FAQ

What is the Free Cash Flow formula?

The Free Cash Flow (FCF) formula comes in several equivalent forms, depending on whether you start from EBITDA or Operating Profit (EBIT).
Here are the main formulas identified:

1. From EBITDA (Most Common Approach)

This formula highlights the tax savings generated by depreciation:

FCF = EBITDA (1 – T) + T Depreciation and Amortization – Delta WCR – Capital Expenditure (Capex)

  • EBITDA: Cash operating profit.
  • T: Income tax rate.
  • T × D&A: Represents the tax shield generated by the  and amortization expenses which don’t generate any cash outlay.
  • Delta WCR: Change in Working Capital Requirement.
  • Investments: Capital expenditures (Capex) to maintain or develop the business.

2. From EBIT (Operating Profit)

This formulation amounts to the same mathematical result:

FCF = EBIT (1 – T) + Depreciation and amortization – Delta WCR – Capital expenditure

EBIT (1 – T) is also known as NOPAT (Net Operating Profit After Tax)
Here, the operating profit net of tax (NOPAT) is calculated, to which all the depreciation is reintegrated (because it is a calculated undisbursed expense) before subtracting the investments in WCR and fixed assets.

3. Committed Capital Approach (Synthetic Vision)

There is also a simplified version showing that the FCF is what remains of the result after financing the growth of the economic asset:

FCF = EBIT (1 – T) – Delta CE

  • Delta CE (Change in Capital Employed) corresponds to the sum of the change in working capital and the increase in net fixed assets (Investments – Depreciation).

Important points for the calculation:

  • Exclusion of financial expenses: The FCF is calculated before financial expenses because the remuneration of creditors is taken into account via the discount rate (CMPC) and not in the flows.
  • The “With/Without” principle: In the context of a specific investment project, the flows must be “delta” flows, measuring the difference between the company’s situation with the project and without the project.