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DES Chapter 10 1 DES Chapter 10 The Condensed Financial Statements and Financial Analysis

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DES Chapter 10 1

DES Chapter 10

The Condensed Financial Statements and Financial

Analysis

DES Chapter 10 2

Using the Corporate Valuation Spreadsheet

Look at the file: Home Depot (for Ch 9-11, WACC, default inputs).xls.

This file will be called Home Depot.xls for short.

DES Chapter 10 3

Steps to Estimate Value Using the Corporate Valuation Spreadsheet

The valuation spreadsheet has seven interrelated worksheets:

(1) Proj & Val(2) Inputs(3) WACC(4) Hist Analys(5) Condensed(6) Comprehensive(7) Actual

DES Chapter 10 4

DES Chapter 10 5

The Condensed Sheet

You don’t need to do your analysis on a financial statements as complicated as those in the Comprehensive or Actual sheets.

The spreadsheet automatically condenses the Comprehensive sheet into a format called the Condensed sheet.

See DES Chapter 10 and its Appendix

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 6

The Condensed Sheet (continued)

Rationale for including additional items in the condensed financial statements:

(1) provide more detail and accuracy in reporting operating performance

(2) account for nonoperating performance

(3) allow us to convert GAAP-based statements into free cash flows

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 7

The Condensed Sheet (continued)

Relative to Van Leer’s financials, the condensed statements provide details on:

Operating performance

Nonoperating performance

Adjustments due to GAAP

DES Chapter 10 8

Additional Detail - Operating Performance

Other Short- and Long-Term Operating Assets/Liabilities Short-term operating assets/liabilities – example:

payroll advances to their employees Other short-term operating assets/liabilities are

catch-alls for such items. Long-term operating assets – example:

goodwill and intangibles, deposits held by suppliers, deferred charges

Other long-term operating assets is a catch-all line item for assets of these types.

DES Chapter 10 9

DES Chapter 10 10

Additional Detail - Nonoperating PerformanceLong-Term Investments and Nonoperating Income activities that are not operating activities

noncontrolling investments in other firms investments in real estate or other stocks and bonds

These investments are accounted for in long-term investments; income from these investments is reported in the nonoperating income account.

DES Chapter 10 11

Additional Detail - Nonoperating PerformanceAfter-Tax Extraordinary Income not related to the firm’s continuing operations one-time events classified as extraordinary

items- examples: settlement of a lawsuit, casualty losses due to flood,

fire, or tornado, and gains or losses on the extinguishment of debt)

items that relate to a firm’s decision to discontinue a segment of its operations (sale or closure of a subsidiary, division, or major segment of its business)

DES Chapter 10 12

Additional Detail - Nonoperating Performance All Short-Term Debt levels vary based on short-term cash

needs, and are not targeted used to meet any excess or unanticipated

cash needs firms have many different types of short-term

debt, but only the total is relevant to valuation includes the portion of the long-term debt that

will come due within a year.

DES Chapter 10 13

Additional Detail - Nonoperating PerformanceOther Long-Term Liabilities Claims by investors other than shareholders -

example: minority interest (e.g., the company being valued

owns a majority, but less than 100%, of a subsidiary firm; minority interest is reported as a liability of the parent representing that portion of the subsidiary’s assets that belong to the minority shareholders in the subsidiary)

A single line item called other long-term liabilities is the catch-all.

DES Chapter 10 14

Additional Detail - Nonoperating PerformancePar Plus PIC Less Treasury Firms are using stock repurchases to distribute

cash to shareholders shares repurchased are called treasury stock sale of stock is recorded in two accounts, one account

called Par and the other PIC PIC stands for paid-in-capital (aka capital surplus) dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs)

Because only the net effect of equity accounts is important for estimating intrinsic value, the model has one account called par plus PIC less treasury.

DES Chapter 10 15

Additional Detail - Nonoperating PerformancePreferred Stock

Preferred stock is another source of capital

Preferred stockholders have priority over common

Preferred stockholders typically do not have the right to vote

DES Chapter 10 16

Adjustments Due to GAAP

Deferred taxes Most firms one sets of books for stockholders,

another for the IRS for the IRS, firms make accounting choices to

minimize taxable income, but for investors, they are required to follow GAAP

the IRS allows firms to use accelerated depreciation GAAP accounting suggests that firms use straight-line

depreciation taxes reported on the stockholder statements may be

either more or less than the taxes the company actually pays

DES Chapter 10 17

Adjustments Due to GAAP

Deferred taxes is the cumulative difference between the taxes the company has reported paying and the taxes it actually paid.

