Talk:Enterprise value/Archives/2012
This is an archive of past discussions about Enterprise value. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
11/30 Responses
Retail Investor writes: Why? You normalize for the capital structure, not the assets.
Right. And the excess cash causes the capital structure to be other than normal.mullacc 00:31, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Retail Investor writes: And that dividend makes the second company worth more before the payment than after it has been paid out.
You're talking about equity value. You're right, but that has nothing to do with EV.mullacc 00:31, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Retail Investor writes: Capitalization is about who OWNS the assets. It has nothing to do with the assets themselves.
Capitalization is about how the assets are funded. Equity is about who owns the assets. Why would you increase capitalization to fund excess cash on the balance sheet? You wouldn't and that's why investors demand stock buy-backs or dividends when a company stockpiles too much cash. And when you do financial analysis, you assume that this is how the cash would be treated in case of a buyout--hence the subtraction of cash in the equation of EV.mullacc 00:31, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Retail Investor writes: My example above proves the second company is more valuable, because the new owners of it could take a $10,000 dividend. AND they would still have the company
This is exactly what my example shows. If your example company had an equity value of $100,000 and no debt, and a buyer came along and bought the whole thing at market value, he'd pay $100,000 and then immediately take out the $10,000 in excess cash. So how much did he really pay for the company? $90,000. If your company had $50,000 in equity value and $50,000 in debt, the buyer would pay $50,000 to the equity holders, and then use the $10,000 of excess cash along with $40,000 of his own money to pay down the debt--again, the total paid for the company is $90,000. Let's say this company used the $10,000 to buyback stock at market value--then it would have equity value of $90,000 after the buyback and $0 in cash, but is the company worth any less as an on-going entity than before? Of course not.
Retail Investor writes: Quoting someone else is no argument. If you are an investor, you know that "fainess opinions" are anything but fair.
I'm a professional investor and I've been an investment banker and I've been a finance student. Everyone in those worlds agrees on the EV equation as I have laid it out. Whatever you think about the integrity of fairness opinions is irrelevant, it's simply an example of a professional application of an industry standard metric. You may not agree with the metric and that's fine, but Wikipedia should reflect the accepted academic and professional equation and not your opinion. Have you spent any time looking at the various financial glossaries available on the web? The external link on this entry agrees with my equation, as does the Reuters glossary.
- You still have not disproved my simple example. Adding all kinds of extraneous stuff only confuses matters. The company with the additional $10,000 cash is worth $10,000 more than the company without. Cash is an asset like any other asset. Assets do not determine capital structure. If you sold out to some private-equity buyout at a price determined by a 'fair-value' opinion that discounted the value of the cash on the balance sheet, I'm sorry for your loss. You got hoodwinked. The first lesson of investing is to think for yourself.Retail Investor 22:52, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
- I did disprove it; see just a few lines above with the paragraph that starts "This is exactly what my example shows." And you're continuing to conflate equity value with enterprise value. When you say "The company with the additional $10,000 cash is worth $10,000 more than the company without", you'd be right if you meant equity value--yes, the market cap will be higher--but you have a fundamental misunderstanding of capital structures if you think enterprise value will be higher.
- "Assets do not determine capital structure." Well, Assets = Liabilities + Equity, so, in a sense, the amount of assets a company owns will determine its total capitalization, or visa versa.
- And no, I haven't been hood-winked by a private-equity buyout. I am the private-equity buyer.mullacc 05:04, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
Other opinions
Just a suggestion this article needs to put an EV value into context. As a novice (i.e. I know nothing about financial terminology) I was hoping for something that would put the EV value into context meaning what is a good vs. a poor EV value. Then again I don’t know if such a thing exists. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.158.20.134 (talk) 14:27, 28 January 2009 (UTC)
On looking at this page and the discussion above, I can see two clear sources that support a definition that includes subtracting cash. Remember that Wikipedia is not a place for original research. If you want to argue that EV does not subtract cash, you need to provide a reliable source to support your definition, not thought experiments. Grouse 11:10, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
- Why can't we be more inclusive? If I say 2+2=4, why should I be deleted because I cannot quote it?Lesliejane 19:36, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
- The No original research policy is one of the core content policies of Wikipedia. If you want to discuss it, I suggest you do it on the talk page for the article. Grouse 19:45, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
- Why can't we be more inclusive? If I say 2+2=4, why should I be deleted because I cannot quote it?Lesliejane 19:36, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
Response to 12/4 changes
I made a few changes to the opening paragraph (which I will detail below), but I left the rest alone despite problems I will lay out here.
Enterprise Value measures the total cost to buy all of a business and payoff all its debts in the process.
I think this is somewhat redundant--the opening statement states that EV represents that aggregate of all financing sources. I think that's enough. To explicitly say that it's the cost to buy all of a business and pay off the debts ignores the realities of takeover premiums and call premiums on the debt.
It is a useful way to compare companies with different capital structures. It normalizes the different costs and different risks associated with different capital structures.
The emphasis on normalizing costs and risks feels too strong to me. I think we should leave it at the idea of normalizing for different capital structures and let the capital structure article spell out the reasons why risks/cost are different under different scenarios.
