Enterprise / Equity Value Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we look at both Enterprise Value and Equity Value?

A

EV - value of the firm attributable TO ALL INVESTORS

Equity Value - portion attributable TO EQUITY.

We look at both b/c Equity is what the public sees, but EV is true value.

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2
Q

When looking at an acquisition of a company, do you pay more attention to Enterprise or Equity Value?

A

Enterprise, b/c that’s what you REALLY PAY and includes often mandatory debt repayment.

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3
Q

What’s the formula for Enterprise Value?

A

EV = Equity Value + NET Debt + Preferred Stock + Minority Interests

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4
Q

Why do you need to add Minority Interest to Enterprise Value?

A

If a company owns more than 50% of another, it must fully consolidate its performance in its F/S. We add Minority Interest so that EV fully reflects a comparable figure - EBITDA will reflect full performance, so apples-to-apples.

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5
Q

How do you calculate fully diluted shares?

A

Take basic shares and add dilutive effect of stock options and other dilutive securites (i.e., warrants, converts). We often use Treasury Stock Method.

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6
Q

Assume a company has 100 shares outstanding, a share price of $10 and 10 options outstanding at a strike price of $5 each - what’s fully diluted equity value?

A
  • Basic equity value = 100 x $10 = $1,000.
  • TSM: Receive $50 from option exercise, creating 10 new shares; spend that $50 to buy back 5 shares, creating 5 new ones.
  • TOTAL = (100 + 5) x $10 = $1,050.
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7
Q

Assume a company has 100 shares, a share price of $10 and 10 options outstanding (strike = $15) - what’s fully diluted equity value?

A

Options are out-of-the-money, so 100 x $10 = $1,000.

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8
Q

Why do you subtract cash in the EV formula? Always accurate?

A

Officially, because cash is a non-operating asset and it’s implicitly counted in equity value.

Unofficially, because an acquiror can use the target’s cash to pay for the acq., or repay debt.

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9
Q

Is it always accurate to add debt to equity value when calculating EV?

A

Generally, yes, because debt usually has to be repaid in CoC. However, there could be exceptions.

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10
Q

Could a company have a negative EV? What would it mean?

A

Yes - Low market cap, low debt and a lot of cash.

Examples:

  1. Companies verging on bankruptcy;
  2. Financial institutions with lots of cash.
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11
Q

Could a company have a negative equity value?

A

No - market cap must be positive.

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12
Q

Why do we add Preferred Stock to get to EV?

A

It functions somewhat like debt: receive fixed dividend and is above common in priority.

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13
Q

How do you account for convertible bonds in the EV formula?

A

In-the-money: count as add’l dilution to equity value

Out-of-the-money: count face value as debt

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14
Q

Assume a company has 1M shares outstanding, share price of $100 and $10M of convertible bonds (par = $1,000, conversion price = $50). What’s DSO?

A

Each $1K converts into 20 shares, so 200,000 new shares; DSO = 1.2M.

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15
Q

Difference between Equity Value and S/E?

A

Market number vs. historical figure.

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16
Q

What problems are there with the conventional EV formula?

A

Excessive simplicity:

  • NOLs
  • Long-Term Investments
  • Equity Investments
  • Cap. Leases
  • (Some) Op. Leases
  • Unfunded Pension Obligations
17
Q

When calculating EV, should you use the BV or MV of each item?

A

Technically, MV.

In practice, equity is only easily-discernible MV.

18
Q

What percentage dilution in Equity Value is too high?

A

No hard rule, but over 10% is odd.