In Practice Webcast: Assessing potential dividends

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Presentation transcript:

In Practice Webcast: Assessing potential dividends Aswath Damodaran In Practice Webcast: Assessing potential dividends It is my cash and I want it now…

A Measure of How Much a Company Could have Afforded to Pay out: FCFE The Free Cashflow to Equity (FCFE) is a measure of how much cash is left in the business after non-equity claimholders (debt and preferred stock) have been paid, and after any reinvestment needed to sustain the firm’s assets and future growth. Net Income + Depreciation & Amortization = Cash flows from Operations to Equity Investors - Preferred Dividends - Capital Expenditures - Working Capital Needs - Principal Repayments + Proceeds from New Debt Issues = Free Cash flow to Equity This cashflow is Free: because it cashflow left over after debt payments and investment needs have been met To Equity Investors: because it is after payments to all non-equity claimholders In coming up with the numbers, we define Capital expenditures as including all capital investments. We do not distinguish between discretionary and non-discretionary cap ex. Once we assume growth in earnings, all cap ex is non-discretionary. Working capital needs refers to the increase in non-cash working capital. Aswath Damodaran

Estimating your firm’s FCFE In General, If cash flow statement used Net Income Net Income + Depreciation & Amortization + Depreciation & Amortization - Capital Expenditures + Capital Expenditures - Change in Non-Cash Working Capital + Changes in Non-cash WC - Preferred Dividend + Preferred Dividend - Principal Repaid + Increase in LT Borrowing + New Debt Issued + Decrease in LT Borrowing + Change in ST Borrowing = FCFE = FCFE Compare to Dividends (Common) Common Dividend + Stock Buybacks Stock Buybacks Estimate the firm’s FCFE and compare to how much it returned to stockholders. Aswath Damodaran

A Practical Framework for Analyzing Dividend Policy How much did the firm pay out? How much could it have afforded to pay out? What it could have paid out What it actually paid out Net Income Dividends - (Cap Ex - Depr’n) (1-DR) + Equity Repurchase - Chg Working Capital (1-DR) = FCFE Firm pays out too little Firm pays out too much FCFE > Dividends FCFE < Dividends Do you trust managers in the company with What investment opportunities does the your cash? firm have? Look at past project choice: Look at past project choice: Compare ROE to Cost of Equity Compare ROE to Cost of Equity ROC to WACC ROC to WACC Most firms return less in cash than they have available to return. Whether they will find themselves under pressure (like Chrysler) or relatively untouched (like Microsoft) will depend upon how much stockholders trust the managers of the firm to use the cash wisely. Stockholders will tend to be less aggressive about demanding that the cash be returned to them for firms With a good investment track record In a sector with high returns Where managers have substantial equity stakes in the firm They will tend to be most aggressive when these conditions do not hold. Firm has history of Firm has history Firm has good Firm has poor good project choice of poor project projects projects and good projects in choice the future Give managers the Force managers to Firm should Firm should deal flexibility to keep justify holding cash cut dividends with its investment cash and set or return cash to and reinvest problem first and dividends stockholders more then cut dividends Aswath Damodaran

A Dividend Matrix Aswath Damodaran The freedom that a company will have with dividend policy is directly proportional to its history in delivering high returns both on projects and to its stockholders. Aswath Damodaran