Section B - Insurance Company Valuation Flashcards

1
Q

Goldfarb: Dividend Discount Model Formulas

A

V0 = PV(Div) + PV(TV)

TV = Terminal Value = Divfinal(1+g) / (k-g)

PV(TV) = TV / (1+k)n

PV(Div) = ∑E[Divt] / (1+k)t

Divt = NIt • (1-Dividend Ratio)

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2
Q

Goldfarb: What are the disadvantages of the Dividend Discount Rate Model (DDM)?

A

Disadvantages

  • Actual dividend payments are discretionary and difficult to forecast
  • Terminal value is sensitive to assumptions and can represent the majority of the valuation
  • Stock buybacks mean a more liberal definition of “dividend” is needed for the DDM
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3
Q

Goldfarb: Dividend Growth Rates beyond Forecast Horizon

g = ?

A

g = plowback • ROE

  • plowback refers to the portion of earnings retained and reinvested
  • ROE is the income generated on reinvestment
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4
Q

Goldfarb: Dividend Discount Rate Model

Key Assumptions

A

DDM valuation is driven by the following assumptions:

  • Expected dividends during the forecast horizon
  • Dividend growth rates beyond the forecast horizon
  • Appropriate risk-adjusted discount rate
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5
Q

Goldfarb: Rate of Return CAPM Formula

A

k = r<em>f</em> +β•E[Rm]

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6
Q

Goldfarb: Briefly describe how high growth rates affect dividends.

A

High growth rates and high dividends are not sustainable at the same time.

This means that high growth rates will be offset by lower dividend amounts.

(Q EP 1a)

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7
Q

Goldfarb: Briefly explain how high growth rates affect the risk-adjusted rate of return.

A

Firms with high growth rates tend to be riskier which drives the risk-adjusted rate up.

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8
Q

Goldfarb: Briefly describe two ways of determining beta used in CAPM.

A

Firm Beta

  • Calculated with linear regression of the firm’s historical stock returns vs. market returns
  • Disadvantage - often unreliable for individual firms due to statistical issues and changes in the firm’s risk over time

Industry Beta

  • Mean or median beta for industry
  • Disadvantage - doesn’t always reflect the firm to the extent the firm’s risk differs from industry
  • Advantage - more stable and reliable than the historical firm beta
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9
Q

Goldfarb: If an industry beta is used to determine the risk-adjusted discount rates, briefly describe two adjustments that may need to be made to beta.

A

Industry-average Beta is more stable, but should be reviewed and possibly adjusted to reflect:

Mix of Business

  • Only use firms with comparable mixes of business
  • May drop number of firms significantly which can reduce the reliability of the result

Financial Leverage

  • Higher leverage (debt) makes the cash flows to equity riskier and should be reflected with a higher Beta
  • To make Betas more comparable, we could “de-lever” the equity Beta to compare to “all-equity Beta” to the industry
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10
Q

Goldfarb: Risk-free Rate Options for CAPM

A

Should be based on current yields on risk-free securities:

  1. 90 Day T-Bill - free of both credit and reinvestment rate risk
  2. Maturity Matched T-Notes - maturity matches the average maturity of cashflows
  3. T-Bonds - most stable option, makes the most sense for corporate decision-making and can better match the duration of the market portfolio and cashflows
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11
Q

Goldfarb: When determining the risk-free rate based on T-Bonds, what do you need to do before you can use the rate?

A

When estimating the risk-free rate, we should subtract the liquidity premium from the T-Bond yield to put it on par with other risk-free investments.

  • T-Bonds tend to be long term and therefore include a liquidity risk premium.
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12
Q

Goldfarb: Considerations in Selecting an Appropriate Equity Risk Premium

A

Short-Term vs. Long-Term Risk Free Rate as a Benchmark

  • Market risk premium
  • Important to use the same risk-free rate in the CAPM formula

Arithmetic vs. Geometric Averages

  • Arithmetic Average - best for single period forecasts
  • Geometric Average - best for multi-period forecasts/long-term averages

Historical vs. Implied Risk Premiums

  • Historical Average - need to select an appropriate time period
  • Implied - the risk premium is implied by the current market prices
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13
Q

Goldfarb: Briefly describe sensitivity analysis.

A

Sensitivity Analysis

DDM and FCFE models are sensitive to growth and discount rate assumptions.

Sensitivity analysis shows the valuations using a range of discount rate and growth rate beyond the forecast horizon assumptions.

High-growth/low-discount rate and low-growth/high-discount rate combinations are unlikely because these assumptions are not independent.

  • Rapid growth is unlikely without increased risk
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14
Q

Goldfarb: Table to set up for the DDM.

A

Time/Years across the top

  • Income after Tax
  • Dividends Paid
  • Beginning Equity
  • Ending Equity
  • ROE
  • Growth Rate

Look at growth and ROE over time and select a growth rate to calculate the terminal value.

