The Terminal Value (VT) is a critical element of business valuation using the discounted flow method (DCF). It represents the value of the business beyond the explicit forecast horizon (usually 5 to 10 years), assuming that the business continues indefinitely.
Here are the steps and methods of calculation:
1. The Perpetual Annuity Method (Gordon-Shapiro)
This is the most commonly described method. It consists of capitalizing the last normative cash flow infinitely.
The basic formula: The terminal value at year N (end of the explicit period) is calculated as follows:
Or, starting from the flow of year N:
- FCF (Free Cash Flow): This is the normative free cash flow. Practitioners insist on the need to adjust this flow so that it is representative of a “cruising speed” (adjustment of working capital and investments to normative levels).
- g (Growth rate): This is the perpetual growth rate of flows.
- WACC: The Weighted Average Cost of Capital (discount rate).
Discounting: This TV amount is a value located in the future (in year N). To obtain its value today, it must be discounted:
2. The Economic Profit Method
A more prudent alternative method is proposed to avoid overvaluing the company. Instead of projecting cash flows infinitely, we project economic performance.
- The principle: It is considered that the company’s ability to “beat the market” (generate a return higher than the cost of capital) will erode over time under the pressure of competition.
- Calculation: The terminal value is calculated by adding to the Invested Capital (in year N) the discounted sum of the future Economic Profit.
- The “Fade”: This approach makes it possible to model a decrease in performance (the fade). For example, it can be expected that the Economic Profit (difference between ROCE and WACC) will gradually decrease (e.g. -1% per year) until it stabilizes or becomes zero, reflecting a more realistic view of long-term competition.
3. Points of vigilance
The calculation of the terminal value is extremely sensitive and carries major risks of evaluation error:
- The weight in the total value: The discounted terminal value often represents a very significant part, or even a majority, of the total value of the company. This means that value is mainly based on very distant and uncertain events.
- The choice of growth rate (g): You must not “make the trees rise to the sky”. It is recommended to be careful:
- The g-rate must not exceed the growth rate of the economy (GDP) or inflation in the long run.
- It is even suggested to consider negative growth rates (e.g. -2% or -3%) to reflect the erosion of margins or the end of volume growth.
Consistency of investments: To sustain an infinite growth rate g, the company must continue to invest. The normative flow must therefore include a sufficient level of investment (Capex and WCR) consistent with this growth rate.