Cash Flow Forecasts: P.V. Viswanath
Cash Flow Forecasts: P.V. Viswanath
Cash Flow Forecasts: P.V. Viswanath
P.V. Viswanath
Includes divestiture and acquisition of real assets (capital expenditures) and disposal and purchase of financial assets. Also includes acquisitions of other firms.
Net cash flow from the issue and + Cash Flows from Financing repurchase of equity, from the issue and repayment of debt and after dividend payments
This is a historical approach. We will modify this to create a model of cashflows for valuation
These cash flow measures can be used to value assets, the firms equity and the entire firm itself.
We do not take into account the tax benefit of interest in computing FCFF because the tax benefit of interest is accounted for in the discount rate.
For valuation purposes, we need forecasts of these quantities and the disaggregated model is more useful. The value of the firm is the discounted present value of cashflows to the firm + any cash position that the firm might have. Cash is considered separately because it is usually interest bearing and its present value is simply its current value.
Cashflows to Equity
Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) is another cashflow measure that focuses on cash flows to equityholders alone. FCFE = Net Income + Depreciation (Change in noncash Working Capital) Capital Expenditures Net Debt Paid. FCFE can also be computed (as an historical quantity) from the statement of cashflows as FCFE = Cashflow from Operations Capital Expenditures Net Debt paid (short-term and long-term) If there are other non-common stock securities, cashflows associated with them, such as preferred dividends are also subtracted. The value of common equity is the discounted present value of free cashflows to equity plus current cash.