Section 3: Dividend Analysis and Preliminary Valuation [WLOs: 1, 4] [CLOs: 1, 2, 4]
In the Section 3: Dividend Analysis and Preliminary Valuation assignment, you will compute the of the company’s stock value based on historical dividend data for your company and a market-based equity rate of return. In this analysis, you will use the constant growth formula to compute two estimates of the stock price, a high-end value and a low-end value. Analysts frequently assess the stock value using a range of values, based on reasonable assumptions for a high-end and a low-end range.
Once you have calculated two stock values, you will compare the company’s calculated values compared to the current market price of the stock. This comparison will help you determine if the stock is currently under-valued or over-valued, and will help you determine your recommendation of buy, hold, or sell. Analysts prepare value estimates based on historical data for the company as well as an understanding of expected future equity rates of return. It is important to understand that the constant growth formula provides an estimate of value, and analysts, like all humans, can be both right and wrong. The inputs used in the formula will greatly impact the value conclusion.
Prepare:
Prior to beginning work on this assignment,
- Complete both learning activities for this week.
- Review Chapters 4 and 5 of the textbook.
- Review the Week 3 Model AssignmentLinks to an external site..
- Watch the following video:
BUS401 – Constant Growth FormulaLinks to an external site.
Write:
In your paper, address the following five parts in a Word document:
Part 1: Dividend Analysis (two to three paragraphs):
- Create a table that illustrates the annual dividends per share paid by your selected company over the past 8 years. If the company has not paid dividends for 8 years, include as many years as available.
- Calculate the growth in annual dividends per share each year and include this annual growth rate in your table.
- To find the dividends your company has paid in the past 8 years, review the BUS401 |Picking a Company that Pays DividendsLinks to an external site. video from Week 1.
- Calculate the average dividend growth rate over the following periods:
- the most recent 8 years,
- the most recent 5 years, and
- the most recent 3 years.
- Summarize the trend in the dividend growth rates.
- Have the dividend growth rates increased or decreased? By how much? Has the increase or decrease been steady or varied from year to year?
- Determine two distinct estimates of the future dividend growth rate for this company: a high-end growth rate and a low-end growth rate. You are to choose these growth rates based on what is reasonable from the data you have on the company’s dividend growth in prior years, as presented in your table. The two future dividend growth rates can be any of following:
- the most recent year growth rate;
- the average growth rate over the 8-year period;
- the average growth rate over the most recent 5 years;
- the average growth rate of the most recent 3 years; or
- a growth rate you select that is reasonable, given the 8-year, 5-year, and 3-year averages, as well as the recent year growth rates.
- NOTE: Both dividend growth rates must be lower than the required rate of return used in the constant growth formula. See Part 2 below for the required rate of return to use in the constant growth formula.
- Justify the determined the high-end dividend growth rate and low-end dividend growth rates for your company. In your justification, provide a least two financial facts from your Week 1 and Week 2 assignments to support your determination.
- Calculate the growth in annual dividends per share each year and include this annual growth rate in your table.
Part 2: Preliminary Valuation: (two to three paragraphs)
- Calculate the stock price for your selected company using the constant growth formula and the low-end dividend growth rate you determined in Part 1. Show all calculations for this estimated stock price using the low-end dividend growth rate.
- For the required rate of return (r), use the following assumptions:
- For a large capitalization company (greater than $10.0 billion in market capitalization) use 10.0%.
- For a mid-cap company (between $2.0 billion and $10.0 billion in market capitalization) use 12.0%.
- For a small-cap company (less than $2.0 billion in market capitalization) use 15.0%.
- Show your calculations.
- For the required rate of return (r), use the following assumptions:
- In a similar manner, calculate another estimate of the stock price for your selected company using the constant growth formula and the high-end dividend growth rate.
- Use the same assumptions for the required rate of return (r) that you used for the low-end stock price, other than using the high-end dividend growth rate.
- Show your calculations.
- Compare each of the two stock prices you just calculated to the current stock price per share of the company.
- State whether each constant growth stock price (low-end and high-end) is above or below the current price.
