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Stephen Penman - Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation 4th edition solution manual-McGraw-Hill_Irwin (2009) $17.49   Add to cart

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Stephen Penman - Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation 4th edition solution manual-McGraw-Hill_Irwin (2009)

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Stephen Penman - Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation 4th edition solution manual-McGraw-Hill_Irwin (2009)

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SOLUTIONS TO
EXERCISE AND CASES

For

FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS AND SECURITY VALUATION




Stephen H. Penman

, CHAPTER ONE

Introduction to Investing and Valuation


Exercises

Drill Exercises

E1.1. Calculating Enterprise Value

Enterprise Value = $1,800 million

E1.2. Calculating Value Per Share

Equity Value = $1,800

E1.3 Buy or Sell?

Value = $850 + $675

= $1,525 million

Value per share = $1,525/25 = $61

Market price = $45

Therefore, BUY!




Applications

E1.4. Finding Information on the Internet: Dell Computer and General Motors

This is an exercise in discovery. The links on the book’s web site will help with the

search. Here is the link to yahoo finance:

http://finance.yahoo.com

E1.5. Enterprise Market Value: General Mills and Hewlett-Packard

(a) General Mills

, Market value of the equity =
Book value of total (short-term and long-term) debt =
Enterprise value



Note three points:

(i) Total market value of equity = Price per share × Shares outstanding.

(ii) The book value of debt is typically assumed to equal its market value, but

financial statement footnotes give market value of debt to confirm this.

(iii) The book value of equity is not a good indicator of its market value. The price-to-

book ratio for the equity can be calculated from the numbers given:

$20,925/$6,215.8 = 3.37.



(b) This question provokes the issue of whether debt held as assets is part of enterprise value

(a part of operations) or effectively a reduction of the net debt claim on the firm. The issue arises

in the financial statement analysis in Part II of the book: are debt assets part of operations or part

of financing activities? Debt is part of financing activities if it is held to absorb excess cash

rather than used as a business asset. The excess cash could be applied to buying back the firm’s

debt rather than buying the debt of others, so the net debt claim on enterprise value is what is

important. Put another way, HP is not in the business of trading debt, so the debt asset is not part

of enterprise operations. The calculation of enterprise value is as follows:

Market value of equity = $47 × 2,473 million shares = $116,231 million

Book value of net debt claims:
Short-term borrowing $ 711 million
Long-term debt 7,688

, Total debt $8,399 million
Debt assets 11,513 (3,114)
Enterprise value 113,117 million




E1.6. Identifying Operating, Investing, and Financing Transactions

(a) Financing

(b) Operations

(c) Operations; but advertising might be seen as investment in a brand-name asset

(d) Financing

(e) Financing

(f) Operations

(g) Investing. R& D is an expense in the income statement, so the student might be

inclined to classify it as an operating activity; but it is an investment.

(h) Operations. But an observant student might point out that interest – that is a part

of financing activities – affects taxes. Chapter 9 shows how taxes are allocated

between operating and financing activities in this case.

(i) Investing

(j) Operations

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