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Free cash flow

In financial accounting, free cash flow (FCF) or free cash flow to firm (FCFF) is the amount by which a business's operating cash flow exceeds its working capital needs and expenditures on fixed assets (known as capital expenditures).[1] It is that portion of cash flow that can be extracted from a company and distributed to creditors and securities holders without causing issues in its operations. As such, it is an indicator of a company's financial flexibility and is of interest to holders of the company's equity, debt, preferred stock and convertible securities, as well as potential lenders and investors.

Free cash flow can be calculated in various ways, depending on audience and available data. A common measure is to take the earnings before interest and taxes, add depreciation and amortization, and then subtract taxes, changes in working capital and capital expenditure. Depending on the audience, a number of refinements and adjustments may also be made to try to eliminate distortions.

Free cash flow may be different from net income, as free cash flow takes into account the purchase of capital goods and changes in working capital and excludes non-cash items.

Calculations edit

A common method for calculating free cash flow is shown below:[2]

Element Source
Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) Current income statement
+ Depreciation & Amortization Current income statement
- Taxes Current income statement
- Changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets: Current assets and liability accounts
- Capital expenditure (CAPEX) Prior and current balance sheets: Property, plant and equipment accounts
= Free cash flow

Note that the first three lines above are calculated on the standard statement of cash flows.

When net profit and tax rate applicable are given, you can also calculate it by taking:

Element Source
Net profit Current income statement
+ Interest expense Current income statement
- Net capital expenditure (CAPEX) Current income statement
- Net changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets: Current assets and liability accounts
- Tax shield on interest expense Current income statement
= Free cash flow

where

  • Net capital expenditure (CAPEX) = Capex - Depreciation and amortization
  • Tax shield = Net interest expense × Marginal tax rate

When Profit After Tax and Debt/Equity ratio are available:

Element Source
Profit after tax (PAT) Income statement
- Changes in capital expenditure × (1-d) Balance sheets, cash flow statements
+ Depreciation and amortization × (1-d) Prior & Current Balance Sheets
- Changes in working capital × (1-d) Balance Sheets, Cash Flow Statements
= Free cash flow

where d is the debt/equity ratio, e.g. for a 3:4 mix it will be 3/7.

Element Source
Net income Income statement
+ Depreciation and amortization Income statement
- Changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets
= Cash flows from operations Same as statement of cash flows: Section 1, from operations

Therefore,

Element Data source
Cash flows from operations Statement of cash flows: Section 1, from operations
- Investment in Operating Capital Statement of cash flows: Section 2, from investment
= Levered free cash flow

Difference with net income edit

There are two differences between net income and free cash flow. The first is the accounting for the purchase of capital goods. Net income deducts depreciation, while the free cash flow measure uses last period's net capital purchases.

Measurement type Component Advantage Disadvantage
Free cash flow Prior period net investment spending Spending is in current dollars Capital investments are at the discretion of management, so spending may be sporadic.
Net income Depreciation charge Charges are smoothed, related to cumulative prior purchases Allowing for typical 2% inflation per year, equipment purchased 10 years ago for $100 would now cost about $122. With 10 year straight line depreciation the old machine would have an annual depreciation of $10, but the new, identical machine would have depreciation of $12.2, or 22% more.

The second difference is that the free cash flow measurement makes adjustments for changes in net working capital, where the net income approach does not. Typically, in a growing company with a 30-day collection period for receivables, a 30-day payment period for purchases, and a weekly payroll, it will require more working capital to finance the labor and profit components embedded in the growing receivables balance.

When a company has negative sales growth, it's likely to lower its capital spending. Receivables, provided they are being timely collected, will also ratchet down. All this "deceleration" will show up as additions to free cash flow. However, over the long term, decelerating sales trends will eventually catch up.

The net free cash flow definition should also allow for cash available to pay off the company's short term debt. It should also take into account any dividends that the company means to pay.