- State whether each constant growth stock price (low-end and high-end) indicates if the stock price is currently under-valued or over-valued in the market.
- Determine your concluded stock value, based on the two calculations using the constant growth formula.
- Justify your conclusion of value for your stock, using either the high-end stock price or the low-end stock price from the constant growth formula. Include least two financial facts from your Week 1 and Week 2 analyses.
Section 4: Valuation Conclusion [WLOs: 3, 4] [CLOs: 1, 2, 3, 4]
In this assignment, you will recalculate the value of the company’s stock based on your company’s specific required rate of return. To do this, you will calculate the required rate of return for your chosen publicly traded company using the capital asset pricing model (CAPM).
Last week, you determined a preliminary estimate of the company’s stock price using the constant growth formula. To simplify the calculation, you were required to use general market required rates of return, based on size. However, this is an assumption that does not account for the specific risk of an investment in a specific company. This week, you will calculate the required rate of return for your chosen publicly traded company using the CAPM. The CAPM is a more precise tool to estimate a firm’s required rate of return. This tool is “tremendously valuable because required returns are used as the discount rates in the valuation formulas when doing time value of money problems and security valuation” (Hickman et al., 2013, Section 9.3, para. 1). You will then use this CAPM required rate of return to revise your stock price value based on the constant growth formula. This will allow you to determine your final recommendation of buy, hold, or sell.
Prepare:
Prior to beginning work on this assignment,
- Complete both of the Week 4 learning activities
- Review Chapters 7 and 9 of Essentials of finance.
- Review the Week 5 – Final Project.
- Review the Week 4 Model AssignmentLinks to an external site..
- Watch the following video:
BUS401 – Valuation ConclusionLinks to an external site.
Write:
In your paper, address the following five parts in a Word document:
Part 1: (two paragraphs)
- Explain the three types of risk and beta, and how these concepts relate to a company’s required rate of return.
Part 2: (two paragraphs)
- Find your company’s beta from a credible source.
- You can get this information from the Mergent database or by looking it up on a financial website like Yahoo! FinanceLinks to an external site..
- Compare your company’s beta to the market beta of 1.0.
- Calculate the company-specific required rate of return using the CAPM formula.
- Show all calculations.
- Use the beta you determined for your chosen company
- Use a risk-free rate of 2.0%.
- For the market risk premium, use the following assumptions:
- For a large capitalization company (greater than $10.0 billion in market capitalization) use 6.0% as the market risk premium.
- For a mid-cap company (between $2.0 billion and $10.0 billion in market capitalization) use 8.0% as the market risk premium.
- For a small-cap company (less than $2.0 billion in market capitalization) use 11.0% as the market risk premium.
- Compare the company-specific required rate of return you calculated to the required return based on size you used in Section 3: Dividend Analysis and Preliminary Valuation in Week 3 for the constant growth formula.
- Determine whether the company-specific required rate of return higher or lower than the rate of return based on size that you used in Section 3 in Week 3 for the constant growth formula?
- Explain the difference in required rate of returns.
Part 3: (two to four paragraphs)
- Recalculate both estimates (the low-end and the high-end) of the stock price using the constant growth formula.
- Use the company’s specific required rate of return you determined using the CAPM.
- Review your selected high-end and low-end growth rates from Week 3.
- If either growth rate is higher than the new CAPM discount rate, you must reduce your selected growth rate(s).
- Your growth rates cannot be higher than the discount rate, because the calculations will result in a negative stock price, which is not meaningful.
- Include a short, written explanation to explain the revised growth rates.
- Show your revised high-end and low-end stock price calculations
- Compare each of the two recalculated stock prices to the current stock price per share of the company.
- State whether each recalculated stock price (low-end and high-end) is above or below the current market price.
- State whether each recalculated stock price (low-end and high-end) indicates if the stock price is currently under-valued or over-valued in the market.
- (See Section 9.3: Required Returns in your course text.)
- State your recommendation for your concluded stock price for the company.
- Use either the high-end stock price or the low-end stock price from the constant growth formula using the CAPM required rate of return.
- Justify the conclusion of value for your stock based on the most important financial facts from the prior weeks’ analysis.