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15
Q

Goldfarb: What is Free Cash Flow?

A

Free Cash Flow

All the cash that could be paid as dividends or other payments to capital providers (adjusted for investments) to support current operation and expected growth.

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16
Q

Goldfarb: Free Cash Flow to Equity Formula

A
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17
Q

Goldfarb: FCFE Method Formulas

A

PV(FCFE) = ∑FCFEt / (1+k)t

TV = FCFEfinal(1+g) / (k-g)

PV(TV) = TV / (1+k)n

V0 = PV(FCFE) + PV(TV)

18
Q

Goldfarb: FCFE Growth Formulas

Reinvested Capital = ?

Reinvestment Rate = ?

Horizon Growth Rate = ?

Forecast Horizon Growth Rate = ?

A

Reinvested Capital = Change in Capital

  • this is also known as the increase in required capital

Reinvestment Rate = Reinvested Capital / Net Income

  • similar to plowback (what we are keeping to reinvest)

Horizon Growth Rate (HGR) = Reinvestment Rateselected • ROEselected

HGR = Reinvested Capital / Beginning Capital = (NI - FCFE) / Beg Capital

  • just another version of the same formula
  • if there is No net borrowing or other impacts, then we can use NI - FCFE

Forecast Horizon Growth Rate = g = FCFEt / FCFEt-1 - 1

19
Q

Goldfarb: What are the issues with the FCFF method for insurance companies?

A

Goldfarb prefers the FCFE method over the FCFF due to several reasons:

→FCFF values equity indirectly as the value of the firm net the market value of debt.

  • Policyholder Liabilities vs. Debt - FCFF treats debt similarly to equity as a source of capital. The distinction between PH liabilities and debt is arbitrary and there’s no good reason to treat them differently. (as per Goldfarb)
  • WACC - FCFF uses the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) to discount free cash flows. This reflects risk to both debt and equity holders, but it’s difficult to define WACC because of PH liabilities.
  • APV - Adjusted present value method uses the all-equity discount rate to derive the value of the firm without considering debt-holders’ claims, tax consequences of debt or the impact of debt on the riskiness of the EQH’s claims
20
Q

Goldfarb: How are Loss & LAE reserves treated in the FCFE method?

A

Increase in Loss & LAE reserves show up in both Non-Cash Charges and Capital Expenditures so they cancel out in the rest of the FCFE formula and are reflected in Net Income.

21
Q

Goldfarb: What are the advantages and disadvantages of the FCFE method?

A

Disadvantages

  • Adjusting projected Net Income to calculate forecasted free cash flows makes the interpretation of FCFE difficult.
    • FCFE may bear little resemblance to internal forecasts
  • May be difficult to assess reasonableness of cash flow/growth rates

Advantages

  • Relatively simple to understand
  • Focused on the firm’s net cash flow generating capacity
22
Q

Goldfarb: What are the assumptions underlying the FCFE method?

A
  • FCFE method assumes that free cash flow not paid immediately as dividends can be invested to earn an appropriate risk-adjusted return
  • Assume an average discount rate for the entire FCFE cash flows
    • P&C insurers will have cash flows from different investible assets (stocks, bonds, etc.) as well as liability cash flows in theory
    • These assets have different discount rates, but for practicality, we use a single discount rate.
23
Q

Goldfarb: In theory, the dividend discount model and the discounted cash flow model should use different discount rates. Why?

A

The DDM and the FCFE models should use different discount rates due to the riskiness of the cashflows paid to the shareholders.

  • DDM assumes that dividends are paid to shareholders and the rest is invested in marketable securities. This is more risky as a larger portion of risk is coming from marketable securities than from underwriting risk.
  • FCFE pays out all cashflows to shareholders and therefore is less risky.
24
Q

Goldfarb: Set up the table used to solve for FCFE.

A

Year as column headers

  • Net Income after tax
  • Beginning Equity
  • Required Capital
  • Increase in Required Capital
  • FCFE
  • ROE
  • Reinvestment Rate
25
Q

Goldfarb: Abnormal Earning Method Formulas

A

AEt = NIt - k•BVt-1 = (ROEt - k)•BVt-1

V0 = BV0 + ∑PV(AE)

  • Note that we use k, which is the discount rate, to derive the normal earnings not ROE
    • the difference between ROE and required ROR falls to zero in a finite period due to competition for abnormal earnings
  • There is no growth assumed for the terminal value - just decline over certain number of periods
    • sometimes the question gives you growth to trick you
26
Q

Goldfarb: Advantages of the Abnormal Earnings Method

A

Advantages

  • Net Income doesn’t need to be adjusted to calculate cash flows
  • Emphasizes the ability of the firm to generate abnormal earnings, the real source of value creation
  • Less importance is placed on the terminal value which can be highly sensitive to assumptions

Note: Accounting rules that distort earnings also distort book value and will “self correct” over time so we can use accounting values.