Net free cash flow = Operation cash flow – Capital expenses to keep current level of operation – dividends – Current portion of long term debt – Depreciation

Here, capex definition should not include additional investment on new equipment. However, maintenance cost can be added.

Dividends will be the base dividend that the company intends to distribute to its share holders.

Current portion of long term debt will be the minimum debt that the company needs to pay in order to not default.

Depreciation should be taken out since this will account for future investment for replacing the current property, plant and equipment (PPE).

If the net income category includes the income from discontinued operation and extraordinary income make sure it is not part of free cash flow.

Net of all the above give free cash available to be reinvested in operations without having to take more debt.

Alternative formula edit

FCF measures:

In symbols:

 

where

Investment is simply the net increase (decrease) in the firm's capital, from the end of one period to the end of the next period:

 

where Kt represents the firm's invested capital at the end of period t. Increases in non-cash current assets may, or may not be deducted, depending on whether they are considered to be maintaining the status quo, or to be investments for growth.

Unlevered free cash flow (i.e., cash flows before interest payments) is defined as EBITDA - CAPEX - changes in net working capital - taxes. This is the generally accepted definition. If there are mandatory repayments of debt, then some analysts utilize levered free cash flow, which is the same formula above, but less interest and mandatory principal repayments. The unlevered cash flow (UFCF) is usually used as the industry norm, because it allows for easier comparison of different companies’ cash flows. It is also preferred over the levered cash flow when conducting analyses to test the impact of different capital structures on the company.[3]

Investment bankers compute free cash flow using the following formulae:

FCFF = After tax operating income + Noncash charges (such as D&A) - CAPEX - Working capital expenditures = Free cash flow to firm (FCFF)

FCFE = Net income + Noncash charges (such as D&A) - CAPEX - Change in non-cash working capital + Net borrowing = Free cash flow to equity (FCFE)

Or simply:

FCFE = FCFF + Net borrowing - Interest*(1-t)

Uses edit

  • Free cash flow measures the cash that a company will pay as interest and principal repayment to bondholders plus the cash that it could pay in dividends to shareholders if it wanted to. Even profitable businesses may have negative free cash flows. For example, a rapidly growing manufacturer with a positive cash conversion cycle will need to outlay cash to purchase inventory for profitable orders that it takes. The business can show a positive net income but have very negative cash flows as the cash gets stuck in the working capital cycle, namely inventory and accounts receivable.
  • According to one version of the discounted cash flow valuation model, the intrinsic value of a company is the present value of all future expected free cash flows. In this case, the present value is computed by discounting the free cash flows at the company's weighted average cost of capital (WACC).
  • Some investors prefer using free cash flow instead of net income to measure a company's financial performance and calculate the intrinsic value of the company, because free cash flow is more difficult to manipulate than net income. The problems with this approach are discussed in the cash flow and return of capital articles.[4]
  • The payout ratio is a metric used to evaluate the sustainability of distributions from REITs, Oil and Gas Royalty Trusts, and Income Trust. The distributions are divided by the free cash flow. Distributions may include any income, flowed-through capital gains or return of capital.

Problems with capital expenditures edit

  • The expenditures for maintenances of assets is only part of the capex reported on the Statement of Cash Flows. It must be separated from the expenditures for growth purposes. This split is not a requirement under GAAP, and is not audited. Management is free to disclose maintenance capex or not. Therefore, this input to the calculation of free cash flow may be subject to manipulation, or require estimation. Since it may be a large number, maintenance capex's uncertainty is the basis for some people's dismissal of 'free cash flow'.
  • A second problem with the maintenance capex measurement is its intrinsic 'lumpiness'. By their nature, expenditures for capital assets that will last decades may be infrequent, but costly when they occur. 'Free cash flow', in turn, will be very different from year to year. No particular year will be a 'norm' that can be expected to be repeated. For companies that have stable capital expenditures, free cash flow will (over the long term) be roughly equal to earnings

