CFA Level 1: Calculating Appropriate Earnings Multiplier

Determining the Earnings Multiplier for Stock Market Series

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Question

Jones Rutherford, a portfolio manager with Churn Brothers Brokerage, has been examining a stock market series and is trying to determine an appropriate earnings multiplier for the series. In this analysis, Jones has amassed the following information:

The next estimated annual dividend per share = $2.30

The estimated earnings per share next year = $4.85

The anticipated growth rate of dividends is 10% per year

The anticipated growth rate of earnings is 9% per year

The required rate of return is 14% per year

Given this information, what is the appropriate earnings multiplier for this stock market series?

Answers

Explanations

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A. B. C. D. E. F.

B

The appropriate earnings multiplier for this stock market series is found as 11.86, therefore none of these answers is correct.

Estimating the earnings multiplier for a stock market series requires the estimation of each of the following components:

The dividend payout ratio.

The required rate of return on common stock in the country/region/industry/sector being analyzed.

The expected growth rate of dividends for the stocks in the country/region/industry/sector being analyzed.

Once values for each of these components have been determined, they are imputed into the following formula:

P/E = [D/E / (k - g)]

Where: P/E = the earnings multiplier, or Price-to-Earnings ratio, D/E = the dividend payout ratio at t1, k = the required rate of return, and g = the anticipated growth rate of dividends.

In this example all of the necessary information has been provided. However, the dividend payout ratio must be calculated based on the anticipated dividend at t1 and the projected EPS figure for t1. The calculation of the dividend payout ratio is as follows:

D/E = [$2.30 / $4.85] = 0.474227

Now that the dividend payout ratio has been determined, the appropriate earnings multiplier is found as follows:

P/E = [0.474227/ (0.14 - 0.10)] = 11.86

Notice that it is the anticipated growth rate of dividends, not the anticipated growth rate of earnings, which is used in the determination of the earnings multiplier.