Published by CFA Institute Research Foundation
Authors:
Frank Fabozzi
Sergio Focardi
Caroline Jonas
Equity Valuation:
Science, Art, or Craft?
The setting
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?2
➢ Fundamental analysts/managers try to determine the intrinsic (fundamental)
value of a company’s stock,
➢ Under the assumption that their ability to estimate the difference between a
stock’s fundmental value and its market price will allow them to outperform
the market
➢ But studies show that on average and over time active traditional managers fail
to outperform markets
➢ The result: «a sea change in investors’ preferences» as investors withdraw funds
from actively managed equity funds and place them in passively managed equity
funds
➢ So what’s all this about equity valuation?
Objective of the monograph
Attempt to respond to a number of critical questions on equity
valuation:
➢As public stocks are traded in competitive markets and
subject to the law of supply & demand, is there really such a
thing as an intrinsic (fundamental) value of a stock?
➢ If yes, can we determine this value using the tools we have?
➢Or can we determine only relative values?
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?3
Critical questions, ctd
➢What about determining the value of hard-to-value assets,
such as IPOs or private equity?
➢What is the role of “hype” or information asymmetry in
determining the value of these asset classes?
➢Do phenomena such as central banks’ policies or corporate
stock buybacks distort market prices, taking them far from a
stock’s fundamental value?
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?4
Critical questions, ctd
➢Has the global investment universe changed so much that the
role of the fundamental analyst/manager is no longer
central?
➢ In other words, are there better ways to generate returns for
investors than traditional value investing?
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?5
Research methodology
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?6
➢Review of 100s of articles and academic literature of which
more than are 160 cited
➢ Interviews with 30 asset managers, academics and other
industry players in North America and Europe
What we will attempt to do
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?7
➢The allotted time will not allow us to cover all the issues in
the monograph
➢ So we will limit our discussion here to some of the critical
issues in equity valuation and equity investment
Equity valuation & market efficiency
➢ Fundamental analysis is a supporting pillar of the notion of
the intrinsic value of a company’s stock
➢The question of equity valuation is closely related to the
question of market efficiency
➢A proper analysis of valuation issues calls for a minimum of
theory and macroeconomic considerations
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?8
A natural approach
➢ Fundamental analysis seems to be an obvious, natural
approach to valuation:
➢As Graham and Dodd advocate (Security Analysis: Principles and
Techniques,1934), the investor, after analyzing a firm as a
potential investment, will look at the market price to
determine whether the firm’s revenue streams are in line
with its market price—that is, whether a stock’s market
price is in line with its “intrinsic” value
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?9
The theory of valuation➢ According to classical APT, financial asset prices are equal to the
sum of the discounted values of expected future cash flows
➢ The discount rate is determined as the sum of the risk-free rates + a risk premium
➢ The intrinsic price corresponds to the natural rate at which the supply and demand for investment are in equilibrium
➢ A parallel framework relates to the notion of market efficiency and intrinsic prices
➢ A first definition of market efficiency comes from Eugene Fama(1970): unfettered financial markets are efficient
➢ This framework has become important for both theoretical and practical reasons
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?10
Analyst’s job: identify mispricings➢The job of the analyst: discover whether a financial asset is
mispriced, i.e., under- or overpriced with respect to its intrinsic value,
➢Under the assumption that markets will eventually correct the mispricing
➢The identification of and the ability to take advantage of mispricings (price anomalies) are believed to generate profit when prices revert to the asset’s fundamental value
➢Though markets are driven by supply & demand, it is widely believed that intrinsic value still plays a role in “beating the market”
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?11
Financial markets are almost arbitrage-
free
➢ In free markets, the price of “things” is determined by the interaction between supply & demand—with (possibly complex) links between the characteristics of “things” and their price
➢ Free competitive markets for goods and services should be reasonably free from arbitrage opportunities. So the “law of one price” should hold approximately, though exceptions can be frequent
➢ Financial assets trade in markets that are almost perfectly competitive and free
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?12
Intrinsic value depends on
macroeconomic considerations➢ The notion of intrinsic value requires the introduction of
macroeconomic considerations: intrinsic value is a concept related to equilibrium in a specific macroeconomic theory
➢ Both the notion of intrinsic value and that of deviations from it can be defined only within a supply-and-demand framework
