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e107d474eb update 2025-04-29 01:00:33 +03:00
e0408342e8 added info on calculations 2025-03-10 01:28:26 +02:00
432c56d06b explained methodology 1, addded definitions 2025-02-27 18:43:15 +02:00
1f656e7e27 udpate 2025-02-27 03:57:30 +02:00
d9e2d795a5 update toc added L59 2025-02-23 23:43:29 +02:00
803b7491d8 58. build financial model done 2025-02-23 23:41:19 +02:00
f333f2ef60 updated 2025-02-23 04:08:50 +02:00
684e576e5f added blank 2025-02-16 08:44:14 +02:00
c3759d5bf3 update 2025-02-16 08:23:15 +02:00
baaa9c9a9a update 2025-01-29 18:13:40 +02:00
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Category,2012,2011,2010
Common stock and paid-in capital,,,
"Balance, beginning of period",63415,62856,62382
Common stock issued,1924,2422,2311
Common stock repurchased,-1714,-3738,-3113
Stock-based compensation expense,2244,2166,1891
Stock-based compensation income tax deficiencies,-75,-292,-647
"Other, net",3,1,32
"Balance, end of period",65797,63415,62856
Retained earnings (deficit),,,
"Balance, beginning of period",-6332,-16681,-22824
Net income,16978,23150,18760
Other comprehensive income:,,,
Net unrealized gains (losses) on derivatives,255,-627,27
Net unrealized gains (losses) on investments,-390,1054,265
Translation adjustments and other,-306,381,-206
Comprehensive income,16537,23958,18846
Common stock cash dividends,-6721,-5394,-4547
Common stock repurchased,-2918,-8215,-8156
"Balance, end of period",566,-6332,-16681
Total stockholders equity,66363,57083,46175
1 Category 2012 2011 2010
2 Common stock and paid-in capital
3 Balance, beginning of period 63415 62856 62382
4 Common stock issued 1924 2422 2311
5 Common stock repurchased -1714 -3738 -3113
6 Stock-based compensation expense 2244 2166 1891
7 Stock-based compensation income tax deficiencies -75 -292 -647
8 Other, net 3 1 32
9 Balance, end of period 65797 63415 62856
10 Retained earnings (deficit)
11 Balance, beginning of period -6332 -16681 -22824
12 Net income 16978 23150 18760
13 Other comprehensive income:
14 Net unrealized gains (losses) on derivatives 255 -627 27
15 Net unrealized gains (losses) on investments -390 1054 265
16 Translation adjustments and other -306 381 -206
17 Comprehensive income 16537 23958 18846
18 Common stock cash dividends -6721 -5394 -4547
19 Common stock repurchased -2918 -8215 -8156
20 Balance, end of period 566 -6332 -16681
21 Total stockholders’ equity 66363 57083 46175

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Category,2012,2011,2010
Revenue,73723,69943,62484
Operating expenses:,,,
Cost of revenue,17530,15577,12395
Research and development,9811,9043,8714
Sales and marketing,13857,13940,13214
General and administrative,4569,4222,4063
Goodwill impairment,6193,0,0
Total operating expenses,51960,42782,38386
Operating income,21763,27161,24098
Other income,504,910,915
Income before income taxes,22267,28071,25013
Provision for income taxes,5289,4921,6253
Net income,16978,23150,18760
Earnings per share:,,,
Basic,2.02,2.73,2.13
Diluted,2.0,2.69,2.1
Weighted average shares outstanding:,,,
Basic,8396,8490,8813
Diluted,8506,8593,8927
Cash dividends declared per common share,0.8,0.64,0.52
Assets,,,
Current assets:,,,
Cash and cash equivalents,6938,9610,
Short-term investments,56102,43162,
"Total cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments",63040,52772,
"Accounts receivable, net",15780,14987,
Inventories,1137,1372,
Deferred income taxes,2035,2467,
Other,3092,3320,
Total current assets,85084,74918,
"Property and equipment, net",8269,8162,
Equity and other investments,9776,10865,
Goodwill,13452,12581,
"Intangible assets, net",3170,744,
Other long-term assets,1520,1434,
Total assets,121271,108704,
Liabilities and stockholders equity,,,
Current liabilities:,,,
Accounts payable,4175,4197,
Current portion of long-term debt,1231,0,
Accrued compensation,3875,3575,
Income taxes,789,580,
Short-term unearned revenue,18653,15722,
Securities lending payable,814,1208,
Other,3151,3492,
Total current liabilities,32688,28774,
Long-term debt,10713,11921,
Long-term unearned revenue,1406,1398,
Deferred income taxes,1893,1456,
Other long-term liabilities,8208,8072,
Total liabilities,54908,51621,
Commitments and contingencies,,,
Stockholders equity:,,,
Common stock and paid-in capital,65797,63415,
Retained earnings (deficit),566,-6332,
