... or how I know this ends
in tears
A week
later and everyone is a bit more nervous, with the speculation that US
sovereign debt purchases by the Federal Reserve will wind down and with the
Bank of Japan completely cornered.
In
anticipation to the debate on the Fed’s bond purchase tapering, on April 28th
(see here) I wrote why the Federal Reserve cannot
exit Quantitative Easing: Any tightening must be preceded by a change in policy
that addresses fiscal deficits. It has absolutely nothing to do with
unemployment or activity levels. Furthermore, it will require international
coordination. This is also not possible. The Bank of Japan is helplessly facing
the collapse of the country’s sovereign debt, the European Monetary Union is
anything but what its name indicates, with one of its members under capital
controls, and China is improvising as its credit bubble bursts.
In
light of this, we are now beginning to see research that incorporates the
problem of future higher inflation to the valuation of different asset classes.
One example of this, in the corporate credit space was Morgan Stanley’s “Credit
Continuum: Debt Cost and the Real Deal” published on May
17th, 2013. Upon reading it, I was uncomfortable with the notion
that inflation is the simple reflection of the change in a price index, which
implies the thesis of the neutrality of money. For instance, the said research
note discusses how standard financial metrics compare vis-à-vis a rate of
inflation.
Why is
this relevant? The gap between current valuations in the capital markets (both
debt and credit) and the weak activity data releases could mistakenly be
interpreted as a reflection of the collective expectation of an imminent
recovery. The question therefore is: Can inflation bring a recovery? Can
inflation positively affect valuations?
I am
not going to comment on others’ views or recommendations, but on the underlying
method. A price index is a mental tool that has no relation to reality. In the
real world, we trade driven by relative prices. To infer economic behaviour off
changes in a price index is a mistake. The impact of inflation is more complex.
For this reason and in anticipation of future debates on this topic, I offer
you today a microeconomic analysis of such impact, on value.
Framework
I
suggest that a good way (but certainly not the only one) to assess the impact
of inflation on the valuation of a firm is to think of the same within the
typical free-cash flow approach. After all, what matters is not how inflation
can affect a certain component of its capital structure, but how the entire
value of a firm is impacted, before the same can be shared among the different
contributors to the said capital structure (i.e. equity, debt holders, etc.)
Simplifying,
as far as I can recall from the times when I worked in the area of Private
Equity, the way to calculate the free cash flow of a firm for a
determined period is to obtain its operating margin, add to it depreciation
& amortization costs and subtract capital expenditures, changes in net
working capital and taxes. I show the formula below:

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