The Effect of Economic Cyclicality on Discounted Cash Flow Values
All valuation models in some way take into account the effects of timing and pattern of investment return on value. Most of the models implicitly or explicitly have an infinite or, at least a relatively long future projection horizon. A seemingly innocuous assumption common to most models is that future cash flow growth will follow a consistent growth pattern. This article considers the impact of cyclicality on typical business valuations. The analysis demonstrates that though cyclicality can dramatically impact forecast cash flows over time, attempting to integrate its impacts into a valuation results in higher expected errors.
Contributor Notes
Timothy Jares, PhD, is an Assistant Dean of the Kenneth W. Monfort College of Business at the University of Northern Colorado. He earned a PhD (Finance) and MBA from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a BS in Mathematics and Computer Science from the Universtiy of South Dakota.
C. Donald Wiggins, ASA, DBA, CVA, is President of Business Valuation, Inc. , and Heritage Capital Group. He is also a Professor Emeritus of Accounting and Finance at the University of North Flordia He received his BBA and MBA degrees from Georgia Southern University and a DBA from Louisiana Tech University.