Financial Modeling and Valuation: A Practical Guide to Investment Banking and Private Equity

  • 5h 38m
  • Paul Pignataro
  • John Wiley & Sons (US)
  • 2013

Written by the Founder and CEO of the prestigious New York School of Finance, this book schools you in the fundamental tools for accurately assessing the soundness of a stock investment. Built around a full-length case study of Wal-Mart, it shows you how to perform an in-depth analysis of that company's financial standing, walking you through all the steps of developing a sophisticated financial model as done by professional Wall Street analysts. You will construct a full scale financial model and valuation step-by-step as you page through the book.

When we ran this analysis in January of 2012, we estimated the stock was undervalued. Since the first run of the analysis, the stock has increased 35 percent. Re-evaluating Wal-Mart 9months later, we will step through the techniques utilized by Wall Street analysts to build models on and properly value business entities.

  • Step-by-step financial modeling - taught using downloadable Wall Street models, you will construct the model step by step as you page through the book.
    • Hot keys and explicit Excel instructions aid even the novice excel modeler.
    • Model built complete with Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement, Balance Sheet, Balance Sheet Balancing Techniques, Depreciation Schedule (complete with accelerating depreciation and deferring taxes), working capital schedule, debt schedule, handling circular references, and automatic debt pay downs.
    • Illustrative concepts including detailing model flows help aid in conceptual understanding.
    • Concepts are reiterated and honed, perfect for a novice yet detailed enough for a professional.
    • Model built direct from Wal-Mart public filings, searching through notes, performing research, and illustrating techniques to formulate projections.
  • Includes in-depth coverage of valuation techniques commonly used by Wall Street professionals.
    • Illustrative comparable company analyses - built the right way, direct from historical financials, calculating LTM (Last Twelve Month) data, calendarization, and properly smoothing EBITDA and Net Income.
    • Precedent transactions analysis - detailing how to extract proper metrics from relevant proxy statements
    • Discounted cash flow analysis - simplifying and illustrating how a DCF is utilized, how unlevered free cash flow is derived, and the meaning of weighted average cost of capital (WACC)
    • Step-by-step we will come up with a valuation on Wal-Mart
  • Chapter end questions, practice models, additional case studies and common interview questions (found in the companion website) help solidify the techniques honed in the book; ideal for universities or business students looking to break into the investment banking field.

About the Author

PAUL PIGNATARO is the founder and CEO of the New York School of Finance (NYSF). He has over thirteen years of experience in investment banking and private equity in business mergers, acquisitions, restructurings, asset divestitures, asset acquisitions, and debt and equity transactions covering the oil, gas, power and utility, internet and technology, real estate, defense, travel, banking, and service industries. At NYSF, Mr. Pignataro continues to participate on the training team, actively providing training at bulge bracket banks and M&A teams at corporations, and billion dollar funds. Prior to his entrepreneurial endeavors, Mr. Pignataro worked at TH Lee Putnam Ventures, a $1 billion private equity firm affiliated with buyout giant Thomas H. Lee Partners. Prior to TH Lee, Mr. Pignataro worked in the Investment Banking department of Morgan Stanley.

In this Book

  • The Income Statement
  • The Cash Flow Statement
  • Depreciation Schedule
  • Working Capital
  • The Balance Sheet
  • The Debt Schedule, Circular References, and Finalizing the Model
  • What is Value?
  • Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
  • Comparable Company Analysis
  • Precedent Transactions Analysis
  • Conclusion
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