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#+title : Section 11 | Lesson 59 - read financials and find data patterns
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* Links
- [[./../mba-main.org ][TOC | Business ]]
- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4315028#overview ][S11:L59 course video ]]
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- file:../_data/section_11/microsoft_valuation.numbers
- file:../_data/section_11/course_notes.pdf
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* Notes
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- MS changed from a growth stock to a value stock
- growth investors loved it
- bill gates left and the company became a bureacracy
- dont ever invest in a tech company where the founder is gone
- they are buying back shares
** forecast revenue
- forecast each year after the next
- not looking at each
- add assumptions 'why' something will happen
- e.g. 2016 Windows 10 is free for the first year, but the second year cost
- xbox sales slowing
- good because factories are less profitable
- the new director was good with clouds and clouds are good for $
*** how to build the model
- read the 10k
- go to investors website and read relations stuff
- last 15 minutes of conference wall street guys ask questions
- call investor relations directly and ask them
- make sure you do your due dilligence
- the relations guys will bs you if you don't know your stuff
- you have the same access as analysts do
- reg fd: regulation federal disclosure
- government mandatated
- everyone has the same access
- publish on website
- publish on webcasts
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** calculate net income
1. calculate operating expenses
\text{Operating Expenses} = \text{R&D} + \text{Sales & Marketing} + \text{G&A}
2. calculate operating income (EBIT)
EBIT=Gross Profit− Operating Expenses
3. calcuate taxes
- assume taxes are 21% of EBIT
Taxes=EBIT× 21%
4. calculate net income
Net Income=EBIT− Taxes
** calculate forecasted fields
*** Operating Expenses
\[
\text{Operating Expenses} = \text{R&D} + \text{Sales & Marketing} + \text{G&A}
\]
*** Operating Income (EBIT)
\[
\text{EBIT} = \text{Gross Profit} - \text{Operating Expenses}
\]
*** Taxes
- Assume taxes are 21% of EBIT
\[
\text{Taxes} = \text{EBIT} \times 21\%
\]
*** Net Income
\[
\text{Net Income} = \text{EBIT} - \text{Taxes}
\]
*** Stock Price
- calculate the YOY trend for all the years you have stock price data
\[
\text{YOY} = \text{SPnow} - \text{SPprev} / \text{SPprev}
\]
- forecast using the previous YOY and project what it will be going forward
\[
\text{SPnow} = \text{SPprev} * \text{(1 + YOY)}
\]
*** Shares
*note: we don't actually have this info*
\[
\text{Share} = \text{Net Income} / \text{Diluted Earnings per share}
\]
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** valuation
- create a forecast
- got earnings per share
- listed assumptions
*** how to make a target price
- 3 methodologies
- do all of them and take an average
- keep it simple
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**** methodology 1: price vs earnings per share
***** NOTE: we are calculating STOCK PRICE based on EARNINGS PER SHARE multiplied by YOY GROWTH RATE
***** Understanding "Valuation" - Price/Earnings (P/E) Ratio Methodology
This section of your financial course explains how to estimate the target price of a stock five years into the future using the Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio.
***** 1. The Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio
- The **P/E ratio* * is a way to value a stock based on its **earnings per share (EPS)* *.
- It is defined as:
#+BEGIN_SRC
P/E = Stock Price / Earnings Per Share (EPS)
#+END_SRC
- Stocks typically trade at a P/E ratio that is close to their **earnings growth rate* *:
- If a company's **earnings grow at 20% per year* *, it will likely have a **P/E ratio of ~20x* *.
- If earnings **grow at 8% per year* *, the stock might trade at **8x EPS* *.
***** 2. Forecasting the Target Price (5-Year Estimate)
- The **target price* * in **5 years* * is based on the company’ s **forecasted EPS* * multiplied by a reasonable P/E ratio.
- In this example:
- **MSFT’ s EPS is growing at 12% per year* *.
- The stock should trade at a **P/E of 12x* * in 5 years.
***** 3. Using the Provided Table (EPS Forecasts)
| Metric | FY19e | FY20e |
|---------------------------------|--------|--------|
| Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS) | $3.93 | $4.90 |
| Year-over-Year EPS Growth | 12% | - |
- **FY19e EPS = $3.93* *
- **FY20e EPS = $4.90* *
- **EPS is growing at 12% per year* *.
***** 4. Calculating the Target Price
- Since the company is growing at **12% per year* *, we assume it will trade at **12x earnings* * in 5 years.
- Using the **FY20e EPS of $4.90* *:
#+BEGIN_SRC
Target Price = 12 × 4.90 = 59
#+END_SRC
***** 5. Comparing Today’ s Price to the Target Price
- **Assume MSFT is trading at $47 today* * (when the course was written).
- **Expected appreciation in 5 years* *:
#+BEGIN_SRC
(59 - 47) / 47 = 25% increase
#+END_SRC
- Since **MSFT is a mature company* *, a **25% increase in 5 years seems reasonable* *.
***** Final Takeaways
✔ The P/E ratio method values stocks based on **earnings growth* *.
✔ Stocks usually trade at a **P/E close to their earnings growth rate* *.
✔ Target price is found by **multiplying the estimated EPS by the assumed P/E ratio* *.
✔ **MSFT, trading at $47 today, could reach $59 in 5 years with 12% EPS growth.* *
🚀 Now you understand how the course uses P/E ratios for stock valuation!
**** methodology 2: price vs revenue/sales
- assume the avg software company trades at 5x revenue in 5 years
- MSFT, being a big company that grows slowly, grows at 70% of avg
- so instead of trading 5x in 5 years, it will trade at 3x in 5 years
- therefore the [[file:finance_terms.org::*Market Capitalization (Market Cap) ][market cap ]] should be $504bn in 5 years
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- market cap is $372 today, so this means 35% upside
| | FY19e | FY20e |
|---------+----------+-------------|
| revenue | $128,530 | $143,953 |
|---------+----------+-------------|
| | | $503,835.69 |
| | | 36% |
ok, first thing is first. he claims the following
1. market cap is 372b today
2a. a company would normally be trading at 5x in 5 years
2b. in this case it will be 3x in 5 years bc it is a large company
3a.
|-|FY12|FY13|FY14|FY15e|FYo