Agency costs edit

In a 1986 paper in the American Economic Review, Michael Jensen noted that free cash flows allowed firms' managers to finance projects earning low returns which, therefore, might not be funded by the equity or bond markets. Examining the US oil industry, which had earned substantial free cash flows in the 1970s and the early 1980s, he wrote that:

[the] 1984 cash flows of the ten largest oil companies were $48.5 billion, 28 percent of the total cash flows Going to Dominic Anthony Ferrante out of Rancho Cordova of the top 200 firms in Dun's Business Month survey. Consistent with the agency costs of free cash flow, management did not pay out the excess resources to shareholders. Instead, the industry continued to spend heavily on [exploration and development] activity even though average returns were below the cost of capital.

Jensen also noted a negative correlation between exploration announcements and the market valuation of these firms—the opposite effect to research announcements in other industries.[5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ross, Stephen A; Westerfield, Randolph W.; Bradford, Jordan D (2022). Fundamentals of Corporate Finance (13th ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill Irwin. ISBN 978-1260772395.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[page needed]
  2. ^ Westerfield, Ross and Jordan op cit. pp. 31–33.
  3. ^ "Discounted Cash Flow Analysis | Street Of Walls". www.streetofwalls.com. Retrieved 2016-12-13.
  4. ^ Nikbakht, E. and Groppelli, A. (2012). Finance (6th ed.). Hauppagge, NY: Barron's. pp. 137, 285–286. ISBN 978-0-7641-4759-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Jensen, Michael C. (1986). "Agency costs of free cash flow, corporate finance and takeovers". American Economic Review. 76 (2): 323–329. doi:10.2139/ssrn.99580. S2CID 56152627.

External links edit

  • Free Cash Flow: Free, But Not Always Easy, Investopedia
  • What is Free Cash Flow?, Morningstar

