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McGill Investment Club September 10 th 2014

McGill Investment Club September 10 th 2014. Advanced Technical Workshop. Table of Contents. Advanced Technical Workshop. Section I: Refresher from Last Session DCF Comps Precedent Transactions Section II: Corporate Structure Questions Section III: Valuation Questions

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McGill Investment Club September 10 th 2014

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  1. McGill Investment ClubSeptember 10th 2014 Advanced Technical Workshop

  2. Table of Contents Advanced Technical Workshop • Section I: Refresher from Last Session • DCF • Comps • Precedent Transactions • Section II: Corporate Structure Questions • Section III: Valuation Questions • Section IV: Accounting Questions • Section V: Stock Pitch • Section VI: Q&A

  3. Section I Refresher from Last Session

  4. Refresher Traditional Valuation Methodologies

  5. Section Ia) Discounted Cash Flow

  6. “Value determined by calculating the present value of a stream of projected cash flows over a certain period and a terminal value” Discount Cash Flow Principles • Projected after-tax unlevered free cash flows • Forecast period should be long enough so that business reaches a steady state by the end of period and incorporates a cycle (if a cyclical industry) • Typically 5 to 10 years • Terminal value • Value of perpetual cash flows following end of forecast • Terminal year should best mirror company's normalized future steady state • Discount rate • Weighted average cost of capital (“WACC”) • Depends on capital structure (typically weighted average cost of equity and debt) • WACC should reflect optimal and sustainable capital structure and underlying estimate of business risk

  7. “Determining the terminal value involves the application of one of the following going concern approaches” Discount Cash Flow Terminal Value Practice Considerations • Based upon current trading multiples ~ multiples of EBITDA • Based upon multiples paid in comparable company transactions • Industry or company considerations may make the current environment not comparable to the terminal year • Implies a perpetual growth rate from the terminal point onward Comparable Trading / Transaction Multiple • Single stage – constant growth perpetuity • Unlevered Free Cash Flow * (1+ Perpetual Growth Rate) / (WACC – Perpetual Growth Rate) • 2 stage – growth rate 1 for n years followed by growth rate 2 • Ideal when company is in steady state • Very sensitive to changes in inputs, especially perpetual growth rate assumptions • Implies multiples as if the business was transacted in the terminal year Perpetual Growth

  8. Strengths Limitations Discount Cash Flow Strengths & Limitations • Based on well accepted corporate finance theory • Flexibility to handle different patterns of cash inflows and outflows • Recognizes time value of money • Allows explicit consideration of project risks • Focuses on future operations • False perception attributed to sophisticated technique due to inherent subjectivity in forecast, terminal value and WACC • Demands extensive set of forecast data and related due diligence • Sensitive to long term growth assumptions • Lacks external reference to reconcile valuation differences

  9. Section Ib) Comparable Company Analysis

  10. Enterprise Value Equity Value Comparable Company Analysis (‘’Comps’’) Overview • What is comparable company analysis? • Provides a market-based valuation perspective on comparable publicly traded companies • It is based on publicly available information; reflects what the many independent investors that comprise the market think • Implied valuation does not reflect premium for control or any synergy potential • Effectiveness of this valuation method depends on the comparability of the companies selected and metrics used to compare the companies • Earnings • Levered Cash Flow • Book Value • Revenues • EBITDA • Unlevered Cash Flow Multiples based on economics that only shareholders are entitled to Multiples based on economics that all stakeholders are entitled to (debtholders and shareholders) Comparable trading analysis: Key Valuation Metrics / Multiples

  11. Comparable Company Analysis Enterprise Value / EBITDA Less affected and easier to interpret when there are capital structure differences Permits the use of statistics less affected by accounting policy variations General Preference for Enterprise Value / EBITDA Multiples… More comprehensive – focuses on the business and not just the equity investor’s stake More flexible – can be modified to exclude non-core assets

