• Valuation/Appraisal

    Public Market Views of EBITDA: Exxon Mobil and Apple

    Some very interesting implications can be noted comparing two different companies using EBITDA.  Z. Christopher Mercer, Founder and CEO of Mercer Capital, looks at how relying on EBITDA as a measure of cash flow can impact the valuation analysis conclusion if other measures are not considered. Read more about the results of this report in the Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting article, Public Market Views of EBITDA: Exxon Mobil and Apple. This article is republished from Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog. It is reprinted with permission. To subscribe to the blog, visit http://mercercapital.com/category/financialreportingblog/.

  • IRS - QuickPress

    Treasury Department Blocks Corporate Inversions

      When it was announced in August that fast food giant Burger King had purchased Tim Horton’s, a Canadian coffee and doughnut chain, for $8.4 billion and was moving its headquarters from the U.S. to Canada, it surprised some, but shocked no one. What it did do was irritate lots of people in Congress. Some called the plan of America’s second-largest fast food chain to move out of the country unpatriotic, but beneath all the bluster, the outrage was all about lost tax revenue. The idea of a national corporation moving its main offices out of the country isn’t new,…

  • QuickPress - Valuation/Appraisal

    Using Warren Buffett’s “Buffett-style” Valuation on US Bancorp

    I built an Excel file with a valuation model using Warren Buffett’s measure of “owner’s earnings.”  In an interesting spin on valuation, analysts at AquaResearch applied what they call “Buffett-style, owner’s earnings” valuation calculations to the US Bancorp (USB) company stock in a DCF style approach.  The author supports his review with a link to an excel file which completely lays out Warren Buffett’s valuation theory, that eschews traditional models relying on GAAP and/or price-to-earnings ratios.  The analysis does require viewers to “register” at the site, but it’s free and absolutely worth a look at how the number shake out.…