Total stockholders equity,66363,57083,
Total liabilities and stockholders equity,121271,108704,
1 Category 2012 2011 2010
2 Revenue 73723 69943 62484
3 Operating expenses:
4 Cost of revenue 17530 15577 12395
5 Research and development 9811 9043 8714
6 Sales and marketing 13857 13940 13214
7 General and administrative 4569 4222 4063
8 Goodwill impairment 6193 0 0
9 Total operating expenses 51960 42782 38386
10 Operating income 21763 27161 24098
11 Other income 504 910 915
12 Income before income taxes 22267 28071 25013
13 Provision for income taxes 5289 4921 6253
14 Net income 16978 23150 18760
15 Earnings per share:
16 Basic 2.02 2.73 2.13
17 Diluted 2.0 2.69 2.1
18 Weighted average shares outstanding:
19 Basic 8396 8490 8813
20 Diluted 8506 8593 8927
21 Cash dividends declared per common share 0.8 0.64 0.52
22 Assets
23 Current assets:
24 Cash and cash equivalents 6938 9610
25 Short-term investments 56102 43162
26 Total cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments 63040 52772
27 Accounts receivable, net 15780 14987
28 Inventories 1137 1372
29 Deferred income taxes 2035 2467
30 Other 3092 3320
31 Total current assets 85084 74918
32 Property and equipment, net 8269 8162
33 Equity and other investments 9776 10865
34 Goodwill 13452 12581
35 Intangible assets, net 3170 744
36 Other long-term assets 1520 1434
37 Total assets 121271 108704
38 Liabilities and stockholders’ equity
39 Current liabilities:
40 Accounts payable 4175 4197
41 Current portion of long-term debt 1231 0
42 Accrued compensation 3875 3575
43 Income taxes 789 580
44 Short-term unearned revenue 18653 15722
45 Securities lending payable 814 1208
46 Other 3151 3492
47 Total current liabilities 32688 28774
48 Long-term debt 10713 11921
49 Long-term unearned revenue 1406 1398
50 Deferred income taxes 1893 1456
51 Other long-term liabilities 8208 8072
52 Total liabilities 54908 51621
53 Commitments and contingencies
54 Stockholders’ equity:
55 Common stock and paid-in capital 65797 63415
56 Retained earnings (deficit) 566 -6332
57 Total stockholders’ equity 66363 57083
58 Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity 121271 108704

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Category,2012,2011,2010
Operations,,,
Net income,16978,23150,18760
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash from operations:,,,
Goodwill impairment,6193,0,0
"Depreciation, amortization, and other",2967,2766,2673
Stock-based compensation expense,2244,2166,1891
Net recognized gains on investments and derivatives,-200,-362,-208
Excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation,-93,-17,-45
Deferred income taxes,954,2,-220
Deferral of unearned revenue,36104,31227,29374
Recognition of unearned revenue,-33347,-28935,-28813
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:,,,
Accounts receivable,-1156,-1451,-2238
Inventories,184,-561,-44
Other current assets,493,-1259,464
Other long-term assets,-248,62,-223
Accounts payable,-31,58,844
Other current liabilities,410,-1146,451
Other long-term liabilities,174,1294,1407
Net cash from operations,31626,26994,24073
Financing,,,
"Short-term debt repayments, maturities of 90 days or less, net",0,-186,-991
"Proceeds from issuance of debt, maturities longer than 90 days",0,6960,4167
"Repayments of debt, maturities longer than 90 days",0,-814,-2986
Common stock issued,1913,2422,2311
Common stock repurchased,-5029,-11555,-11269
Common stock cash dividends paid,-6385,-5180,-4578
Excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation,93,17,45
Other,0,-40,10
Net cash used in financing,-9408,-8376,-13291
Investing,,,
Additions to property and equipment,-2305,-2355,-1977
"Acquisition of companies, net of cash acquired",-10112,-71,-245
Purchases of investments,-57250,-35993,-30168
Maturities of investments,15575,6897,7453
Sales of investments,29700,15880,15125
Securities lending payable,-394,1026,-1502
Net cash used in investing,-24786,-14616,-11314
Effect of exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents,-104,103,-39
Net change in cash and cash equivalents,-2672,4105,-571
"Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period",9610,5505,6076
"Cash and cash equivalents, end of period",6938,9610,5505
1 Category 2012 2011 2010
2 Operations
3 Net income 16978 23150 18760
