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Principles of Finance: Unit 6, Mathy Evaluation of an Investment 8 Views
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Description:
Time for a mathy evaluation of an investment. And yes, mathy is the technical term.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance a la shmoop a mathy evaluation of an investment all
- 00:08
right you're a young financial analyst at a mutual fund company you wear a red [People standing in a cue]
- 00:12
tie in a white shirt and are learning the various expressions you're supposed
- 00:16
to make when whining about taxes you know from the old people there you dream
- 00:21
of becoming the man well for your coverage you inherit dumbest waste of
Full Transcript
- 00:26
time ever or DWOTE yeah that's actually a company that is your research director
- 00:31
or boss assigns you to cover this internet media company if you don't own
- 00:36
it and it then goes up a lot you look like an idiot and vice versa so punting [Person places football on the ground]
- 00:42
on even having an opinion on DWOTE is not an option meaning that you have to
- 00:47
come up with a buy sell or hold recommendation on the stock at a given
- 00:50
price so how do you do the math to come up with a recommendation beyond
- 00:54
blindfolds dart boards and Ouija boards and a donkey and a tail there well the [Donkey appears in a field]
- 00:59
key elements you note about the DWOTE story here we go they have a dollar a
- 01:03
share in cash on the balance sheet no debt no big off-balance sheet assets or
- 01:08
patent things that matter and they also have a dollar a share in trailing one
- 01:12
year fully taxed earnings or net income the stock is currently trading at $65 a
- 01:18
share or 65 times trailing earnings and yes if you subtract $1 from that you get
- 01:24
an equity capitalization of 64 times but kind of a rounding error here and the
- 01:29
scheme of things you think about it so we're gonna move on you heroically note
- 01:32
that in order to just get your money back in cash at this rate it would take [Man discussing DWOTE in a presentation]
- 01:37
your company DWOTE about 65 years to do this
- 01:41
yeah 64 maybe a little less than that with interest and all that but that
- 01:44
we're not gonna go there so lots of optimism lives around DWOTE trading at 65
- 01:49
last year's real profit well compounding your angst on all of this you work for a
- 01:53
conservative mutual fund firm who normally prefer a stocks which pay a
- 01:57
dividend but this is a tech company a tech media company run by 20-somethings [Young tech workers discussing work]
- 02:02
so yeah there's no dividend for you the overall markets trading at about 18
- 02:06
times earnings a bit higher than its historic levels of about 14 times but
- 02:10
with the Fed giving money away and we say that in quotes in the form of
- 02:14
very low interest rates well the higher multiple seems fair assuming that
- 02:18
everything else like growth rates margins etc are all about normal
- 02:23
whatever normal is that is growth prospects fears of war risks of Europe [Soldiers prone firing guns]
- 02:28
defaulting again North Korean nukes Taylor Swift accused of lip-syncing and
- 02:33
so on all that's normal right so you mumble and you note that if you
- 02:37
had a pizza parlor that made a million dollars a year it would be like the
- 02:40
seller of that pizza parlor asking you for sixty five million dollars for that
- 02:45
pizza parlor and yeah that feels like a lot of money for a pizza parlor you
- 02:49
wonder how a pizza parlor could ever sell for sixty five million dollars [Man discussing pizza parlor]
- 02:53
maybe if it sold the real estate along with it and that real estate that we're
- 02:57
sitting directly on a gummy bear mine but yeah sixty five times earnings cool [Man holding gummy bears]
- 03:01
company but wow I wouldn't be the only one in the world in love with it you
- 03:06
could replicate your own pizza parlor for a hundred grand in stoves and food
- 03:10
and cheese and dough and stuff and maybe a hundred grand or so for fronted costs
- 03:14
of rent and labor roundup for insurance and a little local marketing and you're
- 03:18
at 250 grand all-in if you wanted to start your own pizza parlor albeit from [Person taking pizza from stove]
- 03:22
scratch so wait how do you get to paying 65 million dollars for 1 million dollars
- 03:28
of earnings from this notional pizza parlor but first you think why would any
- 03:33
idiot pay 65 million dollars for a pizza parlor well they wouldn't nobody really
- 03:38
pays 65 times earnings for anything just because you see that multiple quoted by
- 03:44
poorly schooled financial journalists does not mean that you should believe it [Financial journalist sitting at desk]
- 03:48
if an investor is paying 65 times earnings on this year's numbers they
- 03:52
must be expecting massively fast earnings growth so they're thinking
- 03:56
about what multiple of earnings they're paying on next year's earnings or the
- 04:00
next year's and by the way pizza parlor sell for like four times earnings maybe
- 04:05
five with seller financing why because pizza parlors don't grow very fast they [Pizza growing in size]
- 04:10
have limited upside like how many people can you have put through a pizza parlor
- 04:14
in a year not that many you compare that to a website well it's a whole different
- 04:18
deal right and who really wants to own a place where little kids scream pick [Kids screaming and running around a pizza parlor]
- 04:22
their noses and the restrooms have you know poor aim but
- 04:26
DWOTE yeah it ain't no pizza parlor it's a video sharing platform for your pets
- 04:31
think dog Vanity Fair, squirrel selfies, platypus profiles, zebras being zazzy...