Metrics using EV
- EV/EBITDA as a measure of payback period: I still don't understand this and have never seen it used this way. As I said above, EBITDA excludes many items that need to be paid before anyone is "paid back." If two companies both trade at 5x EBITDA but one has $5 million in capital expenditures and the other has $50 million, how can anyone say these companies have the same "payback period"? Now, P/E ratios DO imply a payback period to equity holders (or, more accurately, an expected rate of return) and since EBITDA measures a company's ability to generate cash from operations, the two are related. I'd change this section to something like: "EV/EBITDA is a multiple used to help value the equity of a company, often in conjunction with other metrics such as P/E multiples. " I'd like to see sources on the notion of payback periods and EV/EBITDA if we are going to include it--I've done plenty of valuation work and credit analysis in my day and I never used this metric for that purpose.
- EBITDA/EV is the metric most used to measure the cash rate of return on the investment: This is pretty confusing. It's just the inverse of the above ratio and thus suffers from similar problems. Any sources for this usage?
I'd also add a quick statement on the use of EV versus equity value/market cap/price in multiples. This is what I was trying to get at with my statement about P/E multiples in the early version. Something like: "When calculating various multiples related to the valuation of a company, EV is appropriate to use when the denominator incorporates items that do not reflect capital structure (e.g. EV/EBITDA, EV/EBIT, EV/Sales, EV/Unlevered Free Cash Flow) while price or equity value is appropriate for items that do (such as P/E, price/book value and price/levered free cash flow)."
EV is used by
I'd eliminate this section. By mentioning the use of EV in valuation metrics, it becomes obvious that stock market investors use EV. And the section on buyers of controlling interests should be eliminated for the same reasons I gave for removing references to "takeover" from the intro paragraph. I do think it is important to mention takeovers at some point in this article--but it needs to be worded careful. Perhaps something like this placed under the formula: "EV represents the theoretical takeover value of a company at current market value--a theoretical buyer desiring to re-capitalize the company would need to fund both the purchase of equity and the redemption of the debt outstanding, while making use of excess cash on the balance sheet. An actual takeover may or may not include the redemption of debt outstanding and would likely include a premium to equity and various transaction costs."
And to the point made about using only market value of debt versus book value: In practice, book value is used quite often. The exception would include distressed situations where bonds are trading at severe discounts to par. In reality, if a company decided to pay off the entirety of its debt, it would probably need to call that debt rather than attempt to purchase it on the open market. Call provisions are usually at 100% of par or greater. Just going out on the market to buy up your debt is an expensive proceeding and would be detected quickly by bond market participants--but sometimes companies do conduct tender offers when their bonds are trading at heavy discounts and there is a good chance bondholders will sell for something significantly less than par. So, in the vast majority of situations, it is appropriate to use the book value of debt. As with all things in finance, never use EV blindly--check to make sure you aren't dealing with a distressed situation.
Subtracting cash in the equation
The "alternate" calculation is no alternative, it's just wrong. If a reputable source can be found, I'd reconsider.
common equity at market capitalization
I changed this back to equity value. Equity value is slightly different than market capitalization--equity value includes market cap. Market cap alone is wrong in this case.mullacc 18:34, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Removed original research
As there has been no attempt to supply a source so far, I have removed this bit from the article:
- The alternate calculation of EV does not subtract cash. [original research?] From this POV, the EV of a business with excess cash is higher than that of the exact same business without the cash. Any buyer of the first business should pay more money in exchange for receiving cash back as a dividend. Value is transfered from the business to the buyer's pocket.
Please do not add it back to the article without providing a source. Grouse 14:05, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
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Connection between EV and Terminal Value?
On the page for Terminal Value ("http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_value_(finance)") the last word in the section about "Perpetuity Growth Model" the term "Enterprise value" is stated. It's linked to this page. However, the definitions of Enterprise value on that page and on this page seem to be totally different. Why? Perhaps the term Enterprise value has two totally different meanings and currently only one of them is stated on this page. Or, am I missing something? --Smallchanges 15:44, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
Usage
This is unclear: "Stock market investors use EBITDA/EV to compare returns between equivalent companies on a risk adjusted basis. They can then super-impose their own choice of personal debt levels. In practice, stock investors cannot use EV because they have no access to the market values of the company debt.
This is POV: "It is not sufficient to substitute the book value of the debt because a) the market interest rates may have changed, and b) the market's perception of the risk of the loan may have changed since the debt was issued. This isn un-encyclopedic: "Remember, the point of EV is to neutralize the different risks, and costs of different capital structures. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.14.209.55 (talk) 06:56, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
why do we need to add only debt (short- and long-term) and not all liabilities?
Since such liabilities as payables to service providers, taxes payable etc are obligations to pay, so I guess, it is proper to add all liabilities to EV. Unlike assets or debt, this kind of liabilities has no market value and their value can only be book value. If you buy a home which has a huge unpaid bill for heating or property taxes, then you definitely have to add it to your acquisition expenses. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Farma79 (talk • contribs) 13:53, 28 June 2008 (UTC)
Market cap
In the Wikipedia entry for Market_capitalization it is stated that the market cap is "the total value of the issued shares of a publicly traded company", implying that it includes all the shares, whether they are common or preferred. But in this article it is stated that the EV is "is more comprehensive than market capitalization (market cap), which only includes common equity". Is there a contradiction between this two articles? Or I just misunderstood?. pablete (talk) 18:22, 9 November 2012 (UTC)