DES Chapter 10 18

The Condensed Sheet

The following two slides show the condensed balance sheet and income statements for Home Depot, with the “additional” items circled:

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 19

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 20

DES Chapter 10 21

Calculating Free Cash Flow

Additional items in the reporting format have implications for:

calculation of net operating profit after taxes (NOPAT)

total operating capital

free cash flow

This section describes these changes. Calculations are shown in the Hist Analys worksheet.

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 22

Calculating Free Cash Flow (continued)FCF Calculation Step 1: Operating Profits

Most companies include some nonoperating income items when calculating EBIT, but using condensed financials makes it easy to calculate pre-tax operating profits

Sales - COGS - SGA

- Depreciation= Operating profits

This step is shown in the next slide . . .(continued)

DES Chapter 10 23

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 24

Calculating Free Cash Flow (continued)

FCF Calculation Step 2: NOPAT

Operating profit– Tax on operating income

+ Extraordinary income(after tax) = NOPAT

OK, so you need to know tax on operating income . . .

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 25

Calculating Free Cash Flow (continued)FCF Calculation Step 3: Tax on Operating Income

Differences in Reported Taxes and Actual Taxes Reported taxes – Taxes reported but not paid= Actual taxes

Taxes on Nonoperating Income Actual taxes + Taxes saved due to interest deductions – Taxes paid on interest income – Taxes paid on nonoperating income= Tax on operating income

These steps are shown in the next slide . . . (continued)

DES Chapter 10 26

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 27

Calculating Free Cash Flow (continued)

FCF Calculation Step 4: Total Operating Capital

Net operating working capital

+ Operating long-term capital

= Total operating capital

Total operating capital, year t

+ Total operating capital, year t-1= Investment in Operating Capital, year t

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 28

Calculating Free Cash Flow (continued)

FCF Calculation Step 5: Free Cash Flow

NOPAT - Investment in Operating Capital= Free Cash Flow

Steps 4 & 5 are shown in the next slide . . .

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 29

DES Chapter 10 30

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation.

Corporate information resources:

• Thomson ONE - Business School Edition access comes with your purchase of Corporate Valuation

• Your library may have accessible online or print sources

• The Internet

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 31

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Using other sources -- there are many good sources of information available on the internet. Just to see one example, consider finance.yahoo.com:

Go to finance.yahoo.com Enter ticker symbol for Home Depot (HD), and select

“Go” and you will see the following screen . . .

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 32

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 33

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Now consider the list of options in the frame on the left side of the Home Depot screen:

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 34

(Continued at right)

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/ (continued)

DES Chapter 10 35

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Select “Profile” (circled on the slide) for background information about the company. You will get the following screen:

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 36

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/ (continued)

DES Chapter 10 37

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Once in the “profile,” there is another list of linked options -- click on the one called “Ratio Comparison.” This brings up “Valuation” ratios - several

other categories of useful ratios may be chosen (see circled selections).

Note the ratio comparisons of the individual company with both the industry and sector. You will use them soon.

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 38Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 39

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Input ratio data for competitors (but this is already done this for you in Home Depot.xls).Check “average” of historical ratios.Check “trend” of historical ratios.Check “most recent ratio,” compared with competitors/industry.Use “graph button” to look at historical ratios.

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 40

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

What can you say about the company’s past performance with respect to:

Profitability (NOPAT/Sales and other ratios)? Efficiency (Operating capital/sales and other

ratios)? Comparison to its industry?

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 41

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

What are important issues?

What are signs of financial strength?

Signs of financial weakness?

Signs of a growing versus a declining industry?

What is the life cycle of a firm?

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 42

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

Important aspects for projections:

Sales growth

Profitability changes

Asset Utilization

Working Capital

Debt level

(continued)

DES Chapter 10 43

Analyze the Historical and Current Situation (Continued).

More issues to examine:ROIC over time—does the company have good investment opportunities?Cash accumulationExtraordinary itemsFree Cash FlowDividend policy