
Growth
stocks tend to have PE ratios
higher than average. Corporate management
generally
likes
a firm's PE to be high. A higher PE
ratio allows management to raise
capital more
easily
without having to sell a
large number of
shares.
A
number of academic studies provide
evidence supporting the
theory that low PE
stocks
are
attractive. The most
important of-these is probably a
now-classic study by Sanjoy
Basu,
finding
above-average performance with low PE
stocks.
In
general, a low price-earnings
ratio implies greater risk.
Higher leverage means
higher
risk,
and higher leverage tends to produce a
low PE, because leverage
increases the
volatility
in a firm's earnings, regardless of
whether the leverage comes
from the fixed
costs
associated
with capital investment or
from interest payments on
debt. Increased
uncertainty
in
earnings may depress the
stock price, and hence produce a
lower PE ratio. You
should
not,
however, automatically assume
that a low PE stock is
highly leveraged.
Stock
Market investors are more
concerned with future than with the
past.
Differences
between Industries:
Neither
the price-earnings ratio nor
the price to book ratio is a
stand-alone statistic.
Important
industry differences need to be
considered. A firm whose primary
asset is
brainpower
(such as a software company)
has fewer capital assets
than a smokestack
company
(like a steel mill). The
software industry would
normally have a higher price
to
book
ratio than the steel
industry.
For
this reason, relative ratios
are commonly computed for
both the PE and the price
to
book
statistics. This calculation
provides the ratio of the
firm's statistic to the
industry
average
statistic.
SOME
ANALYTICAL FACTORS:
Growth
Rates:
Dividend
and earnings growth rates
are important to both value
and growth investors,
but
especially
to the growth investor. The
estimation of further growth
rates is an art rather
than
a science.
Many models that attempt to
calculate a stock's worth
are quite sensitive to
the
growth
rate used; consequently, an analyst needs
to be careful in preparing this
statistic.
Corporations
like to establish a predictable
dividend payout pattern,
normally including an
annual
increase in the dividend
payment- Some people feel
that predictable
dividends
reduce
the uncertainty surrounding
the future cash flows to
which shareholders are
entitled.
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PepsiCo
(PEP, NYSE'), a familiar
soft-drink company, is also the
parent corporation
for
Frito-Lay
and Tropicana Products. Table
7-4 shows historical
dividend and earnings
information
that will be used in the
examples to follow. In its 1994
annual report, the
company
states that its current
payout target is approximately
one-third of the prior
year's
income
from continuing operations. Since
1988, the average annual
payout ratio is 33.7
percent.
Of
the two common ways of
determining growth rates,
the first method uses
the company's
past
history of dividends. The
other method uses the
firm's earnings retention rate
coupled
with
the firm's return on equity.
We will look at each of these
methods.
Calculate
dividend growth rates using
the geometric mean rather
than the arithmetic
mean.
The
Dividend Discount
Model:
Stock
potentially has an infinite
life. If the stack's
dividends increase by a known
growth
rate
each year, it is valued as a
growing perpetuity. Standard present
value tables cannot be
used
for a growing perpetuity,
but fortunately a mathematical
identity makes present
value
determinations
a simple task. Equation
(7-3) shows a relationship
known as the dividend
discount
model (DDM), also called
Gordon's growth
model.
D0 ( I + g )
D
po =
= 1
k-g
k-g
In
this equation, Do is
the current dividend; D1 is the dividend to be paid
next year; g is the
expected
dividend growth rate; and k is
the discount factor
according to the riskiness of
the
stock.20
the model assumes that
the dividend stream is perpetual and
that the long-term
growth
rate is constant.
The
DDM is sometimes used to get an idea of
how risky the market
thinks a particular
stock
is at
the moment. In equation
(7-3), we can observe the current
stock price and the
current
dividend.
We can estimate the dividend growth
rate. The one variable we
cannot observe is
the
discount rate k. This value,
however, can be calculated if we know
the other variables
in
the
equation. The variable k is sometimes
called the shareholders'
required rate of return.
D0 ( I + g )
k=
+g
p0
Note
that the expression for k,
the shareholders' required rate of
return, is the sum of
two
components:
the expected dividend yield on
the stock and the expected
growth rate. If the
dividend
yield is a constant, g represents
the anticipated capital
appreciation in the
stock
price.