- 04:39
everyone loves the site the company doesn't spend a dime on marketing
- 04:43
because customers just walk in or you know click in the front door and that [Images of people clicking computer mouse]]
- 04:47
clicking thing is important unlike a pizza parlor which has a limited
- 04:51
capacity of maybe a thousand meals a day on a ridiculously record busy day well
- 04:56
there's essentially no limit to how many clicks DWOTE conserve it could literally
- 05:00
serve a billion clicks an hour if it wanted to
- 05:03
anyway the customers love the product and they get addicted fast DWOTE sells [Girl looking at computer screen]
- 05:08
ads and for the power users who want to market their own pet wares largely
- 05:12
insurance and organic foods and training devices there's a subscription fee of a
- 05:18
hundred bucks a month well the company has shockingly high margins as well the
- 05:22
only have 40 employees most of whom are in Latvia and none of whom were in
- 05:26
California..DWOTE hosts its site on Amazon Web Services which is super cheap [View of an office appears]
- 05:31
and the company's revenues could go up a hundred X and their expenses would
- 05:35
only double, wow you think that is scale way better business than the pizza
- 05:40
parlor right well what are the odds you wonder that people will still be using
- 05:43
DWOTE in five years hmm that's harder what are the odds people will still be
- 05:48
eating pizza in five years yeah much easier different risks different rewards
- 05:53
so the company has 100 million dollars in revenues this year operating expense [DWOTE financial standings appear]
- 05:56
of 15 million in pre-tax profits of 85 its biggest expenses taxes which 20 mill
- 06:02
oh and to make the math easier less hard they have 65 million shares outstanding
- 06:07
so yeah that's 65 million dollars in earnings buck a share there and a bunch
- 06:12
of thoughts come into your brain how can a little company of such ridiculously
- 06:16
high margins that are sustainable these margins are higher than the profit
- 06:20
margins Microsoft had in their heyday as a monopoly are these margins really
- 06:26
sustainable the company grew a hundred percent from last year can it keep [Important questions appear]
- 06:29
growing at that rate and it's such high margins like won't they have to spend a
- 06:33
bunch of dough marketing themselves is this a real business or a fad like
- 06:37
remember guitar hero pokemons go one direction yeah [One Direction band together]
- 06:41
well, your boss mumbles your boss at the mutual fund there I think I have things [Boss mumbling to man]
- 06:45
in my golf bag older than the CEO of this company does she know what she's
- 06:50
doing and then you ask what's for dinner well you get hungry doing financial
- 06:54
analysis very few six-packs in the mutual fund world all right so the [Man with six pack and cheese burger appears]
- 06:58
company has 100 million dollars in trailing revenues ten million dollars
- 07:01
comes from selling ads on the site and 90 million comes from subscriptions to
- 07:04
power users who pay a thousand bucks a year eighty to a hundred bucks a month
- 07:08
roughly but if you buy a year at a time you get the discount mainly to make the
- 07:12
math easier for this problem so the company has 90,000 power users
- 07:16
subscribers paying at a grand a year let's think about that is that a lot or
- 07:21
a little 90,000 well eBay has like a million power sellers but you wonder how [Man with eBay briefcase for a head working out]
- 07:26
big this pet market is maybe it's tapping out so you do some research and
- 07:30
you find that 114 percent of the world owns a pet and many own two so that's
- 07:35
how we got that math there and in most places people treat their pets better [Woman with a cat and a toddler appears]
- 07:38
than they treat their human children how crazy would it be for the subscriber
- 07:42
number to double like could it get to 180,000 well there's like 300 million
- 07:47
people in America and change and like seven billion in the world is that
- 07:50
really hard to think about could it get to a million well it almost has to have
- 07:54
a clear line to a million paying subscribers because if it doesn't well
- 07:57
it's not worth the risk here of 65 times earnings if the company ever missed a
- 08:01
quarter that is they produced growth numbers below published or [Man discussing whisper numbers]
- 08:04
whispered street expectations well the stock would fall out of love and plummet
- 08:09
that is people who owned it with high growth expectations would sell and sell
- 08:13
and sell and continue to sell the stock until value buyers stepped in to buy it
- 08:18
and put a floor on the stock but wow that's a long way down from here in this
- 08:22
market you know that a normal multiple is like yeah 20x for a software company