4 Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash from operations:
5 Goodwill impairment 6193 0 0
6 Depreciation, amortization, and other 2967 2766 2673
7 Stock-based compensation expense 2244 2166 1891
8 Net recognized gains on investments and derivatives -200 -362 -208
9 Excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation -93 -17 -45
10 Deferred income taxes 954 2 -220
11 Deferral of unearned revenue 36104 31227 29374
12 Recognition of unearned revenue -33347 -28935 -28813
13 Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
14 Accounts receivable -1156 -1451 -2238
15 Inventories 184 -561 -44
16 Other current assets 493 -1259 464
17 Other long-term assets -248 62 -223
18 Accounts payable -31 58 844
19 Other current liabilities 410 -1146 451
20 Other long-term liabilities 174 1294 1407
21 Net cash from operations 31626 26994 24073
22 Financing
23 Short-term debt repayments, maturities of 90 days or less, net 0 -186 -991
24 Proceeds from issuance of debt, maturities longer than 90 days 0 6960 4167
25 Repayments of debt, maturities longer than 90 days 0 -814 -2986
26 Common stock issued 1913 2422 2311
27 Common stock repurchased -5029 -11555 -11269
28 Common stock cash dividends paid -6385 -5180 -4578
29 Excess tax benefits from stock-based compensation 93 17 45
30 Other 0 -40 10
31 Net cash used in financing -9408 -8376 -13291
32 Investing
33 Additions to property and equipment -2305 -2355 -1977
34 Acquisition of companies, net of cash acquired -10112 -71 -245
35 Purchases of investments -57250 -35993 -30168
36 Maturities of investments 15575 6897 7453
37 Sales of investments 29700 15880 15125
38 Securities lending payable -394 1026 -1502
39 Net cash used in investing -24786 -14616 -11314
40 Effect of exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents -104 103 -39
41 Net change in cash and cash equivalents -2672 4105 -571
42 Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period 9610 5505 6076
43 Cash and cash equivalents, end of period 6938 9610 5505

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Subproject commit 81ab28665924e14c9fabbe78a56bfa8563583d82 Subproject commit 6105a32ff0b689a73fc05329f960a18ea8bea249

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#+title: Definitions

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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4589926#overview][Udemy MBA course]] - [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4589926#overview][Udemy MBA course]]
* Table of Contents * Table of Contents
** financial terms, errata, etc
#+attr_html: :class contents-overview
- [[./mba/finance_terms.org][Financial Terms]]
** Section 1 - Launching a new company ** Section 1 - Launching a new company
#+attr_html: :class contents-overview #+attr_html: :class contents-overview
- [[./mba/ch05.org][Chapter 05. How to Legally Protect Your Company]] - [[./mba/ch05.org][Chapter 05. How to Legally Protect Your Company]]
@ -57,3 +61,7 @@
** Section 10 - Due Diligence and Data Sources ** Section 10 - Due Diligence and Data Sources
#+attr_html: :class contents-overview #+attr_html: :class contents-overview
- [[./mba/ch55.org][Chapter 55. Where to get Information for your Financial Model]] - [[./mba/ch55.org][Chapter 55. Where to get Information for your Financial Model]]
** Section 11 - Modeling and Valuation
- [[./mba/ch58.org][Chapter 58. How to Build a Financial Model for a Public Company]]
- [[./mba/ch59.org][Chapter 59. Read Financials like a book & find patterns in data]]

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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4314666#overview][S10:L55. Where to get Information for your Financial Models]] - [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4314666#overview][S10:L55. Where to get Information for your Financial Models]]
* Notes * Notes
1. Question financial data
2. CFO's and CEO's are the best salespeople in the world
** Oracle income statement
*** lost money
bc the entire economy was crashing
*** gained money
1. revenue growth increased bc they bought companies
- sun microsystems
- bea
- etc
2. this was not organic growth
3. organic growth is when you aren't buying companies
** tech model
- subscribers or license revenues
- bookings
- recognize revenue when you ship the product and they pay you
- but a lot of this hasn't been paid yet.