The
shareholders' required rate of return is
the sum of the expected
sum of the
expected
dividend yield
and the expected stock price
appreciation.
The
Importance of Hitting the Earnings
Estimate:
Corporate
CFOs know the importance of
hitting Wall Street's
earnings estimates. Analysts
are
in frequent contact with the
company, know its operations
well, and usually base
their
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estimates
on sound information- The
market often penalizes a
company's stock
substantially
when
the earnings report is
disappointing. This is especially
true when the required rate
of
return
and the estimated growth rate are
high.
Suppose
a company has a dividend
payout ratio of 50%,
analysts expect earnings of
$1.10
in
the coming year, the
consensus median dividend
growth rate is 15%, and the
current
stock
price is $27'/2, According to
the DDM, the shareholders'
required rate of return is
17%:
D
0.5($1.10)
R = 1
+ g=
+ 0.15 = 17%
p0
$
27.50
Suppose
also that the expected earnings in
the upcoming quarter are
$0.29, but the
company
reports
only $0.27- This is a
negative surprise, meaning
that actual earnings were
below
expectations.
This might cause the
analyst to reduce the estimate of future
growth and,
because
of the uncertainty, to boost the
discount rate. Perhaps the
analyst adjusts the
growth
rate to
13% and the required rate of
return to 18%. If future
estimates for the year
remain on
track,
the anticipated earnings per
share will be only $1.08.
How does this affect
the stock
price? You
might first think that
being off by two cents is
not a big deal, but as
the
following
equation shows, the stock
price is hit hard by this
news. It falls by nearly
61%.
D2 D2 (1.g )
/(k - g )
D1
P0 =
+
(1 + k ) (1
+
k
)
2
(1 + k ) 2
These
results indicate why the
whisper number is important and why CFOs
do not like to
feed
incomplete information to the
analysts who follow their
companies.
The
Multistage DDM:
Small
firms often show initially
high levels of growth that
cannot reasonably be expected to
persist. In
such a case, it is appropriate to
use two (or more)
growth rates. Suppose a
firm
currently
pays a $1 dividend that is expected to
grow by 20 percent for the
net two years,
and
then grow by 5 percent
annually thereafter. A growth rate
that can reasonably be
expected to
persist is called a customable growth
rate. What is the most an
investor can pay
for
this stock if the required
rate of return is 17%? To find out,
solve for pq in the
following
equation.
The
term for the dividend in
year three is discounted
only twice because the
formula for tile
growing
perpetuity is based on next year's
dividend. Therefore, the
numerator is discounted
only
twice, not three
times.
Caveats
about the DDM:
The
dividend discount model is a
useful tool in security
analysis. It is not, however,
a
method
to predict the future. As
with most analytical
techniques, the DDM helps an
analyst
make a
better decision, but it does
not make the decision. Users
should understand the
shortcomings
of the DDM.
First,
the DDM requires that g. If
the dividend growth rate is greater
than or equal to the
shareholders'
required rate of return, the
equation cannot be used.
Dividing by zero or by a
negative
number obviously gives an absurd
result. Also, the results
are sensitive to the
estimate of g.
Minor differences in the
growth rate selected can materially
affect the results.
As
shown, there are numerous
ways of estimating g.
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Another
consideration is the assumption
that the dividend yield
remains constant. A change
in
dividend policy can affect
the apparent growth rate. A change in
the growth rate will
produce
different values from the
model. Finally, the model
implicitly assumes the
long-
term
ROE is constant. The DDM
does not require that
every year's growth be
identical.
Rather,
it requires that the
long-term growth rate be constant in
other words, a
long-term
trend
about which the annual
values fluctuate.
False
Growth:
Historical
data must always be
scrutinized carefully when
used to determine a growth
rate.
Remember
that in the investing
business the future is much
more important than the
past
Sometimes
accounting changes, mergers, or other
unusual events can muddy the
water for
the
financial analyst. One such
situation occurs when one
firm acquires another
firm
through
a stock swap.
Some
shareholders may-decide not to
tender their shares, but
most are likely to do so.
In
any
event, after the merger,
when the accounting records of
the two firms are
consolidated,
we
see that A's earnings per
share have risen. This
appreciation is due solely to the
merger
and is a
phenomenon called false
growth. False growth occurs
anytime a firm acquires
another
firm with a PE ratio lower
than its own. The
stock price does not
matter; the PE
ratio
determines the
outcome.
