Enterprise value발음듣기
Enterprise value
In the price to earnings conundrum video we encountered a situation where two different entrepreneurs bought an identical asset, in this case it was a pizza parlor or a pizzeria, but they each financed it in a different way.발음듣기
He had no debt. While this guy, he borrowed some money and he even had some non-operating assets.발음듣기
So he levered up. For every $1 he put in he borrowed $10 from the bank in order to buy more assets that he actually brought to the table.발음듣기
And we saw when you did their financial statements - their revenue, cost of goods - everything up to the operating profit line was the same.발음듣기
And that makes sense because, if you remember the first introduction to income statement video, operating profit is really indicative of what the operating assets are generating.발음듣기
And everything below the operating line, everything below the operating profit line, is either coming from non-operating assets, that would the case of non-operating income.발음듣기
And then when you have these differences in capital structure it changes what your net income is.발음듣기
But what we saw is when we applied the same price to earnings ratio, and they had the same share counts - I didn't change too many variables here I just really changed how they paid for the asset.발음듣기
But when you apply the same price to earnings ratio to both earning streams, to both companies, you got something that was reasonably unintuitive.발음듣기
And if you try it out, if you grow this guy's revenue a little bit, if you actually grow both of their revenues by the same amount or both of their gross profits by the same amount or if you grow both of their operating profits by the same amount,발음듣기
So given that someone might say, oh, because of the leverage maybe I'm willing to pay even a higher multiple.발음듣기
But we saw at the end of the last video, when you apply, let's say, a 10 multiple, or really any multiple to both of these earning streams, you get a situation that at first doesn't look crazy.발음듣기
OK, the market cap of this guy is $210,000 if you apply a 10 multiple to their earnings stream, while the market cap of this guy is $189,000 if you apply a 10 multiple to their earning stream.발음듣기
But what was the conundrum, what really got us thinking, was how can this whole equity stream right here, or this equity, or this earnings stream be, worth 210 and this one be worth 189 when this guy only put $10,000 in initially and this guy put $100,000?발음듣기
And so when you're paying $210,000 for this asset, for this equity, you are essentially saying that this asset is worth $210,000.발음듣기
But if you're saying that this equity is worth $189,000, right, that's what the market cap is.발음듣기
Then you're implicitly saying that this asset, that all of these assets are worth the value of this market capitalization plus this debt, right?발음듣기
So that's $289,000. And then if you wanted the value of this operating asset you would subtract out this much right here, the cash.발음듣기
So when you apply the same price to earnings to these similar businesses you've actually got a situation where you're overpaying for this asset relative to this one, even though they're identical.발음듣기
Price to earnings ratio is a good a quick way of comparing two companies relative to their growth or relative to an industry.발음듣기
You saw in the last video that how you're capitalized, and when I say capitalized I mean how do you pay for your assets.발음듣기
If you have a lot of debt versus a lot of equity, what actually happens on the earnings line is very, very different.발음듣기
And so if you want to capture that information, when you look at the price of a stock you have to figure out what you're actually paying for the enterprise of the company, the enterprise value of the company.발음듣기
So when I talk about the enterprise, or the enterprise value, I'm talking about the operating assets.발음듣기
It gets a little bit more complicated if you're talking about a financial company like a bank or an insurance company.발음듣기
The enterprise value is the asset value of the assets that allow the company to do business.발음듣기
so the ovens, the building, the places, where people actually eat their food, and even the cash that's necessary to operate the business.발음듣기
The enterprise value shouldn't incorporate the cash that's surplus, that's not necessary to operate the business.발음듣기
So you could go backwards and you say, OK, for a given price how much am I paying for an enterprise value?발음듣기
So let's say that this stock - let's say that Company A or this one, let's say the stock right now is trading at $20.발음듣기
And you'll say, OK, for $20 I'm getting $2.10 earnings per year, assuming it's not growing or something.발음듣기
So when you superficially just look at this you're going to say, wow, this is a cheaper price to earnings ratio, maybe I should buy that.발음듣기
But what we saw in the last video is that price to earnings isn't a good relative valuation metric when two different companies are capitalized very differently.발음듣기
So what you want to do is instead back out what these prices imply about the enterprise value.발음듣기
So let me redraw those two diagrams because I feel like I'm - So for this entrepreneur you have the assets and there's no debt.발음듣기
So if the market cap is $200,000 you're essentially saying that these assets, these operating assets, are worth $200,000.발음듣기
So in this case, at a price of $20, we know that the enterprise value, the market enterprise value,발음듣기
so what the market is saying the enterprise is worth, the operating assets are worth, is $200,000.발음듣기
Not really use that one. So $100,000, this is the equity or the market capitalization or the market value of the equity.발음듣기
So if we remember there was some of the assets that were actually operational and some were non-operational.발음듣기
But if we were to subtract out the cash or the non-operating assets, what's not necessary to operate the business, we get $190,000 of enterprise value.발음듣기
So in this case, when you look at the price to earnings you're like, wow, this is half as expensive as that.발음듣기
And I just happened to make up the numbers so even when I did the enterprise value it's only 5% cheaper.발음듣기
To figure out the enterprise value you take, and this will be the formula you see in a lot of books.발음듣기
And the reason why, first, you subtract cash is, and it really should be just cash that is not associated with the enterprise.발음듣기
Some people subtract out all cash with the argument that the company doesn't need to use any of it.발음듣기
But the real idea behind it is to kind of capture the assets that are actually generating the profits of the enterprise.발음듣기
And hopefully that makes a little bit more sense as why the enterprise value is actually described this way.발음듣기
Now the one thing you might say, OK, Sal, you figured out how to calculate enterprise value from a share price.발음듣기
How do I figure out what a company's enterprise value should be and then figure out what its share price should be?발음듣기
EBITDA. I won't cover that now because it's a new term for you, but it means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.발음듣기
But what I like to do is just think about, OK, what are the real earnings from the enterprise?발음듣기
And then you could apply a multiple to that based on what other companies are trading at or how fast it's growing.발음듣기
Let's say in this case we're saying they're both generating $30,000 in operating profit per year.발음듣기
So let's say I want to say that EV to operating profit, which I frankly think is a better metric than EV to EBITDA--발음듣기
and I'll cover EBITDA in a future video - let's say that I think for this industry it should be 5.발음듣기
Now for the first guy if the EV is $180,000, if I'm saying that this thing right here, the market value, should be $180,000, then I'm implying that the equity should be worth $180,000.발음듣기
So essentially I would take that EV and I would say, well, all of that's equity, there's no cash there, there's no debt, so all of this is equity.발음듣기
And then if you wanted to subtract out, figure out the market cap, you would take this whole thing and then subtract out the debt to get the market cap.발음듣기
That right there, right? You were just figuring out this whole distance, subtracting out this distance.발음듣기
So essentially you would say that the market cap is equal to the enterprise value plus the cash minus the debt.발음듣기
So if you believe that the enterprise value of these pizzerias are identical and that they're both worth $180,000, you should be willing to pay $18 for Company A.발음듣기
And now if you're a little bit more aggressive you might like the leverage, you might like how Company B is growing, et cetera.발음듣기
Maybe you would like to pay a premium for that leverage or maybe you wouldn't, because it also increases your risk.발음듣기
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