  12. Select the right peer group • Focus on the appropriate financial metric and ratios: each sector utilizes a standard set of ratios/metrics • Make the necessary adjustments to ensure comparability (non-recurring items, accounting policies, M&A activity) Comparable Company Analysis Selecting Comparable Companies Value Drivers Illustrative Considerations • Market / Product leadership • Client-base & supply chain • Technology & patent • Market presence, operating “leverage” • Good proxy for risk • Cost structure • Margin analysis • Consistency • Financial leverage • Quality of management • Non-recurring items • Different accounting practices • Sales, EBITDA, earnings • Consistency of growth / volatility • Growth potential Relative Risk Profile Strategic Positioning Size Profitability Capital Structure Others Relative Growth Growth Profile

  13. Strengths Limitations Comparable Company Analysis Strengths & Limitations • Challenge of finding true “comparability” within peer groups • Very difficult to adjust for differences in underlying business of comps • Company specific issues may limit analysis and effectiveness (e.g. limited liquidity) • Other external factors may impact share price performance • Market sentiment, M&A activity in the sector and regulatory issues • Analysis is focused on trailing date and on next 1-2 years, thus ignoring future performance and long-term issues • Assumes market prices of comparable companies correctly reflect all available information • Objective comparison reflecting all publicly available information on the overall sector and the individual companies • Growth / profitability expectations • Sector trends • Risk factors • Often provides a reliable, useful first order approximation of value • May be forward looking, and can also be backward looking • Ease of understanding and application • Requires fewer assumptions (e.g. Discount rates) • Standard practice when valuing emerging companies, as forecasting cash flows is difficult

  14. Section Ic) Precedent Transaction Analysis

  15. Valuation based upon applying observed financial and operating metrics from comparable transactions • Provides useful information on valuation multiples that acq • Provides indication of private market value • Value of consideration that willing buyers and sellers are prepared to exchange in current economic environment • Many considerations discussed in Comparable Trading Analysis section apply, however three specific nuances to this methodology must be addressed Precedent Transactions Analysis Overview Considerations • Comparability of precedent deals and the acquired companies • Was the deal completed under comparable economic conditions • Is the other consideration comparable (cash vs. stock)? • Eliminate all deals that are too small or too large compared to the potential transaction • Look at relative size of acquirer versus target • Only include deals where sufficient / reliable information is available • Private deals: if no public data is available, do not use in deal comparison • Timing: the more recent the data, the more relevant the benchmark • Auction / Interlopers: competition for the assets drives valuation up Relevance Size Information Type of Deal

  16. Strengths Limitations Precedent Transactions Analysis Strengths & Limitations • Based on public information • Reflects different premium at which transactions have been completed in the past (important to isolate impact of economic cycles) • Overview of potential interlopers based on historical behaviour and their strategic approach to M&A • Ease of understanding and calculation • Commonly used yardstick / rule of thumb • Relevance deteriorates over time • Important not to miss context for the premium paid in different transactions to avoid drawing misleading conclusions. • Financial versus strategic investor; • Governance issues, commercial agreements, etc.; • Asset competition driving up prices; and • Distressed sales. • Important to distinguish what kind of assets were traded in order to achieve like-for-like comparisons. • Market conditions at the time of a transaction can have substantial influence on valuation (ie. Sector consolidation) • Challenge of true “comparability”

  17. Section II Corporate Structure Questions

  18. Corporate Structure Enterprise Value Questions • Whenever a company owns more than 50% of another company, it is required to report the financial performance of the whole company as part of its own performance • To compare apples with apples, you must add minority interest to get to EV so that numerator and numerator both reflect 100% of the majority-owned subsidiary • A company has 100 shares at $10, 10 options with strike price of $5 and 10 options with strike price of $15. What are fully diluted shares? • Treasury stock method: 10 in-the-money options will be exercised  10 shares issued • With the $50 raised by the company, 5 shares are bought back • 100 + 10 – 5 = 105 • How to account for convertible bonds in the enterprise value formula? • If in-the-money, additional dilution to equity holders • If out-of-the-money, count the face value of the convertibles as part of debt Why do you need to add minority interest to obtain enterprise value?

