You may have found a great company that you feel has outstanding potential but always end up getting stuck at what price you should purchase the company. Finding the value of a stock is a critical part of investing successfully. Valuing stocks is not hard, but it does require logic and practice.
Now this formula will excite a few, but for the rest, my advice is to just understand what a DCF calculation is and what variables you need to include and adjust.
How to Value a Stock with DCF
DCF Discount Rate
The purpose of a discounted cash flow is to find the sum of the future cash flow of the business and discount it back to the present value. To do this you need to decide upon a discount rate.
Discount Rate: 10% = 100/1.1 = $90.90
Discount Rate: 15% = 100/1.15 = $86.96
Discount Rate: 30% = 100/1.3 = $76.92
Growth rate is going to be the Achilles heel to any stock calculation. By growth rate, I mean the FCF growth rate.
The best practice is to keep growth rates as low as possible. If the company looks to be undervalued with 0% growth rate, you have more upside than downside. The higher you set the growth rate, the higher you set up the downside potential.
Look at what happened to SPWR and FSLR. Solar energy was the rage in 2008 and growth was estimated to be at 50% and above, but these lofty expectations only make the fall harder.
What I failed to do in the beginning when I started valuing stocks was to adjust the FCF numbers for cycles and one time events.
If you start a discounted cash flow calculation based on either a year with higher than normal FCF or much lower FCF, as is the case in 2008, the stock calculation will also be wrong.
Be sure to consider taking the median or average for the past few years to determine the normalized free cash flow.
The point of the stock valuation is to be realistic, not pessimistic or optimistic.
Margin of Safety
An important point is to not confuse a high discount rate for a margin of safety.
This is because since you are requiring a higher return immediately off your investment, you are trying to pay much less than a discount rate of 9%. So by placing more emphasis on a higher return, you are in fact reducing the risk of the investment which is why a 25% margin of safety may be enough.
Practice your valuation with the free dcf stock analysis spreadsheet with all the things discussed.
- A discount rate is your rate of return. Higher discount rate means you are trying to pay less for the future cash flows at the present time.
- Growth rates are the fuzziest aspect of valuing stocks and should be applied conservatively.
- Adjust numbers to remove one time events and cycles. Always consider a normal operating environment.
- Never for a big margin of safety. The best of us get it wrong as well.
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/valuation-methods/how-value-stocks-dcf/?source=rss&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OldSchoolValue+%28Old+School+Value%29
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