➢ Simply stated, the intrinsic value is the value financial assets would have in economies where the supply and demand for investments are in equilibrium
➢ Determining the intrinsic value of a stock calls, in turn, for determining (1) the distribution of future cash flows, (2) the true discount rates and (3) the risk premiums
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?13
The natural rate of return
➢ The concept of the intrinsic value of financial assets depends on the possibility of defining a natural rate of return or, more correctly, a “natural rate of interest” + a “natural risk premium”
➢ However, defining a natural rate of interest or a natural rate of return without recourse to macroeconomic considerations is well beyond the realm of pure finance theory
➢ The idea of a natural rate of interest (now gaining the attention of central banks) was introduced by the Swedish economist Knut Wicksell (1898), who defined the natural rate of interest as that rate of interest that guarantees stable asset and consumer prices
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?14
But rates are neglected
➢Much of the vast literature on stock valuation does not
address the problem of rates theoretically but devotes much
time to describing how to analyze a balance sheet and,
eventually, how to forecast earnings or dividends
➢As for describing how to choose the discount rate, most
authors simply recommend heuristics or historical values
➢The capital asset pricing model and factor models are also
used
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?15
Intrinsic vs relative valuations
➢ In practice, only relative comparisons are made
➢While intrinsic valuation is used only for evaluating situations
of strong disequilibrium
➢ In other words, evaluating whether a stock is cheap or
expensive with respect to other stocks is possible, but
evaluating whether a stock is cheap or expensive in absolute
is not, except in situations far from equilibrium
➢ Let’s now take a look at frequently used tools and their
relative advantages/limitations
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?16
Net present value models➢ Models used to compute net present value (NPV) require two key
steps:
➢ (1) the forecasting of future cash flows
➢ (2) the estimation of discount factors—that is, the risk-free rate + a risk premium
➢ Forecasts of future cash flows are based on the fundamental analysis of a firm + models of projections of future cash flows and their uncertainty
➢ The intrinsic discount factor cannot really be determined without macroeconomic considerations (as mentioned above), including knowledge of the financial and banking system
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?17
Required rate of return
➢ In practice, analysts use various techniques for making a reasonable estimate of a required rate of return (equivalent to the discount rate if the market is in equilibrium)
➢ The required rate of return is the benchmark return rate used by investors in their decision-making process
➢ If, on the one hand, the expected return of a stock is higher than the required rate, the stock is considered underpriced and is a candidate for investment;
➢ If the expected return is lower than the required return, the stock is considered overpriced and therefore not a good candidate for investment
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?18
DDM and DCF models
➢Discounted present value approaches use company
fundamentals to try to determine the intrinsic value of a
firm, in which the value is the sum of discounted expected
future cash flows
➢Two basic versions of this model:
➢ the dividend discount model (DDM)
➢ and the discounted cash flow (DCF) model
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?19
Problems with the DDM: cash flows as
dividends
➢ In the DDM, dividends are considered to be the relevant cash
flows but dividends are discretionary, thus their forecasting is
problematic
➢ In fact, one has to forecast not only how the company will
perform but also the decisions that will be made about the
distribution of dividends (versus reinvestment of profits into the
company’s operations)
➢ For this reason, many prefer DCF models, which use a different
concept of the company’s discounted future cash flows
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?20
The DCF model: Cash is the key
quantity
➢The idea behind a DCF model is that what is important is the
cash available, regardless of whether or not it is distributed
➢Advantage of the DCF model: its applicability to listed and
unlisted firms alike
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?21
A representative quote on DCF
“All models shed light on some aspect of ‘the truth’; they all have their
pros and cons. However, on the margin, we favor the free-cash-flow
model, basically because we find free cash flows less prone to
manipulation.”
Christian Kjaer, head of global equities and volatility at Denmark’s largest pension
provider ATP ($113 billion in aum)
The insight here: The price of a stock reflects the expectations
of future cash flows
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?22
Limits of the DDM and DCF models
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?23
➢A DDM can be used only in cases where a firm pays stable
(and predictable) dividends;
➢The DCF, only in cases where a firm has positive (and
predictable) free cash flows
➢ Free cash flows = cash flows minus an allowance for enough
reinvestment of cash to keep the company in a steady state,
replacing equipment, etc.
