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Mar 30, 2015

In a previous article we analyzed Torchmark Corporation's (TMK, Financial) dividend hike of 6.6% in its quarterly dividend to $0.135 per share from the previous $0.1267, generating an annualized dividend of $0.6 cents per share and a dividend yield of nearly 1%.

In this article, let's take a look at Prudential Financial, Inc. (PRU, Financial), a $35.93 billion market cap company that provides insurance, investment management and other financial products and services to individual and institutional customers in the U.S. and internationally.

Dividend policy

Prudential Financial's dividend yield is at 2.8%, which looks attractive and is above its peers. Dividends have been paid since 2002, so now let's take a look at a model that is applicable to stable, mature, dividend-paying firms and try to find the intrinsic value of the stock. Although the model has a number of characteristics that make it useful and appropriate for many applications, it is by no means the be-all and end-all for valuation. The purpose is to force investors to evaluate different assumptions about growth and future prospects.

Valuation

In stock valuation models, dividend discount models (DDM) define cash flow as the dividends to be received by the shareholders. Extending the period indefinitely, the fundamental value of the stock is the present value of an infinite stream of dividends, according to John Burr Williams.

Although this is theoretically correct, it requires forecasting dividends for many periods so we can use some growth models like: Gordon (constant) growth model, the Two or Three stage growth model or the H-Model (which is a special case of a two-stage model). With the appropriate model, we can forecast dividends up to the end of the investment horizon where we no longer have confidence in the forecasts and then forecast a terminal value based on some other method, such as a multiple of book value or earnings.

To start with, the Gordon Growth Model (GGM) assumes that dividends increase at a constant rate indefinitely.

This formula condenses to: V0=(D0 (1+g))/(r-g)=D1/(r-g)

where:

V0 = fundamental value

D0 = last year dividends per share of Exxon's common stock

r = required rate of return on the common stock

g = dividend growth rate

Let´s estimate the inputs for modeling:

Required Rate of Return (r)

The capital asset pricing model (CAPM) estimates the required return on equity using the following formula: required return on stockj = risk-free rate + beta of j x equity risk premium

Assumptions:

Risk-Free Rate: Rate of return on LT Government Debt: RF = 2.67%. This is a very low rate because of today´s context. Since 1900, yields have ranged from a little less than 2% to 15% with an average rate of 4.9%. So I think it is more appropriate to use this rate.

Beta: β =1.89

GGM equity risk premium = (1-year forecasted dividend yield on market index) +(consensus long-term earnings growth rate) – (long-term government bond yield) = 2.13% + 11.97% - 2.67% = 11.43%[1]

rPRU = RF + βPRU [GGM ERP]

= 4.9% + 1.89 [11.43%]

= 26.50%

Dividend growth rate (g)

The sustainable growth rate is the rate at which earnings and dividends can grow indefinitely assuming that the firm´s debt-to-equity ratio is unchanged, and it doesn´t issue new equity.

g = b x ROE

b = retention rate

ROE=(Net Income)/Equity= ((Net Income)/Sales).(Sales/(Total Assets)).((Total Assets)/Equity)

The “PRAT” Model:

g= ((Net Income-Dividends)/(Net Income)).((Net Income)/Sales).(Sales/(Total Assets)).((Total Assets)/Equity)

Let´s collect the information we need to get the dividend growth rate:

Financial Data (USD $ in millions) 12/31/14 12/31/13 12/31/12
Cash dividends declared 1,027,000 847,000 768,000
Net income applicable to common shares 1,381,000 (667,000) 520,000
Net sales 54,105,000 41,461,000 84,847,000
Total assets 766,655,000 731,781,000 709,235,000
Total Shareholders' equity 41,770,000 35,278,000 38,503,000
Ratios   Â
Retention rate 0 2.27 -0.48
Profit margin 0.03 -0.02 0.01
Asset turnover 0.07 0.06 0.12
Financial leverage 19.90 19.84 33.48
   Â
Retention rate = (Net Income – Cash dividends declared) ÷ Net Income = 0.26
   Â
Profit margin = Net Income ÷ Net sales = 0.03 Â Â
   Â
Asset turnover = Net sales ÷ Total assets = 0.07 Â Â
   Â
Financial leverage = Total assets ÷ Total Shareholders' equity = 18.35 Â
   Â
Averages   Â
Retention rate 0.68 Â Â
Profit margin 0.01 Â Â
Asset turnover 0.08 Â Â
Financial leverage 24.41 Â Â
   Â
g = Retention rate × Profit margin × Asset turnover × Financial leverage Â
   Â
Dividend growth rate 0.71% Â Â
   Â

Because for most companies, the GGM is unrealistic, let´s consider the H-Model which assumes a growth rate that starts high and then declines linearly over the high growth stage, until it reverts to the long-run rate. A smoother transition to the mature phase growth rate that is more realistic.

Dividend growth rate (g) implied by Gordon growth model (long-run rate)

With the GGM formula and simple math:

g = (P0.r - D0)/(P0+D0)

= ($80.04 ×26.50% – $2.32) ÷ ($80.04 + $2.32) = 22.94%.

The growth rates are:

Year Value g(t)
1 g(1) 0.71%
2 g(2) 6.27%
3 g(3) 11.83%
4 g(4) 17.38%
5 g(5) 22.94%

G(2), g(3) and g(4) are calculated using linear interpolation between g(1) and g(5).

Calculation of Intrinsic Value

Year Value Cash Flow Present value
0 Div 0 2.32 Â
1 Div 1 2.34 1.85
2 Div 2 2.48 1.55
3 Div 3 2.78 1.37
4 Div 4 3.26 1.27
5 Div 5 4.01 1.24
5 Terminal Value 138.24 42.67
Intrinsic value   49.95
Current share price   80.04

Final comment

We have covered just one valuation metho,d and investors should not rely on one alone in order to determine a fair (over/under) value for a potential investment.

The price is above the intrinsic value, so we can say that the stock is overvalued and, according to the model, subject to a potential sale. Further, considering that the stock is down by only 12.51% year to date so I think it is time to collect the gains and move towards another stock. One possibility in the same sub-industry could be Manulife Financial Corporation (MFC, Financial) which yields 2.8%.

Hedge funds gurus like Jeremy Grantham (Trades, Portfolio) and Paul Tudor Jones (Trades, Portfolio) have reduced this stock in the fourth quarter of 2014, as well as the funds RS Investment Management (Trades, Portfolio) and Pioneer Investments (Trades, Portfolio).

Disclosure: Omar Venerio holds no position in any stocks mentioned.


[1] These values were obtained from Bloomberg's CRP function.