- The market may or may not be valuing the company based on its intrinsic value (for example, undervaluing the company based on its intrinsic value creates a value investing opportunity)
- The book value may or may not be related to the Intrinsic Value (book value is the current value of assets less liabilities)
- Determining the Intrinsic Value usually requires consideration of qualitative (subjective) and quantitative (measurable) aspects of the company
The difference in earning power over a lifetime of working, in current dollars, less the cost of the college education, in current dollarsIn other words, to calculate the intrinsic value of a college education, you would consider the wage differential over a work career of, 40 years, and covert it to current dollars. Let's say this is $1 million. If a college education currently costs $100,000, the intrinsic value of the college education is $900,000.
For a company, you would similarly determine how much cash you could pull out of the company in the future (profits, earnings, dividends, etc.), and discount this to determine current dollars (in $/share). This amount would then be compared to the current share price. These two amounts can then be compared on an apples-to-apples basis to determine the attractiveness of a stock.
In my next post, I'm going to take a look at a couple of different companies and contrast their Intrinsic Value. This will help us see the importance of future earnings on calculating Intrinsic Value.