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Yes, I had a go at using the Free Cash Flow for companies where they had negative NPATs, but I felt that you really need to use it for all years so that you don't end up comparing apples and oranges, so to speak.
So, yes, the FCFF may be 'better' in some regards, but I'm really interested in working out how best to handle this particular issue (NPAT losses) in Roger's Model; he obviously does handle them but is loath to say how
How do you know he uses that model when a company is making a loss?
How do you know he uses that model when a company is making a loss?
Yes, Just remember cashflows are real. NPAT is not always real, hence why some companies end up with negative npat.
For example if you were tracking Westfields NPAT over 20 years it would be a real story of boom and bust, with big valuations increases followed by valuation decreases.
However if instead you tracked the free cash flow produced, it would be a much truer picture of earnings growth and at the end of the day it is the free cashflow that is paid in dividends and reinvested so I would say that is more important.
I'm not entirely convinced that the cashflows are any more real than the NPATThey are still subject to all sorts of accounting chicanery. Yes, it is that free cashflow that pays the dividends, but did it come from productive activity or financial activity? eg borrowing money, demergers which then 'pay' money back to the mother company (eg Westfield's various antics in this arena )
Look, Roger's book is pretty good, but in the end he is in it to make money. The evidence of that is the fact that he is now trying to monetise his black box system (A1-C5). He has used a simple formula to allow people with not much time on their hands to "value" companies. The real value is in knowing how to grade a company, but he doesn't share that information. I don't believe he uses one single formula in isolation to make investment decisions. I think he probably uses a variety of valuation techniques, depending on the situation. He does also stress that a company making zero is worth zero. I'm not trying to be critical of him, but his formula is not a silver bullet that will work in every scenario. Your spreadsheet is locked btw.
I agree, Nothing Roger do is special it been around for a decades
he is just really good at re-selling old ideas...
look at the explosion of how to be frugal sites and pay down debt
pop up in the US since the GFC, again these ideas been around
since man kind walk the earth
There is no magic formular or any sort of formular that make you
money, you have to have a reasonable understanding of the business
its balance sheet and factors in some risk associated with investing
in the stock market and away you go...
I dont think there is anything wrong taking on some good advices
people like Roger, Warren, Charlie do give out good advices, just dont
get too hang up on a specific calculation...
Exactly. So many people get hung up on coming up with a number. The key to value investing is, as you say, analysing and understanding the company and its business. If it really were so simple that you could take 3 variables plug them into a formula and get the intrinsic value of a company everyone would be doing it.
I'm not sure why you couldn't record your praise about your 'value investing' without feeling obliged to make pejorative comments about a different style which fairly obviously you don't understand.It makes a nice counter balance to the mumbo jumbo that seems to sprout out from lots of techincal analysts.
Look, Roger's book is pretty good, but in the end he is in it to make money. The evidence of that is the fact that he is now trying to monetise his black box system (A1-C5). He has used a simple formula to allow people with not much time on their hands to "value" companies. The real value is in knowing how to grade a company, but he doesn't share that information. I don't believe he uses one single formula in isolation to make investment decisions. I think he probably uses a variety of valuation techniques, depending on the situation.
He does also stress that a company making zero is worth zero.
I'm not trying to be critical of him, but his formula is not a silver bullet that will work in every scenario. Your spreadsheet is locked btw.
If you glance at the cashflow statement it's pretty easy to tell where the money funding dividends came from.
I'd agree with most of thatMy question is though; using his published method (but with non published figures for the multipliers) how do you deal with POR to get a somewhat realistic figure?
New Stratos said:Where has he said that? If so then that's pretty dumb, which Roger doesn't strike me as being. If Westfield, for example, closed all it's Shopping Centres tomorrow ie no rental income, it would still have value.
New Stratos said:Sure, but my point was about trying to replace one single figure with another, when either can be dodgy.
Look, Roger's book is pretty good, but in the end he is in it to make money. The evidence of that is the fact that he is now trying to monetise his black box system (A1-C5).
I'm not sure why you couldn't record your praise about your 'value investing' without feeling obliged to make pejorative comments about a different style which fairly obviously you don't understand.
Craft or anyone that can help,
Could suggest any other books/things that are worth reading?
I've read most of the prominent value investing books (Intelligent Investor, Common Stocks & Uncommon Profits, Margin of Safety, Roger's book, Berkshire Letters and Competitive advantages books)
I'd be specifically interested in anything relating to earnings risk and default risk?
. I think his method is better suited to the Bruce Greenwald approach of rarely paying for growth and thus valuing the company as though it's current earnings are what it will earn in perpetuity.
I agree with you, although I also think everyone does make mistakes. From what I have seen, when it comes to assessing the earnings potential of a company his method comes back to sort of airy-fairy concepts "pick wonderful companies" etc and a few Mae West quotes. It's very easy to write that, it is, afterall, commonsense, who is buying bad companies? But for the novice investor, which his book is aimed at it really gives scant detail on how exactly to identify how safe a company's earning stream is.
There is a heavy reliance on RoE to be able to predict the future earnings potential of companies, I don't disagree that a high RoE can indicate a competitive advantage, but it doesn't always. I think his method is better suited to the Bruce Greenwald approach of rarely paying for growth and thus valuing the company as though it's current earnings are what it will earn in perpetuity.
I think that is a little harsh. There's plenty of advice in the book, and in other commonly available Value Investing books, on what constitutes a good company eg low debt-equity, steadily growing earnings, high ROE, Intrinsic Value increasing (and he gives one way to estimate the IV)
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