free, cash, flow, financial, accounting, free, cash, flow, free, cash, flow, firm, fcff, amount, which, business, operating, cash, flow, exceeds, working, capital, needs, expenditures, fixed, assets, known, capital, expenditures, that, portion, cash, flow, tha. In financial accounting free cash flow FCF or free cash flow to firm FCFF is the amount by which a business s operating cash flow exceeds its working capital needs and expenditures on fixed assets known as capital expenditures 1 It is that portion of cash flow that can be extracted from a company and distributed to creditors and securities holders without causing issues in its operations As such it is an indicator of a company s financial flexibility and is of interest to holders of the company s equity debt preferred stock and convertible securities as well as potential lenders and investors Free cash flow can be calculated in various ways depending on audience and available data A common measure is to take the earnings before interest and taxes add depreciation and amortization and then subtract taxes changes in working capital and capital expenditure Depending on the audience a number of refinements and adjustments may also be made to try to eliminate distortions Free cash flow may be different from net income as free cash flow takes into account the purchase of capital goods and changes in working capital and excludes non cash items Contents 1 Calculations 2 Difference with net income 3 Alternative formula 4 Uses 5 Problems with capital expenditures 6 Agency costs 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksCalculations editA common method for calculating free cash flow is shown below 2 Element SourceEarnings before interest and taxes EBIT Current income statement Depreciation amp Amortization Current income statement Taxes Current income statement Changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets Current assets and liability accounts Capital expenditure CAPEX Prior and current balance sheets Property plant and equipment accounts Free cash flowNote that the first three lines above are calculated on the standard statement of cash flows When net profit and tax rate applicable are given you can also calculate it by taking Element SourceNet profit Current income statement Interest expense Current income statement Net capital expenditure CAPEX Current income statement Net changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets Current assets and liability accounts Tax shield on interest expense Current income statement Free cash flowwhere Net capital expenditure CAPEX Capex Depreciation and amortization Tax shield Net interest expense Marginal tax rateWhen Profit After Tax and Debt Equity ratio are available Element SourceProfit after tax PAT Income statement Changes in capital expenditure 1 d Balance sheets cash flow statements Depreciation and amortization 1 d Prior amp Current Balance Sheets Changes in working capital 1 d Balance Sheets Cash Flow Statements Free cash flowwhere d is the debt equity ratio e g for a 3 4 mix it will be 3 7 Element SourceNet income Income statement Depreciation and amortization Income statement Changes in working capital Prior and current balance sheets Cash flows from operations Same as statement of cash flows Section 1 from operationsTherefore Element Data sourceCash flows from operations Statement of cash flows Section 1 from operations Investment in Operating Capital Statement of cash flows Section 2 from investment Levered free cash flowDifference with net income editThere are two differences between net income and free cash flow The first is the accounting for the purchase of capital goods Net income deducts depreciation while the free cash flow measure uses last period s net capital purchases Measurement type Component Advantage DisadvantageFree cash flow Prior period net investment spending Spending is in current dollars Capital investments are at the discretion of management so spending may be sporadic Net income Depreciation charge Charges are smoothed related to cumulative prior purchases Allowing for typical 2 inflation per year equipment purchased 10 years ago for 100 would now cost about 122 With 10 year straight line depreciation the old machine would have an annual depreciation of 10 but the new identical machine would have depreciation of 12 2 or 22 more The second difference is that the free cash flow measurement makes adjustments for changes in net working capital where the net income approach does not Typically in a growing company with a 30 day collection period for receivables a 30 day payment period for purchases and a weekly payroll it will require more working capital to finance the labor and profit components embedded in the growing receivables balance When a company has negative sales growth it s likely to lower its capital spending Receivables provided they are being timely collected will also ratchet down All this deceleration will show up as additions to free cash flow However over the long term decelerating sales trends will eventually catch up The net free cash flow definition should also allow for cash available to pay off the company s short term debt It should also take into account any dividends that the company means to pay Net free cash flow Operation cash flow Capital expenses to keep current level of operation dividends Current portion of long term debt DepreciationHere capex definition should not include additional investment on new equipment However maintenance cost can be added Dividends will be the base dividend that the company intends to distribute to its share holders Current portion of long term debt will be the minimum debt that the company needs to pay in order to not default Depreciation should be taken out since this will account for future investment for replacing the current property plant and equipment PPE If the net income category includes the income from discontinued operation and extraordinary income make sure it is not part of free cash flow Net of all the above give free cash available to be reinvested in operations without having to take more debt Alternative formula editFCF measures Operating cash flow OCF Less expenditures necessary to maintain assets capital expenditures or capex but this does not include increase in working capital Less interest charges In symbols F C F t O C B t I t displaystyle FCF t OCB t I t nbsp where OCBt is the firm s net operating