DCF - Discounted Cash Flow for Beginners

Learn how to do DCF valuations on companies financial statements

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DCF - Discounted Cash Flow for Beginners

What You Will 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

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 valuation

By joining this training you would benefit by::

  • Learning how to do DCF valuations on companies financial statements

  • Learning how to find the per share intrinsic value

  • DCF 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.

Who Should Attend!

  • 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

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Subscribers

2912

Lectures

35

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