In 2000, Enron enjoyed remarkable success in the capital markets. During that year, Enrons shares increased in
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At year-end 2000, Enron posted earnings per share of $1.19. Among sell-side analysts following Enron, the consensus forecast for earnings per share was $1.31 per share for 2001 and $1.44 per share for 2002, with 10 percent earnings growth expected from 2003–2005.
At the time, Enron was paying dividends equivalent to roughly 40 percent of earnings and was expected to maintain that payout policy.
At year-end 2000, Enron had a market beta of 1.7. The risk-free rate of return was 4.3 percent, and the market risk premium was 5.0 percent.
Required
a. Use the CAPM to compute the required rate of return on common equity capital for Enron.
b. Use year-end 2000 data to compute the following ratios for Enron:
i. Market-to-book
ii. Price-earnings (using 2000 earnings per share)
iii. Forward price-earnings (using consensus forecast earnings per share for 2001).
c. Reverse-engineer Enron’s $83 share price to solve for the implied expected return on Enron shares at year-end 2000. Do the reverse engineering under the following assumptions:
i. Enron’s market price equals value.
ii. The consensus analysts’ earnings-per-share forecasts through 2005 are reliable proxies for market expectations.
iii. Enron will maintain a 40 percent dividend payout rate.
iv. Beyond 2005, Enron’s long-run earnings growth rate will be 3.0 percent.
d. What do these analyses suggest about investing in Enron’s shares at a price of $83?
Dividend
A dividend is a distribution of a portion of company’s earnings, decided and managed by the company’s board of directors, and paid to the shareholders. Dividends are given on the shares. It is a token reward paid to the shareholders for their... Expected Return
The expected return is the profit or loss an investor anticipates on an investment that has known or anticipated rates of return (RoR). It is calculated by multiplying potential outcomes by the chances of them occurring and then totaling these...
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Related Book For
Financial Reporting Financial Statement Analysis And Valuation A Strategic Perspective
ISBN: 140
7th Edition
Authors: James M Wahlen, Stephen P Baginskl, Mark T Bradshaw
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