  19. Corporate Structure Restructuring Questions • Company cannot meet its interest obligations • Large one-time event (e.g. litigation) • Too much debt is maturing at the same time and company cannot repay principal • What options are available to a distressed company that can’t meet debt obligations? • Refinance and obtain new debt or equity • Sell the company or a division (what are the drawbacks of this approach?) • Restructure financial obligations with debt holders • File for bankruptcy and restructure the firm • What can the debt holders do to recover their principal? • Lend additional capital in form of debt or equity • Conditional financing (e.g. if the company reduces expenses, changes management, etc.) • Sale • Foreclosure A company has had positive EBITDA for the last 10 years but recently went bankrupt. How could this happen?

  20. Corporate Structure Restructuring Questions • Often the public debt of a distressed company will not be very liquid, therefore it will be difficult to use bond yields as a proxy • Look at credit spreads (CCC or D companies) • You can sell your company by selling equity or assets, which one would you prefer? • If you are the distressed seller, you prefer to sell your equity to get rid of liabilities and also because it is taxed higher for asset sales. However, you might get higher valuations by selling individual assets • The buyer prefers to buy assets because he can pick and choose what is best • How could a decline in a company’s share price cause it to go bankrupt? • Customers, vendors, suppliers, and lenders would be more reluctant to do business with the distressed company How do you calculate cost of debt for a distressed company?

  21. Section III Valuation Questions

  22. Valuation Basic Valuation Methods • Which of the three methods yield the highest/lowest valuations? • Typically, the precedent transaction valuation method yields the highest valuation given it incorporates a control premium • The lowest valuation method is typically the Liquidation Value • How do you present valuation methodologies to a company? • Valuation methods are all “triangulated” and presented on what is called a football field analysis, alongside 52-week trading range and research high and low valuation • Why can’t you use an Equity Value / EBITDA multiple? • Because Equity Value does not take into account debt holders, but EBITDA incorporates interest (the return on debt holders) • Multiples need to be sensitive to capital structure – if interest is included in the multiple, then so does the debt portion • Why would someone want to use EV / EBIT multiples instead of EV / EBITDA? • Some companies like to adjust their depreciation and amortization policies to “adjust” earnings – therefore, EV/EBIT would be a more comparable metric amongst companies where these amounts significantly affect the multiples

  23. Valuation Alternative Valuation Methods • The acquisition of another company using a significant amount of borrowed money (bonds or loans) to meet the cost of acquisition • The purpose of leveraged buyouts is to allow companies (mostly PE firms) to make large acquisitions without having to commit a lot of capital • How do you derive a liquidation value for a firm? • Cash: 100% • A/R: 80% • Inventory: 50% • Goodwill: 0% • When would you use sum of the parts and how does it work? • Typically used for companies with different unrelated subsidiaries for which it would not be prudent to use a single DCF or simple comps (e.g. Samsung) • Value every division separately (applying a multiple or building a DCF for each) and add up the values obtained What is an LBO and why is used in practice? What is a good target?

  24. Valuation Typical Valuation Questions • Depending on the assumptions of the interviewer one might want to use any of the traditional or unconventional valuation methods we have discussed • Not because it sounds weird that it cannot easily be valued • We have two companies with the same financial statements and operating segments, yet company A is trading at a higher multiple than company B. Why could this be the case? • Growth • Management • Intangibles • Recent news • Company A and B are the same, except A leases products instead of owning them. For which of the two would you pay a higher EV/EBITDA acquisition multiple? • Company A: lease would show up in SG&A, reducing EBITDA • Company B: depreciation charge does not show up in EBITDA, making it higher How do you value a Cola distributing machine?

  25. Valuation Typical Valuation Questions • Trick question. You should not, we do not look at CFF when generating UFCF • For a mining company, would you expect higher multiples in cyclical upswings or downturns? • During downturns because you expect commodity price to revert to mean in the future. Multiple is high because denominator is most likely to be very low at the moment • How do you value a private company? • Technically you can still use a DCF but you how do you get to WACC? • Estimate WACC from public comps but add in an illiquidity and perhaps size premium to reflect the risk of the private company • To estimate the value of a private company that is about to do an IPO, no need to add illiquidity premium as the company will soon become public A company will be paying down debt in the coming years. How do we account for this in a DCF?