When
using historical data to estimate a
stack's dividend growth
rate, an analyst should
be
alert
for instances of false growth
contained in the data- If acquisitions
occurred during the
period,
the analyst may need to
consider that fact in
arriving at an estimate of the
growth
rate.
False Growth
occurs anytime a firm
acquires another firm with a
lower price-earnings
ratio.
A
Firm's Cash Flow:
Earnings
are important to individual and
institutional investors alike.
Increasing earnings
are a
good sign, and investors like to
see growth in this
statistic. The trained
financial
analyst
knows, however, that taking
stated earnings at face value can be a
mistake. For this
reason,
security analysts pay
particularly close attention to cash
flow, the movement of
funds
into and out of the firm.
The Wall Street Journal once
reported in an editorial.
"A
lot of executives apparently
believe that if they can figure
out a way to boost
reported
earnings,
their stock prices will go up
even if the higher earnings do
not represent: any
underlying
economic change. In other words, the
executives think they are
smart and the
market
is dumb. The market is
smart. Apparently the dumb
one is the corporate
executive
caught
up in the earnings-per-share
mystique."
The
formal definition of cash
flow is net: income after
taxes plus non-cash expenses.
The
most
important non-cash expense is
depreciation. Depreciation is a
tax-deductible business
expense,
but no check is written for
it. No funds leave the
firm to pay for
depreciation
expense; it is
non-cash. Some financial
analysts calculate a variation
known as free cash
flow,
often defined as net income
after taxes plus non-cash
expenses minus required
capital
expenditures.
This concept recognizes that
even though the checking
account contains
certain
funds, they are not
necessarily available for
discretionary use. If a firm
must replace
a
fleet of trucks next month,
the money to do so is encumbered and
should not be viewed
as
profit
to be distributed or invested in new
ventures.
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Some
evidence indicates that
market valuation is more a
function of corporate cash
flow
than
corporate earnings. A famous
study by Kaplan and Roll
examined market reaction
to
changes
in depreciation-methods.24 Switching from
straight-line to an accelerated
method
will
decrease earnings but
increase cash flow;
switching from an accelerated
method to
straight-line
will do just the opposite. This
study found that the
market reacts negatively
to
firms
that increase earnings at
the expense of cash flow,
and vice versa.
Statement
of Financial Accounting Standard number
95 requires a firm to separate
cash
flows
from operations, financing
activities, and investment activities on
its statement of
cash
flows. However, these
numbers hold more than
initially meets the eye.
Cash flow from
operations
is the firm's lifeblood. If
this statistic is weak, it
calls into question the
firm's
health
or even its ability to
survive. In this example,
cash flow from operations
steadily
declined
over the four years,
from $88 million in 1996 to $35 million
in 1999. In the past
two
years the firm's operating
cash flow was insufficient to
cover the dividends paid.
In
fact,
equipment sales helped
provide the funds necessary
for the dividend
checks.
Similarly,
the firm borrowed $20
million in 1997. It is not
clear from this statement
whether
the
firm used those funds
productively. While net
income was up the following
year,
operating
cash flow was down. Accounts
receivable and inventory rose
substantially;
analysts
know these changes may be a
bad sign. Accounts
receivable can be increased by
easing
credit terms, and rising
inventory levels may
indicate that customers are
not buying
the
firm's products. Perhaps the
firm used long-term debt to
finance the acquisition
of
current
assets.
The
cash flow from operations
figures are widely used as a
check on a firm's
earnings
quality.
Rising earnings associated
with declining operating
cash flow means the
earnings
are
of low quality- A security
analyst will temper estimates of
future dividend or
earnings
growth
if the earnings are low
quality. For this reason,
the statement of cash flows
is a
useful
analytical tool.
Cash
Flow from operations is a
firm's lifeblood.
Small-Cap,
Mid-Cap, and Large-Cap
Stocks:
Another
consideration in fundamental stock
analysis relates to the size of the
firm.
Currently,
firms are categorized as
small-cap, mid-cap, or large-cap,
cap being short
for
capitalization.
Although no precise definition
has been stated for
these terms most
analysts
consider
a firm with capitalization
less than $500 million to be a
small cap stock'
Lipper
Analytical
Services defines a mid-cap ·firm as one
with capitalization between $800
million
and $2
billion. Others extend the
mid-cap range up to $6 billion.