Challenges in using present value
models➢ The challenge: the dependence of future cash flows on, and the
predictability of, input forecasts, e.g. a company’s return on invested capital, its growth rate, and its weighted average cost of capital
➢ Key difficulty: forecasting future dividends, cash flows, and the discount rate
➢ In theory, both the DDM and DCF models include an infinite stream of cash flows and/or the eventual final liquidation of the firm
➢ In practice, however, all models make forecasts of dividends or cash flows over a finite time horizon, typically 5 to 10 years
➢ Therefore, every present value model, in practice, has two components: the present value of cash flows before the time horizon + the terminal value at the time horizon
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?24
NPV models and the terminal value➢ The terminal value at the time horizon is a critical issue: it
depends on the maturity of the firm and the sector
Prof Charles Lee notes:
➢ In a mature sector (e.g., the tobacco industry), over an 8-year time horizon, the terminal value represents 56% of the total present value;
➢ In the skin care sector, the terminal value represents 100% of the total present value;
➢ In the high-tech sector, the first 8 years of a firm yield negative cash flows, and the terminal value might represent 125% of the total present value
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?25
NPV models and the discount rate➢ In addition to evaluating cash flows, the other crucial element in
present value models is the discount rate
➢ Determining the intrinsic value of a stock is somehow equivalent to identifying a natural rate of interest and a natural rate of return
➢ Both are related to a situation of macroeconomic equilibrium where prices are stable, there is full employment, and the money available for investment equals the money needed for investment
➢ The problem of determining the intrinsic value of stocks is, therefore, the problem of determining an equilibrium economic situation
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?26
NPV models and the discount rate, ctd
➢ Central banks increasingly interested in the problem of determining the natural interest rate,
➢ Because, in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the policies of central banks have been focused on setting interest rates
➢ Among the more popular models for determining the natural interest rate is the Laubach–Williams model
➢ In this model, the natural rate is assumed to depend on the estimated contemporaneous trend growth rate of potential output + a time-varying unobserved component that captures the effects of other unspecified influences on the natural rate
➢ The model is estimated using the Kalman filter
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?27
NPV models and buybacks
➢ For the full year 2016, firms in the S&P 500 spent $536.4 billion on buybacks; for the 5-year period 2009–2016, the figure was $2.75 trillion (Standard & Poor’s, 2017)
Buybacks have two effects:
1. By increasing demand for a stock, buybacks increase the stock price, thereby increasing the realized risk premium
2. Buybacks reduce the amount of cash available to pay dividends; many regard buybacks as a substitute for dividends, an alternative way of returning cash to the shareholder
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?28
Dividends and buybacks➢ Given corporate buybacks and other innovations, dividend models
are less useful than they once were
➢ Straehl and Ibbotson (2015) argue that the shift in corporate payout policy from dividends to buybacks has caused a “secular decrease in dividend yields, and an analogous increase in per-share growth,”
➢ Leading to “a structural break in the return components of the traditional supply models such as the dividend discount model,”
➢ Thereby creating the need for a new supply model of stock returns (Straehl & Ibbotson propose the total payout model)
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?29
Residual income models
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?30
➢ For the above reasons, progressive shift away from models such as the DDM or DCF to the Residual Income Model (RIM)
➢ The RIM is based on value creation rather than on cash distribution
➢ Lee observes that over the entire life of a firm, wealth creation must equal the sum of dividends paid (ref Slide 25)
➢ Over short time horizons, however, wealth creation differs from dividends paid
➢ The residual income = the income generated in a given period minus the cost of capital needed to generate that income
➢ The RIM values a company at a given time by computing the present value of future residual income + the capital of the firm
Relative valuation & market multiples
➢ When the use of a discounted present value approach is deemed difficult or inappropriate, relative valuation methods based on heuristics—in particular, market multiples—are the tools of choice
➢ Market multiples are used to determine the price of an asset relative to the price of a similar (comparable) asset;
➢ So, they establish a ranking of asset values
➢ They do not inform on the intrinsic value of the asset
➢ Behind their use is the belief that markets will eventually identify and correct “mispricings,” i.e., return to the mean,
➢ Thereby allowing an analyst to forecast the future price movements of a given stock
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?31
But...