profit after taxes NOPAT during period t It is the firm s investment during period t including variation of working capitalInvestment is simply the net increase decrease in the firm s capital from the end of one period to the end of the next period I t K t K t 1 displaystyle I t K t K t 1 nbsp where Kt represents the firm s invested capital at the end of period t Increases in non cash current assets may or may not be deducted depending on whether they are considered to be maintaining the status quo or to be investments for growth Unlevered free cash flow i e cash flows before interest payments is defined as EBITDA CAPEX changes in net working capital taxes This is the generally accepted definition If there are mandatory repayments of debt then some analysts utilize levered free cash flow which is the same formula above but less interest and mandatory principal repayments The unlevered cash flow UFCF is usually used as the industry norm because it allows for easier comparison of different companies cash flows It is also preferred over the levered cash flow when conducting analyses to test the impact of different capital structures on the company 3 Investment bankers compute free cash flow using the following formulae FCFF After tax operating income Noncash charges such as D amp A CAPEX Working capital expenditures Free cash flow to firm FCFF FCFE Net income Noncash charges such as D amp A CAPEX Change in non cash working capital Net borrowing Free cash flow to equity FCFE Or simply FCFE FCFF Net borrowing Interest 1 t Uses editFree cash flow measures the cash that a company will pay as interest and principal repayment to bondholders plus the cash that it could pay in dividends to shareholders if it wanted to Even profitable businesses may have negative free cash flows For example a rapidly growing manufacturer with a positive cash conversion cycle will need to outlay cash to purchase inventory for profitable orders that it takes The business can show a positive net income but have very negative cash flows as the cash gets stuck in the working capital cycle namely inventory and accounts receivable According to one version of the discounted cash flow valuation model the intrinsic value of a company is the present value of all future expected free cash flows In this case the present value is computed by discounting the free cash flows at the company s weighted average cost of capital WACC Some investors prefer using free cash flow instead of net income to measure a company s financial performance and calculate the intrinsic value of the company because free cash flow is more difficult to manipulate than net income The problems with this approach are discussed in the cash flow and return of capital articles 4 The payout ratio is a metric used to evaluate the sustainability of distributions from REITs Oil and Gas Royalty Trusts and Income Trust The distributions are divided by the free cash flow Distributions may include any income flowed through capital gains or return of capital Problems with capital expenditures editThe expenditures for maintenances of assets is only part of the capex reported on the Statement of Cash Flows It must be separated from the expenditures for growth purposes This split is not a requirement under GAAP and is not audited Management is free to disclose maintenance capex or not Therefore this input to the calculation of free cash flow may be subject to manipulation or require estimation Since it may be a large number maintenance capex s uncertainty is the basis for some people s dismissal of free cash flow A second problem with the maintenance capex measurement is its intrinsic lumpiness By their nature expenditures for capital assets that will last decades may be infrequent but costly when they occur Free cash flow in turn will be very different from year to year No particular year will be a norm that can be expected to be repeated For companies that have stable capital expenditures free cash flow will over the long term be roughly equal to earningsAgency costs editIn a 1986 paper in the American Economic Review Michael Jensen noted that free cash flows allowed firms managers to finance projects earning low returns which therefore might not be funded by the equity or bond markets Examining the US oil industry which had earned substantial free cash flows in the 1970s and the early 1980s he wrote that the 1984 cash flows of the ten largest oil companies were 48 5 billion 28 percent of the total cash flows Going to Dominic Anthony Ferrante out of Rancho Cordova of the top 200 firms in Dun s Business Month survey Consistent with the agency costs of free cash flow management did not pay out the excess resources to shareholders Instead the industry continued to spend heavily on exploration and development activity even though average returns were below the cost of capital Jensen also noted a negative correlation between exploration announcements and the market valuation of these firms the opposite effect to research announcements in other industries 5 See also editBusiness valuation Cashflow forecast Discounted cash flow Enterprise value Economic value added Owner earnings Weighted average cost of capitalReferences edit Ross Stephen A Westerfield Randolph W Bradford Jordan D 2022 Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 13th ed Boston McGraw Hill Irwin ISBN 978 1260772395 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link page needed Westerfield Ross and Jordan op cit pp 31 33 Discounted Cash Flow Analysis Street Of Walls www streetofwalls com Retrieved 2016 12 13 Nikbakht E and Groppelli A 2012 Finance 6th ed Hauppagge NY Barron s pp 137 285 286 ISBN 978 0 7641 4759 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jensen Michael C 1986 Agency costs of free cash flow corporate finance and takeovers American Economic Review 76 2 323 329 doi 10 2139 ssrn 99580 S2CID 56152627 Brealey Richard A Myers Stewart C Allen Franklin 2005 Principles of Corporate Finance 8th ed Boston McGraw Hill Irwin ISBN 0 07 295723 9 Stewart G Bennett III 1991 The Quest for Value New York HarperBusiness ISBN 0 88730 418 4 External links editFree Cash Flow Free But Not Always Easy Investopedia What is Free Cash Flow Morningstar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Free cash flow amp oldid 1186201632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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