- 08:26
something like that maybe 25 but for a value buyer to step in the stock could [Man assessing value]
- 08:30
have to fall like 15 or so a share maybe less crushing and that's down $50 from
- 08:36
here ugh and you picture the HR lady at your mutual fund company calling you [Man thinking of HR lady]
- 08:40
down to her office telling you to bring your jacket and your little desk plant
- 08:44
with you tons of risk on the downside you pull your hair
- 08:48
prepping for a bigger Caesar salad that's already starting to go on up [Mans hair transforms into caesar salad]
- 08:52
there and you do some research and after poking around and using Google properly
- 08:56
you discover that the company is reserving massive storage space
- 09:00
everywhere hmm well yeah video takes up a lot of space it wouldn't do that if
- 09:06
the advance indications of demand weren't good then you meet with the CEO and [Man sits down with the CEO]
- 09:11
in the meeting you notice tons of pictures of animals all over her desk
- 09:15
and walls and around her neck she's kind of weird she stands to shake your hand [CEO stands up and shakes mans hand]
- 09:20
but tada you see that she is pregnant you want to talk about her stock she
- 09:26
wants to talk about being a parent and you have seven kids who were adopted
- 09:30
when she learns of your massive fatherhood well suddenly you feel her
- 09:34
liking on you a lot she's relentless and asking you all about your daily life the
- 09:40
events you share how it is to be a father of seven kids you know that
- 09:43
normally these interviews go the other way around with you interrogating the
- 09:47
CEO but this time she's interrogating you about babies odd and then a light
- 09:53
shines through the window on your Caesar salad you feel the warmth and you [Light shines on mans head]
- 09:56
realize because you're smart and they hired you and they pay you a lot of
- 10:00
money to work at this mutual fund company that she's about to launch a
- 10:03
video product for parents to share videos of their children with their pets [Woman with child on a swing]
- 10:09
a whole new market financially probably 40 times the size of the pet market you
- 10:15
reckon and since this company already has a loving cute brand while who
- 10:18
doesn't love baby zebras and platypuses or platypi is it more whatever you're
- 10:23
willing to bet that it will be trusted and embraced by a million parents in not [Images of parents with their kids]
- 10:28
too long so yeah babies wow that's a big idea the revenues from that would dwarf
- 10:33
her pet revenues you take a deep breath knowing that the laws of regulation FD
- 10:38
financial disclosure she cannot disclose anything to you that isn't already
- 10:43
publicly broadly known and she didn't tell you she's doing a site about babies
- 10:48
you're just making a big guess here and you could be wrong so you could ask flat
- 10:53
out if she's launching that product on the baby's thing and watch her face lie [Man discussing baby video launch to CEO]
- 10:57
or you could just let it go and buy the stock well the financial estimate
- 11:01
projection math is easy ish if they got to a
- 11:04
million users paying a grand a year with maybe half from the US and half from
- 11:09
everywhere else because many other countries around the world do have
- 11:12
babies that would be a billion dollars a year in revenues a million times a
- 11:16
thousand one BFG a big fat gig even if expenses ballooned massively the company [Expenses balloon inflates]
- 11:22
would still show something like 800 million dollars in pre-tax profits
- 11:27
it would have generated a ton of cash for itself in the interim and the cash
- 11:31
matters example in 2009 Apple is trading for about 50 bucks a share and had 40
- 11:35
bucks a share in cash and no debt meaning the street valued the equity of
- 11:39
Apple for just $10 a share you could have bought some how do you feel and
- 11:43
after tax in this setting DWOTE would have something like 650 million dollars
- 11:48
in profits on 65 million shares outstanding in that'd be earnings of
- 11:52
like $100 a share now multiply that by 50 bucks and you get a company worth
- 11:57
some five billion dollars in change and there's probably upside even from there [Apple and DWOTE growth numbers appear]
- 12:02
so if you actually believed those growth numbers you'd be paying less than one
- 12:06
times earnings if you bought the stock today even at the high multiple of
- 12:10
trailing earnings $65 and albeit earnings of the stock a few years from
- 12:14
now could be a whole lot different well you run not walk to the lobby and you [Man running towards lobby]
- 12:19
call in a big fat buy order to your traitor at your mutual fund company and
- 12:23
then you pray a lot [Man praying in church]
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