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?32
➢ It is not always easy to identify “comparable” stocks and doing
so can be subjective
➢ Behind the use of market multiples is the belief that markets
will eventually identify and correct “mispricings,” i.e., return
to the mean
➢ But the timing of a return to the mean - should such a return
exist - is difficult to forecast
➢ In addition, relative valuations are not exempt from some of
the conceptual difficulties of absolute valuations
Conceptual difficulty of the most widely
used multiple, the P/E
The strongest formulation of the P/E principle states that an
intrinsic, natural ratio exists between the price of a stock and
its earnings and that this ratio is universal and somewhat stable
over time
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?33
But the P/E is subject to large
fluctuations
➢Determining a natural, intrinsic P/E is akin to determining a natural rate of return
➢ Sometimes the average P/E of a market (or firm) is compared with a historical average of the P/E of the same market (or firm)
➢Consider that the cross-sectional average P/E for the S&P 500 for the 146-year period 1871–2017 had a mean of 15.64, with values as low as 5.31 (Dec. 1917) and as high as 123.73 (May 2009);
➢Clearly using the P/E to forecast price movements is questionable
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?34
Can we trust our models? Graham’s
view
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?35
«The copncept of future prospects and particularly of continued growth
in the future invites the application of formulas out of higher order
mathematics to establsih the present value of the favored issue. But the
combination of precise formulas with highly imprecise
assumptions can be used to establish, or rather justify,
practically any value one wishes...»
Benjmain Graham (1949)
How should we use our models?
Penman’s view
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?36
«...Investing is not a game against nature, but against
other investors. Thus one does not have to discover a value as if
it exists in nature; the onus is not on an analyst to come up with a
valuation, but merely to accept or reject the value in the market
price. Accordingly, valuation models are not for valuation;
they are for challenging the market price.»
Stephen Penman, Columbia Business School (2016)
What Drives Valuations? Growth?➢ Growth rates and multiples move in lockstep only when combined with
healthy returns on invested capital (McKinsey consultants Goedhart, Koller, and Wessels, 2005)
➢ Profits drive stock prices: over the past 20 years, profitable companies stocks were up >650% (cumulative); unprofitable ones were down 23% (Robert Almeida, 2016)
➢ Expected (or desired) resale value drives prices, creating bubbles of 1%-25% of a stock’s price (Robert Jarrow, 2016)
➢ What valuation models don’t capture well: sentiment management quality, leverage, making it difficult to identify mispricings (Macquarie Equities Research, 2013b)
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?37
Do valuation methods have predictive
power?
➢ Problems in using intrinsic value to predict prices: time to reversion and the stability of intrinsic value uncertain (Brian Jacobsen, Wells Fargo AM)
➢ Present value models have been found to have short-term predictive power (Ang & Bekaert, 2007) with short-rate as the best predictor
➢ Relative valuation models have some predictive power, but confidence in the signals only if mispricings are extreme relative to the model (Christian Kjaer, ATP)
➢ P/E believed to have limited medium-to-long term predictive power but cannot be used for timing (Robeco Int’l AM)
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?38
Can asset managers take advantage of
mispricings?
Supposing that valuation models allow active managers to
identify mispriced equities, can managers actually take
advantage of such price “anomalies”?
“If it were true, then why is it that when you look over the last several
years that it isn’t two-thirds of the managers that are outperformed by
the index but more like 80-90% of the managers?”
Burton Malkiel, Princeton, 2016
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?39
Do prices return to some historical
mean?
