Dcf - Discounted Cash Flow For Beginners

Posted By: ELK1nG

Dcf - Discounted Cash Flow For Beginners
Published 10/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 2.33 GB | Duration: 5h 1m

Learn how to do DCF valuations on companies financial statements

What you'll learn

With the help of practical application and examples you shall understand different valuation methods available to investors

Learn about DCF, where is it used, benefits of using DCF - comparability with other methods, projecting cash flows, determining levered and unlevered beta.

Calculating cost of equity, calculating after tax cost of debt, calculating WACC, calculating a terminal value using Gordon growth.

Discounting the cash flows at WACC, finding the per share intrinsic value, concluding the analysis, creating share price sensitivity tables

Requirements

Basic knowledge of Finance concepts

Description

One of the valuation methods Discounted Cash Flows (DCF) is used to determine the worth of investing. This training is dedicated to learning about this most commonly used DCF valuation techniques wherein you shall understand its techniques right from scratch on a financial model.With the help of practical application and examples you shall understand different valuation methods available to investors. Learn about DCF, where is it used, benefits of using DCF - comparability with other methods, projecting cash flows, determining levered and unlevered beta, calculating cost of equity, calculating after tax cost of debt, calculating WACC, calculating a terminal value using Gordon growth as well as the multiples method, discounting the cash flows at WACC, finding the per share intrinsic value, concluding the analysis, creating share price sensitivity tables and constructing a football field valuationBy joining this training you would benefit by::Learning how to do DCF valuations on companies financial statementsLearning how to find the per share intrinsic valueDCF Valuation techniques.Discounted Cash Flow model is a theoretical method of evaluating a stream of cash flow based on several assumptions related to cash flow projections, growth rate, and required rate estimations based on market conditions and risk involved, therefore as it is forward-looking, most of these inputs are approximations and can result in mistakes in evaluation.

Overview

Section 1: Introduction

Lecture 1 Introduction Discounted Cash Flow

Section 2: Absolute Valuation

Lecture 2 Course Outline

Lecture 3 Valuation Methodologies

Lecture 4 Relative Valuation

Section 3: DCF

Lecture 5 Basic Concepts of DCF

Lecture 6 Understand DCF Method

Lecture 7 More on DCF Method

Lecture 8 Using Concept of Terminal Value

Lecture 9 Common Trade of DCF Value

Lecture 10 Types of DCF

Lecture 11 Important Accounting Equations

Section 4: DCF Advantages

Lecture 12 Advantages of DCF

Lecture 13 DCF Versus Comps

Lecture 14 Steps of DCF

Lecture 15 More on DFC Steps

Lecture 16 DCF Predicting the Cash Flows

Lecture 17 DCF Predicting the Cash Flows Continues

Section 5: Case Study

Lecture 18 Starting with the Case Study

Lecture 19 Predicting the Cash Flows

Lecture 20 Case Study Explained

Lecture 21 Predicting Terminal Values

Lecture 22 Methods to Calculate Terminal Values

Lecture 23 Case study Step 2 Explained

Lecture 24 Case study Step 2 Explained Continues

Lecture 25 Working on DCF Explain

Section 6: Net Debt and Cost of Debt

Lecture 26 Net Debt

Lecture 27 Cost of Debt

Lecture 28 More on Cost of Debt

Lecture 29 Cost of Equity

Section 7: Beta

Lecture 30 Understand Beta

Lecture 31 Beta Continues

Lecture 32 Finalizing the case study

Lecture 33 Creating a Sensitivity Table

Lecture 34 Concluding the Analysis

Lecture 35 Common Interview Questions

Financial Analysts,Students pursuing Degree, Diploma, Engineering and commerce who want to make a career in finance/Fixed Income market.,MBA in Finance, BBA in Finance