27
Q

Goldfarb: What adjustments need to be made to the beginning book value for the abnormal earnings method?

A
  • Remove any systematic bias in reported assets and liabilities (e.g. restating reported loss reserves)
  • Remove intangible assets (e.g. goodwill, reputation, etc.) to isolate tangible book value
28
Q

Goldfarb: What do you need to keep in mind regarding Abnormal Earning Horizon?

A
  • Unreasonable to assume that AE will continue in perpetuity
  • Each year, decrease AE by 1/(n+1) times latest year
29
Q

Goldfarb: Set up the table for AE method.

A

Columns are years

  • Net Income after Tax
  • Regulatory Capital
  • Normal Earnings (Regulatory Capital x k)
  • Abonormal Earnings
30
Q

Goldfarb: Why is it difficult for investors outside the company to create reliable forecasts?

A
  • Outsiders might not have sufficiently detailed data to create projections
  • May be difficult to estimate growth and rate adequacy
  • May be difficult to forecast financials for even short forecast horizons
31
Q

Goldfarb: P-E Ratio Formulas

A
32
Q

Goldfarb: P-BV Ratio Formulas

A
33
Q

Goldfarb: What are alternative uses for P-E and P-BV Ratios?

A

Validation of Assumptions

Calculate the P-E or P-BV ratio using the firm valuation and compare it to the ratio implied by the market value of peer companies.

Shortcut to Valuation

Use the average multiple from peer companies to value the firm.
Terminal Value

Multiples can help with estimating the terminal value for one of the other methods.

34
Q

Goldfarb: If we assume that ROE will decline to the cost of capital after n years as competitors enter the market, we can obtain the following P-BV ratio:

P0 / BV0 = ?

A

P0/BV0 = 1 + {(ROE-k) / (k-g) • [1 - ((1+g) / (1+k))n]}

  • this formula assumes constant ROE for n years, followed by a drop in the ROE to the same level as the cost of capital
    • watch for this in questions!
35
Q

Goldfarb: Market vs. Transaction Multiples

A

Market Multiples - P-E and P-BV ratios based on market prices

Transaction Multiples - Multiples based on transaction prices

  • e.g. IPO or M&A prices
36
Q

Goldfarb: Transaction Multiples

Advantages & Disadvantages

A

Advantages

  • Price is based on the negotiation between sophisticated parties (more meaningful than multiples based on current market prices)

Disadvantages

  • Control Premiums - M&A pricing may be misleading because buyer pays a premium to make different strategic decisions
  • Overpricing in M&A Transactions - based on history, acquiring firms tend to overpay to over take a company
  • Underpricing in IPO Transactions
  • Reported Financial Variables - transaction price may be reliable but the reported multiple may be based on other financial forecasts
  • Underlying Economic Assumptions - transaction multiples use past periods so they may not be appropriate any longer (changes to inflation, interest rates, growth rates, etc.)
37
Q

Goldfarb: Considerations when Selecting “Pure Play” Peer Companies for Multiples Valuation

A

Peers should be comparable:

  • Business (products, markets, etc.)
  • ROE
  • Financial Leverage
  • Growth Rates
38
Q

Goldfarb: Why is valuing equity as a call option impracticable for an insurance company?

(Limitations of Option Pricing Methods)

A

The value would be a call option on the company’s assets with a strike price equal to the face value of debt.

Problems:

  • Debt isn’t well defined for an insurance company
    • PH liabilities are indistinguishable from other forms of debt for the equity holders
  • There is no clear single expiration date for an insurer’s debt, considering policyholder liabilities
39
Q

Goldfarb: List the types of Real Options

A

Abandonment Option - option to end a project early and recover the net liquidation proceeds

  • American Put Option on value of project with strike = net liquidation proceeds

Expansion Option - option to expand the scope of a successful project to capture more profits

  • American Call Option on gross value additional capacity with strike = cost of creating capacity

Contraction Option - Option to scale back the scope of a project

  • American Put Option on gross value lost capacity with strike = cost savings

Option to Deter - Option to hold off on project until there is more information

  • American Call Option on value of project

Option to Extend - Option to extend the life of a project by paying a fixed price

  • European Call Option on asset’s future value
40
Q

Goldfarb: What are the practical difficulties with real option valuation?

A
  • Difficult to identify new businesses where real option value exists
  • Difficult to assess the current value of these new businesses
  • Difficult to determine whether the firm has the ability to enter the business at a fixed price or at a price that differs from the market value

Note: The value of the real option would be added to the firm valuation.

41
Q

Goldfarb: Real Option Valuation Formulas

A