Wednesday 28 December 2022

The Art of Business Valuation. BUSINESS VALUE IS IMPRECISIVELY KNOWABLE.

 



BUSINESS VALUE IS IMPRECISIVELY KNOWABLE

Many investors insist on affixing exact values to their investments, seeking precision in an imprecise world, but business value cannot be precisely determined

Reported book value, earnings, and cash flow are, after all, only the best guesses of accountants who follow a fairly strict set of standards and practices designed more to achieve conformity than to reflect economic value. 

Projected results are less precise still. 

You cannot appraise the value of your home to the nearest thousand dollars. Why would it be any easier to place a value on vast and complex businesses?



BUSINESS VALUE CHANGES OVER TIME.  REQUIRES CONTINUOUS REASSESSMENTS.

Not only is business value imprecisely knowable, it also changes over time, fluctuating with numerous macroeconomic, microeconomic, and market-related factors. So while investors at any given time cannot determine business value with precision, they must nevertheless almost continuously reassess their estimates of value in order to incorporate all known factors that could influence their appraisal.

Any attempt to value businesses with precision will yield values that are precisely inaccurate. The problem is that it is easy to confuse the capability to make precise forecasts with the ability to make accurate ones. 

Anyone with a simple, handheld calculator can perform net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR) calculations. 
  • The NPV calculation provides a single-point value of an investment by discounting estimates of future cash flow back to the present. 
  • IRR, using assumptions of future cash flow and price paid, is a calculation of the rate of return on an investment to as many decimal places as desired.


NPV AND IRR ARE ONLY AS ACCURATE AS THE CASH FLOW ASSUMPTIONS USED

The seeming precision provided by NPV and IRR calculations can give investors a false sense of certainty for they are really only as accurate as the cash flow assumptions that were used to derive them.

The advent of the computerized spreadsheet has exacerbated this problem, creating the illusion of extensive and thoughtful 
analysis, even for the most haphazard of efforts. Typically, investors place a great deal of importance on the output, even though they pay little attention to the assumptions. 
“Garbage in, garbage out” is an apt description of the process. 

NPV and IRR are wonderful at summarizing, in absolute and percentage terms, respectively, the returns for a given series of cash flows. 

When cash flows are contractually determined, as in the case of a bond, and when all payments are received when due, 
  • IRR provides the precise rate of return to the investor while 
  • NPV describes the value of the investment at a given discount rate. 

In the case of a bond, these calculations allow investors to quantify their returns under one set of assumptions, that is, that contractual payments are received when due. 

These tools, however, are of no use in determining the likelihood that investors will actually receive all contractual payments and, in fact, achieve the projected returns.

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