Free Cash Flow
Last updated
Last updated
Free Cash Flow (FCF) is the residual cash flow that's left over after all of the project's requirements have been satisfied and the implications accounted for.
It's the cash flow that can be distributed to the financial claimants (e.g., debt and equity) of the project or company.
It's not the same as accounting cash flow from the statement of cash flows (SCFs) but we can derive free cash flow from the statement of cash flows.
In the previous section, we discussed the NPV rule.
The formula for NPV is actually computed using FCFs (Free Cash FLows), as follows:
FCF is computed as follows:
+ Depreciation - Capital Expenditures - Change in Net Working Capital
where:
is the marginal tax rate,
is also known as the Unlevered Net Income/Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)/Earnings Before Interest After Taxes (EBIAT)
Revenue = Market Size * Market Share * Price
Costs = Cost Margin * Revenue + R&D Expenditures
Net Working Capital = Current Assets - Current Liabilities
Current Assets = Cash + Accounts Receivable + Inventory
Current Liabilities = Accounts Payable
Change in Net Working Capital = NWC(t) - NWC(t-1), i.e. the change in NWC over one period
The FCF described above is more precisely called unlevered FCF.
Levered FCF or Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE):
FCFE is residual cash flow left over after all of the project’s requirements have been satisfied, implications accounted for, and all debt financing has been satisfied.
It is the cash flow that can be distributed to the shareholders (i.e., equity) of the project or company.
It is called leveraged because it is affected by the choice of leverage i.e. debt.
+ Net Borrowing
Note that strategic decisions affect FCF (and thereby FCFE), whereas financial decisions affect only FCFE, they do not affect FCF.