- operating and gross margin trends
*** tech model bs
- usually low debt if any
- cash rich
- analyze deferred revenue
*** tech model cash flow
- cash flow is not as relevent
- becomes same as revenue
*** valuation
- in five years is the company going to be more or less relevant
- use revenue, eps and cash flow multiples
- look long term
** non tech
*** valuation
- dcf: discounted cash flow
- model it five years out
- revenue, eps, and cash flow multiples
** growth versus value spectrum
- growth
- invest in companies that grow quickly
- value
- general only buy cheap stocks
- don't really get tech stocks
** info on publicly traded companies
- www.sec.gov
- 10Q quarterly reports
*** 10-q
1. financial statemetns
- balance sheet
- income statement
- cashflow statement
2. management discussion & analysis (MD&A)
- explanation of financial performance and trends
- insights into risks and future expectations
3. market risks
- details on economic, legal or industry risks
4. legal proceedings
- updates on lawsuits or government investigations
5. internal controls
- corporate governance
- controls over financial reporting
*** 10-K
**** basics
- annual financial report
- comprehensive audited overview
**** sections
1. business overview
- industry, operations and business model
- major products, services and markets
- competitive landscape
2. financial statements
- audited
- balance sheet
- assets
- liabilities
- equity
- income statement
- revenue
- expenses
- profit/loss
- cash flow statement
- operating
- investing
- financing cash flows
- statement of shareholders equity
3. management discussion and analysis (MD&A)
- management anaylysis of financial performence
- risks, trends, and future outlook
4. risk factors
- poetential threats to company
- economic
- regulatory
- competitive
5. legal proceedings
6. corporate governance and executive compensation
- details for CEO's and top executives
- board of directors and corporate governance policies
7. market data & shareholder information
- stock performance
- number of outstanding shares
** recap
- great quantitative tools
- target price based on estimates in 5 years
- look for trends
- use sec.gov

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#+title: Section 11 | Lesson 58 - How to Build a Financial Model for a Public Company
#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
#+OPTIONS: H:6
* Links
- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4315002#overview][S11:L58 course video]]
* Notes
- how analysts
- assess
- get access to information
- goto sec.gov and find the 10k
** investor relations
- help you understand their company
- anybody can talk to microsoft investor relations
- their job to help you
- small companies that are publicly traded might outsource it
- go to web site and find contact info
** model valuation
*** sources
- sec.gov
- investor relations of the company
*** publicly traded companies
- you have the info and sources
- first source is investor relations
- e.g. search for 'microsoft investor relations'
**** investor relations website
- events
- past earnings releases
- earnings and financials
- download an excel spreadsheet
**** sec.gov
- put in the ticker e.g. "MSFT" for Micrasoft
- download the 10-K
- business of the company
- risk factors
- legal proceedings
- etc
***** other forms:
- 8-K is press release
- S-1 all companies must file which tells you everything you need to know about the company
** basics
*** rule
- everything is a % of revenue
- look for trends in the historical data
- make assumptions about future
- cash flow and earnings are effectively the same in the long run
- debt is only relevant if it's huge
- balance sheet, cash flow, irrelevant in the long run
*** layering
1. revenue
1. cost of revenue
2. gross profit (margin)
3. add % of revenue to
- cost of revenu
- gross profit
2. operating expenses
1. research and development
2. sales and marketing
3. general and administrative
4. operating income (same as EBIT)
5. add % of revenue to the above
3. below the bottom line
1. taxes
2. net income
3. shares
4. diluted shares
4. add YOY
- revenue
- research and development
- sales and marketing
- general and administrative
5. on taxes add % of EBIT
*** result
**** revenue
- revenue
- % YOY
- cost of revenue
- % of revenue
- gross profit
- % of revenue
**** operating expenses
- research and development
- % YOY
- % of revenue
- sales and marketing
- % YOY
- % of revenue
- general and administrative
- % YOY
- % of revenue
- operating income (same as EBIT)
