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In fact, the business life cycle has become an integral part of the corporatefinance, valuation and investing classes that I teach, and in many of the posts that I have written on this blog. In 2022, I decided that I had hit critical mass, in terms of corporate life cycle content, and that the material could be organized as a book.
However, there are a few industry-specific or specialized multiples as well: EnterpriseValue / Rate Base (TEV / RB): The Rate Base represents all investors in the company and determines its allowable revenue and earnings, so it’s perfectly valid to turn it into a valuation multiple.
Check rules of thumb : Investing and corporatefinance are full of rules of thumb, many of long standing. For example, I have seen it asserted that a stock that trades at less than bookvalue is cheap or that a stock that trades at more than twenty times EBITDA is expensive.
Challenge rules of thumb and conventional wisdom : Investing has always had rules of thumb on how and when to invest, ranging from using historical PE or CAPE ratios to decide if markets are over valued, to simplistic rules (eg. buy stocks that trade at less than bookvalue or trade at PEG ratios less than one) for individual stocks.
Cash generating capacity : Debt payments are serviced with operating cash flows, and the more operating cash flows that firms generate, as a percent of their market value, the more that they can afford to borrow.
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