Substantial
financial research finds
unusually good performance from
small-cap stocks;
this
phenomenon
is sometimes called the small
firm effect. Because of this
effect, some analysts
devote
particular attention to small-cap
firms.
Mid-cap
firms showed average
earnings growth of 15 percent
during 1993, compared
with
12
percent for large-cap firms.
Some analysts believe the
mid-caps offer particularly
fertile
hunting
ground for the stock
picker. Small-cap stocks tend to be
more volatile, scaring
away
the
more risk-averse investors.
Index funds and large
institutional portfolios own
large-cap
stocks.
The likelihood of "striking
oil" from superior analysis
of these large-cap stocks is
remote,
because too many other
people are -trying to do the
same thing.
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A
study by Prudential Securities
found that since 1926 mid-cap stocks
returned 0-4% less
than
small-cap stocks but were
much less volatile. Many
investors find that the
risk-return
package
historically offered by the
mid-caps is superior to that
offered by either the
small-
caps
or the large-caps.
Future
study on relative performance by
market capitalization is going to be
complicated by
the
definitional problem. We have
traditionally defined market
capitalization as the
current
share
price multiplied by the
number of outstanding shares.
This definition, however,
can
pose
a dilemma for the thoughtful
security analyst. Y Suppose
you are hired as a
large-
capitalization
common stock manager. Your
job is to build and manage a
portfolio of large-
cap
stocks. How should you view
a company like Yahoo! (YHOO,
NASDAQ)? In February
2000
the company's stock price of
about $156 gave it a capitalization of
$82-2 billion. The
price-earnings
ratio, however, was over
1,600. Suppose its PE were
"only" 100, a figure
that
is
still well above the market
average. This would drop the
capitalization into the
mid-cap
range.
Overlay this with the
fact that the company
has only about 700
employees, and you
might
be hard pressed to call
Yahoo! a large-cap firm in
the historical sense.
Cooking the
Books:
Ail
publicly traded firms in the
United States must have
their financial statements audited
to
ensure
they fairly present the
company's financial position.
Still, every year there is
at least
one
story of accounting fraud at a
major firm. In 1992, for
instance, the women's
clothing
firm
Leslie Fay admitted it had
manipulated inventory numbers to
produce earnings of
$23.9
million when, in fact, it
lost $13.7 million. The
news cut the stock
price in half and
led
to bankruptcy two months
later. In recent years there
have been accounting
bombshells
at
other firms including
Comptronix Corp., Cascade
International, Maxwell
Communication
Corp.,
Chambers Development, MiniScribe,
Cendant, and numerous others.
Unfortunately,
there
is not much the analyst can
do about fraud. As Patricia
McConnell, a respected
analyst
at Bear
Steams says, "A well-perpetrated
fraud is impossible to detect."
The important thing
to
remember is that the
marketplace is full of many types of
risk, and fraud is one of
them.
Fundamental
analysts believe securities
are priced according to
economic data; technical
analysts
believe supply and demand factors
are most important. Most
investment research
deals
with predicting future
earnings. A value investor
believes a security should
only be
purchased
when the underlying
fundamentals justify the purchase.
They believe in a
regression to
the mean of security
returns.
A
growth investor seeks
rapidly growing companies. Value
investors place a great deal of
importance
on a stock's price to book
ratio and its price-earnings
ratio. A future
earning
growth
rate is unobservable. Most analysts
use several methods to estimate
this statistic to
determine
a likely range for the value
rather than a single
number.
The
dividend discount model
(also called Gordon's growth
model) can be used to
value
stock
as a growing perpetuity. The
shareholders' required rate of return is
an input to the
model.
False growth in earnings
occurs any time a firm
acquires another firm with a
lower
price-earning
ratio. Cash flow from
operations is a firm's lifeblood.
This value is often
used
as a
check on the quality of a
firm's earnings.
The
evidence shows that
small-cap stocks outperform mid- or
large-cap stocks. Some
analysts
believe that mid-cap stocks
are particularly fertile
hunting ground for the
security
analyst
because they receive less
attention from the
marketplace. Spectacular gains are
occasionally
associated with initial
public offerings (IPO).these gains
usually disappear
within
the first year or two of
the new stock's
life.
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