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Page 1: Valuing bonds and stocks

Valuing bonds and stocks

Yields and growth

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Exam (sub) question

r = 6%, compounded monthly. Save $100 at the end of each month for

10 years. Final value, in dollars of time 120?

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Answer in two steps

Step 1. Find PDV of the annuity. .005 per month 120 months PVAF = 90.073451 PVAF*100 = 9007.3451

Step 2. Translate to money of time 120.

[(1.005)^120]*9007.3451 = 16387.934

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Present value of annuity factor

Trr

TrPVAF)1(

11

1),(

Time 0 1 2 … T T+1Cash flow 0 1 1 … 1 0

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Example: Cost of College

Annual cost = 25000 Paid when? Make a table of cash flows

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Timing

Obviously simplified

Time 0 1 2 3 4Cash flow -25 -25 -25 -25 0

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Present value at time zero

25+25*PVAF(.06,3) =91.825298

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Spreadsheet confirmation

Time Balance Pay leaving0 91.825 -25 66.8251 70.8345 -25 45.83452 48.58457 -25 23.584573 24.99964 -25 -0.000364 -0.00038 -0.00038

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Saving for college

Start saving 16 years before matriculation.

How much each year? Make a table.

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The college savings problem

Time 0 1 2 … 16Savings C C C … CFinal value 91.8253

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Solution outlined

Target = 91.825 dollars of time 16. Discount to dollars of time 0.

Divide by (1.06)16

Result 36.146687… , the new target PV of savings =C+C*PVAF(.06,16) Equate and solve for C.

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Numerical Solution

PV of target sum = 36.146687 PV of savings = C+C*10.105895 Solve C*11.105695 = 36.14667 C = 3.2547298

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Confirmation in an excel spread sheet.

Time contribution balance0 3.25473 3.254731 3.25473 6.7047442 3.25473 10.36176… …15 3.25473 83.557116 3.25473 91.8253

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Finish here1/17/06

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Apply the formula to a Bond

Time 0 0.5 1 1.5 … TCash flow 0 C C C … CCash flow 1000

This is a bond maturing T full yearsfrom now with coupon rate 2C/1000.C is the coupon payment.

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Yield

Yield is a market rate now. Coupon rate is written into the bond. It is near the market rate when issued. Yield and coupon rate are different.

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Given the yield, r

Yield r for a bond with semi-annual coupons means r/2 each 6 months.

Value of the bond that matures in T years is

P = C*PVAF(r/2,2T) + 1000/(1+r/2)2T

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Given the price of the bond, P

Yield is the r that satisfies the valuation equation

P=C*PVAF(r/2,2T) + 1000/(1+r/2)2T

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A typical bond

T = 0 .5 1 1.5

Coupon 0 60 60 60

Principal 0 0 0 1000

Total 0 60 60 1060

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Value at yield of 5%

Pure discount bond (the 1000): Value =1000/(1.025)3=928.599…

Strip: ( the coupon payments)60*(1/.025)(1-1/(1.025)3)

=171.3614… Total market value of bond =1099.96

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Facts of bonds

They are called, at the option of the issuer when interest

rates fall. or retired in a sinking fund,

as required to assure ultimate repayment.

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More Facts

Yield > coupon rate, bond sells at a discount (P<1000)

Yield < coupon rate, it sells at a premium(P>1000)

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Growing perpetuities

Thought to be relevant for valuing stocks

Present value of growing perpetuity factor PVGPF

g = growth rate (decimal) r = interest rate (decimal) PVGPF(r,g) = 1/(r-g)

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Growing perpetuity

Time 0 1 2 3 …Cash flow 0 1 (1+g) (1+g) 2̂ …

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Riddle

What if the growth rate is above the discount rate?

Formula gives a negative value. Correct interpretation is infinity.

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More riddle: market response

An investment with growth rate above the interest rate.

Others copy the investment until competition drives the growth rate down

or until … the opportunity drives the interest rate

up.

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Review question

A bond has a coupon rate of 8%. The maturity is 10 years from now. It sells today at par, that is, for $1000. What is the yield? Prove it.

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Answer one

yield = coupon rate. You must know that.

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Answer two: proof

1000/(1.04)20 + 40*(1/.04)[1-1/(1.04)20] = 456.3869462+543.6130537 = 1000

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Answer two: deeper proof

1000/(1.04)20 + 40*(1/.04)[1-1/(1.04)20]

1000/(1.04)20 + 1000-1000/(1.04)20

End terms cancel. Answer = 1000.

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Growing perpetuity

Time 0 1 2 3 …Cash flow 0 1 (1+g) (1+g) 2̂ …

grgrPVGPF

1),(

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Example: share of stock

The market expects a dividend of $4 in one year.

It expects the dividend to grow by 5% per year

The discount rate for such firms is 16%. What is the price of a share?

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Solution

P=4*(1/(.16-.05)) =36.3636...

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Decomposition of value

Absent growth, as a cash cow,value = 4*(1/.16)

= 25. Remaining value of 36.3636… - 25 is

net present value of growth opportunities (NPVGO).

=11.3636...

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Example: whole firm

The market expects $30M in one year and growth of 2% thereafter. Discount rate = 17%. Value of the firm is $200M. That is 30M*(1/(.17-.02))

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continued

A new line of business for the firm is discovered.

The market expects $20M in a year, with growth at 7% thereafter. Value of the new growth opportunity is

$200M (at r = 17%).

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Whole value:400M = 200M + 200M

Note that the value is gross, not net. Share price? Divide by the number of shares.

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Why should we be skepticalabout the PV growing perpetuity

The value is coming from far distant years.

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