London
School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
Modules
1
143 Valuation and securities analysis
Prerequisite
If taken as part of a BSc degree, 25
Principles of accounting and 24 Principles ofbanking and finance
Aims and objectives
This unit is aimed at students interested
in equity research, corporate finance, and fund management. It is
designed to provide the tools, drawn from accounting,finance, economics,
and strategy, required to:
? Analyse the performance of securities;
? Value securities;
? Assess returns on active investment strategies.
Furthermore, it provides empirical evidence on returns to fundamental
and technical analysis.
Learning outcomes
On completion of this unit, students
should:
- ?Be able to analyse the performance
of securities and understand the equity research published by
financial analysts;?
- Have gained the knowledge in
valuation technologies required in corporate finance;
- Be able to read and critically
assess valuation reports;
- Have gained insights in fund
management;
Appreciate the difficulties associated with assessing abnormal returns
to fundamental and technical analysis.
Syllabus
This unit covers three broad topics:
financial analysis, securities valuation, and returns to fundamental and
technical analysis.
Introduction
Introduction to the analysis framework
using financial statements: The setting: investors, firms, securities,
and financial markets. The framework for analysis.
Business strategy analysis. Accounting
analysis. Financial analysis. Prospective analysis.
Introduction to stylised financial statements: Stylised profit and loss,
balance sheet, and cash flow statements. Accounting relations governing
the stylised financial statements.
The Framework for Analysis: Industry
analysis. Competitive strategy analysis.
Sources of competitive advantage. Achieving and sustaining competitive
advantage.
Financial analysis: performance evaluation:Concept of comprehensive
earnings.
Earnings and stock returns. Bottom line profitability. Cost of equity
capital.
Concept of residual earnings. Business profitability. Economic value
added. Link
between business and bottom line profitability. Accounting rates of
return and
stock rates of return. Determinants of business profitability. Business
profitability
and free cash flows.
Accounting analysis: Overview of the institutional framework governing
financial
reporting. Factors influencing accounting quality. Assessing the quality
of
accounting.
Prospective performance evaluation and valuation: Forecasting: simple
forecasting and full information forecasting. Empirical evidence on the
behaviour
of accounting rates of return, residual earnings, economic value added,
financial
leverage, and determinants of business profitability. Present value of
expected
residual earnings.
Securities valuation
Securities valuation:Introduction to valuation methods based on
dividends, free
cash flows, residual earnings, and economic value added. Inferences on
valuation
accuracy. Comparison of valuation methods: empirical evidence.
Implications for price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios:Determinants
of price-to-
book ratios. Residual earnings growth. Determinants of price-to-earnings
ratios. Empirical evidence. Strategic taxonomy. Implications of
strategic
taxonomy for price-to-book and price-to-earnings ratios. Empirical
evidence on
the joint distribution of price-to-book and price-to-earnings ratios.
Financial Information and Stock Prices: Usefulness of earnings to
investors: the
empirical evidence from capital markets research. Earnings response
coefficients.
The Lev critique. Competing hypotheses to explain the earnings response
conundrum. Relevance of financial versus non-financial information.
Application
to internet stocks.
Applications
Mergers and acquisitions:Motivation for mergers and acquisitions.
Strategic and
financial analysis of mergers and acquisitions. Acquisition pricing.
Accounting
issues. Acquisition financing. Acquisition outcome.
Credit analysis and distress predictions:The market for credit. The
credit analysis
process. Financial analysis for credit evaluation. Prospective analysis
for credit
analysis. Financial analysis and public debt. Predictions of financial
distress and
turnaround.
Empirical evidence on returns to fundamental and technical analysis
Measuring returns to active investment strategies:Introduction to common
performance measures. Concepts of abnormal return. Measures of market
timing
ability
Returns to fundamental analysis:Contrarian strategies. Implications of
current
earnings for future earnings. Do stock prices fully reflect information
in accruals
and cash flows about future earnings? Earnings management and the long
run
performance of IPOs.
Returns to technical analysis:Contrarian
strategies. Momentum strategies.
Reconciliation of empirical evidence.
Essential reading
Palepu, K., V. Bernard and P. Healy. Business Analysis & Valuation.
(South-Western
College Publishing, 2003) third edition [ISBN 978-0324118940].
Penman, S. Financial Statement Analysis & Security Valuation.
(McGraw-Hill,
2007) third edition [ISBN 9780073127132].
Assessment
This unit is assessed by a three hour unseen written examination. |