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?40
➢Need to distinguish between absolute and relative mean
reversion
➢Absolute mean reversion is «definitely a long-term
phenomenon, impossible to use for timing the market»
(Lanterns, PGGM)
➢ But reversion to a common stochastic trend possibly more
useful (Focardi, Fabozzi, Mitov, 2016) as markets admit only
one integrated factor
Valuing IPOs
➢Clearly, valuing IPOs can be problematic
➢Warren Buffett once famously said that if he were teaching a
finance course, he would ask students to evaluate an internet
stock, and any student giving an answer would flunk
Investopedia’s John Burke (May 2016) noted that
➢ 72% of the IPOs issued in 2015 were trading below the
issuance price a year later
➢The average return for a 2015 IPO stock issued in the United
States was –19%
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?41
Problems in IPO valuationsWhile the same methods used to value listed firms (i.e., multiples, DDMs, DCF models) are used to value issuing firms, caveat emptor (buyer beware):
➢ Lack of reliable earnings information (i.e., information asymmetry) and problems with information sources (i.e., hype)
➢ Comparable firms difficult to define - and an entire sector might be detached from fundamentals, e.g., dot.com bubble of the 1990s
➢ Role of investment banks in price discovery important but subject to optimistic bias in estimating future profitability
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?42
Phenomena distorting equity prices
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?43
Two major phenomena about which equity analysts and
investors now worry because of their potential to distort
market prices relative to theoretical valuations:
➢Central banks’ policies
➢Corporate buybacks or more in general a dearth of shares
Equity prices & central bank policies
➢ Central banks’ policies include low-to-negative interest rates and
quantitative easing
➢ Together, these two factors are helping sustain a market rally in the
US where, for example, the S&P 500 Index has more than tripled
since its March 2009 low and the cyclically adjusted price-to-
earnings ratio (CAPE) is about 70% above its historical average
➢ Plausible explanation: newly created money contributed to asset
inflation without contributing to the GNP
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?44
Equity prices and a dearth of shares
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?45
➢A decline in the number of listed shares in the US: from a
high of > 8,000 in 1994 to 4,300 in 2016
➢Worldwide situation different as esp China, India helped
increase the number of listed stocks from about 14,800 in
1975 to >43,000 in 2016
➢ Share buybacks: for the period 2009-2016, US firms were
the biggest buyers of stocks, for a total of $3.4 trillion in
buybacks
Equity prices and a dearth of shares, ctd
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?46
➢ For the period 2009-2016, US corporate buybacks of $3.4
trillion + dividends of $2.4 trillion = $5.7 trillion pumped
into US stock markets
➢ Share buybacks a growing phenomeon in Japan, Europe but
still a small proportion of market capitalization compared to
the US
«The bull has been on steroids from share buybacks by corporate
managers.»
Edward Yardeni, 2017
Determining if entire markets or
market segments are over-valued
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?47
➢ Though still controversial, we suggest that the long-run performance of equity investments is fundamentally linked to growth in earnings which in turn depends on growth in real GDP
➢ One measure: the ratio betwen a country’s total market capitalization (TMC) and its GDP
➢ The intuition: the stock of capital and the economic output should move together
➢ Example: TMC-to-GDP, US: 1975-1985 average < 50%; dot.com bubble 2000, 153%; 2015, 139%; 2016, 147%
Criticisims of the TMC-GDP ratio
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?48
➢Does not take into account structural changes to profit
magins due to e.g., tax/interest rates, technological
innovation, cost of labor
➢Does not take into account institutional differences between
countries, e.g., public vs privately owned companies in
Germany vs US
➢ Economies are complex systems, averaging growth over an
entire market/economy is basically impossible
Two closing considerations
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?49
➢Has the global investment universe changed so much that the
role of the fundamental analyst/manager is no longer
central?
➢ In other words, are there better ways to generate returns for
investors than traditional value investing?
On the centrality of the role of
fundamental analysis
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?50
➢As a group, active managers (Europe, Japan, US) fail to outperform large-, mid- and small-cap indices in developed and developing countries
➢And persistence in performance is negative
➢ So, what is the value of active management and does the value justify the cost?
➢ If investors decide – as they seem to be doing – that the cost is not justified by the returns, fundamental analysis still plays a role in enhancing a firm’s access to capital
Better ways to generate returns than
traditional value investing?
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?51
➢ The investible universe has largely expanded: ➢ 1975, c. 2,600 investible firms in US, c. 2000 in Japan, 471 in
German and 0 in India and China;➢ 2016 , c 43,200 worldwide, of which only 10% US
➢ Expansion of the investible universe to assets other than equities
➢ Debate on the relative contribution to returns of equity selection vs asset allocation continues
➢ But large institutional investors we talked to ask: ➢ Is searching for the best active manager worth the effort?➢ Isn’t there a better role for active managers than beating the market?
Some additional issues you will find in
the monograph
Equity Valuation: Science, Art, or Craft?52
➢What is the equilibrium between the cost and the benefit of
doing fundamental analysis?
➢Do fundamental analysts/managers really play an important
role in keeping markets (quasi) efficient?
➢Will new news sources, data sources, new tools, or new
technology not yet (widely) used allow fundamental
managers to better estimate a stock’s fundamental value?