- % of revenue
**** below the line items
- taxes
- % of EBIT
- net income
- shares
- diluted earnings per share
** forecasting
- add the years you want to the model
- then add columns for the projecting years with each column name having an 'e' for estimate after the year name. ie. FY2027e
- look for patterns
- try to determine why revenue grew or contracted

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#+title: Section 11 | Lesson 59 - read financials and find data patterns
#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
#+OPTIONS: H:6
* 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]]
- file:../_data/section_11/microsoft_valuation.numbers
- file:../_data/section_11/course_notes.pdf
* Notes
- 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
** calculate net income
1. calculate operating expenses
\[
\text{Operating Expenses} = \text{R&D} + \text{Sales & Marketing} + \text{G&A}
\]
2. calculate operating income (EBIT)
\[
\text{EBIT} = \text{Gross Profit} \text{Operating Expenses}
\]
3. calcuate taxes (assume taxes are 21% of EBIT)
\[
\text{Taxes}= \text{EBIT} × \text{21%}
\]
4. calculate net income
\[
\text{Net Income} = \text{EBIT} \text{Taxes}
\]
** 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
\[
\text{Net Income} = \text{EBIT} - \text{Taxes}
\]
*** Shares
**** Where We Have the Information
- When historical data is available, derive share count using net income and diluted EPS:
\[
\text{Shares} = \frac{\text{Net Income}}{\text{Diluted EPS}}
\]
- For forward projections, we reverse this: project shares first, then derive EPS.
**** Assumed Share Growth by Company Type
| Company Type | Assumed Annual Share Growth |
|---------------------------+----------------------------------|
| High-growth tech | 58% |
| Mid-sized growth firm | 35% |
| Blue chip or cash-stable | 02% or flat/shrinking via buybacks |
**** Core Financial Projection Assumptions
| Element | Assumption |
|-------------+------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Shares | Project using a realistic dilution rate (e.g., 35%) unless buybacks occur |
| Net Income | Calculate as EBIT × (1 - tax rate), based on revenue projections |
| EPS | Net Income / Shares |
*** EPS
- For projected years, calculate EPS based on projected net income and projected shares.
- Maintain a YOY column for EPS to support stock price modeling.
*** Stock Price
- Stock price should be projected based on fundamentals, not simple historical price growth.
- Use a mix of valuation models (outlined below) to estimate target price.
- These models are based on earnings, revenue, and comparable multiples.
** valuation of stock price
- 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
**** 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 companys **forecasted EPS** multiplied by a reasonable P/E ratio.
- In this example:
- **MSFTs 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 Todays 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
- 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.
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#+title: Definitions
#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
#+OPTIONS: H:6
* Links
- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
* Notes
** Market Capitalization (Market Cap)
Market capitalization (market cap) refers to the total value of a company's outstanding shares of stock. It is used as a measure of a companys size and worth in the stock market.
*** Formula:
#+BEGIN_SRC
Market Cap = Stock Price × Total Outstanding Shares
#+END_SRC
*** Example:
If a company has 10 million shares and each share is worth $50, the market cap would be:
#+BEGIN_SRC
10,000,000 × 50 = 500,000,000
#+END_SRC
So, the company's market cap is **$500 million**.
*** Market Cap Categories:
- *Small-cap:* Less than **$2 billion** (e.g., early-stage or high-growth companies)
- *Mid-cap:* Between **$2 billion - $10 billion** (e.g., growing businesses)
- *Large-cap:* Over **$10 billion** (e.g., well-established companies like Apple, Microsoft)
*** Why is Market Cap Important?
- **Indicates company size** Larger companies tend to be more stable, while smaller ones might have higher growth potential.
- **Affects investment decisions** Large-cap stocks are often safer but may grow slower, while small-cap stocks can be more volatile but have higher growth potential.
- **Used in stock indices** Major indices like the **S&P 500** are weighted by market cap.
This structured format is now **ready for Org-mode** and easy to read or export! 🚀