  26. Valuation Typical Valuation Questions • Oil and gas: EV / Production, EV / 2P Reserves • Retail: EV / EBITDAR (R = Rent) • Technology: EV / Unique visitors • Financials: Price / Book Value • How do you value a company with negative EBITDA? Pre-revenue? • Climb-up the ladder and use EV / Revenue • Use creative multiples like EV / Clicks • What variables impact an LBO model most? • Purchase and exit multiples have the biggest impact on the returns of a model • Amount of leverage (debt) used also has a significant impact, followed by operational characteristics such as revenue growth and EBITDA margins What are some industry specific multiples?

  27. Valuation Accretion/Dilution Questions • If a company with a higher P/E acquires a company with a lower P/E, is this an accretive or dilutive acquisition? • ONLY IF the acquisition was financed 100% with equity or cash and IF the implied P/E with the acquisition premium is still lower can you say that the deal is accretive • Rule of thumb for Accretion/Dilution • If the deal involves just cash and debt, you can sum up the interest expense for debt and the foregone interest on cash, then compare it against the seller’s Pre-Tax Income • If it’s an all-stock deal you can compare P/E multiples • But if the deal involves cash, stock, and debt, there’s no quick rule-of-thumb you can use but you can calculate it based on the average P/E of cash (1/interest earned on cash) and average P/E of debt (D/interest %)

  28. Section IV Accounting Questions

  29. Accounting Classic Machine Question On January 1st, company A buys a new machine for $100, financed with $50 in cash and $50 in debt. It will be depreciated on a straight line basis for 10 years. It will also contribute to revenue in the coming fiscal year by an additional $10 and COGS of $5. How will this affect all three financial statements at year end on December 31st? Assume a tax rate of 50% and interest rate of 10%.

  30. Accounting Questions Typical Accounting Questions • GAAP is accrual based but tax is cash based • Tax is only concerned with revenue/expenses in the current period and what income you owe • GAAP uses straight-line depreciation whereas tax uses accelerated depreciation • What are examples of non-recurring charges we need to add back to a company’s EBIT or EBITDA when looking at financial statements? • Restructuring charges • Goodwill impairment • Asset write-downs • Bad debt expense • Legal expenses • Disaster expenses • Changes in accounting procedures How is GAAP/IFRS accounting different from tax accounting?

  31. Accounting Questions Typical Accounting Questions • Net operating losses: tax credit created when a company records losses. Can be carried back 3 years (2 in USA) and forward 20 years • You should always carry back as much as possible today and exercise the credits as soon as possible in the future • Value = NOLs that can be carried back today*Tax rate + PV(NOLs to be used in future)*Tax rate • What is a depreciation waterfall? What are NOL’s and how are they valued?

  32. Accounting Questions Typical Accounting Questions • This happens if D&A is embedded in other I/S line items. When this happens, you need to use the C/S number to arrive at EBITDA because you would be undercounting D&A • When does goodwill impairment happen? • When you reassess the value of the company you acquired (annual impairment test) and you find out it is worth significantly less. An example of this is tech companies that have been acquired before the tech bubble • A company switches from LIFO to FIFO in an inflationary environment; how does it affect its statements? • Operating income and earnings will be overstated (lower COGS). Inventory will be higher as “cheaper” items will be sold first. CFO will be higher due to increased earnings, offset by a change in NWC Why would the D&A numbers from the I/S differ from the ones on the C/S? Which one should you use?

  33. Section V Pitch a Stock

  34. Pitch a Stock Capital One Financial Discounted valuation The market is discounting COF to its peers even though it has best in industry financial metrics, strong growth prospects in the consumer credit cards, and a shift in focus toward returning value to shareholders

  35. Q&A

  36. Contact • Xavier Le Sieur – Bank of America, Merrill Lynch (Investment Banking) • xavier.lesieur@mail.mcgill.ca • I would be happy to help with: • Cover Letter & Resume Review • Mock Interviews • General Finance Jobs available • Reviewing Offers

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