Clifford Capital Partners Fund Investor Class (CLFFX) Simple Excess Return Model - Discounting Cash Flows
CLFFX
Clifford Capital Partners Fund Investor Class
CLFFX (NASDAQ)

Simple Excess Return Model

This model is used to estimate the value of companies that have reached maturity and earn stable excess returns with little to no chance of high growth.

Note: Excess return models are better suited for estimating the fair value of financial companies compared to enterprise valuation models, such as the Discounted Free Cash Flow Model.

See Valuing Financial Service Firms

Fair Value Formulas

Fair Value = Book Value of Equity + Present Value of Future Excess Returns

Present Value of Future Excess Returns = Next Year's Excess Return per Share / (Discount Rate - Growth In Perpetuity)

This model was inspired by Prof. Aswath Damodaran's spreadsheet ⬇️eqexret.xls

Assumptions

Discount Rate

Discount Rate

Discount Rate = Cost of Equity = Risk Free Rate + Beta * Market Premium

The cost of equity is the theoretical rate of return that an equity investment should generate. It is calculated using the CAPM formula.

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↳ Beta

Beta

Beta measures the volatility of a stock's price in relation to the overall stock market. A higher beta indicates greater price fluctuations relative to the market.

↳ Risk Free Rate

Risk Free Rate

The risk-free rate represents the return an investor expects from an absolutely risk-free investment over a specified time period. By default, it is set to the current yield of the U.S. 10-Year Treasury Bond.

↳ Equity Risk Premium

Equity Risk Premium

The market risk premium is the additional return over the risk-free rate expected by investors for equity risk.

Historical Years

Historical Years

The number of years of historical data used to calculate averages and trends for analysis.

Growth In Perpetuity

Growth In Perpetuity

The stable rate at which the company's book value is assumed to grow in perpetuity.

Return on Equity

Return on Equity

Return On Equity (ROE) is used to estimate the Earnings Per Share (EPS) expressed as a percentage of Book Value.

Stable Payout Ratio

Stable Payout Ratio

The stable payout ratio estimates what the company can afford to pay out in dividends.

Stable Payout Ratio = 1 - Growth in Perpetuity / Return on Equity

Monetary values in USD

amounts except #

Average LTM
Mar 08
2025 2024 2023
Common Dividends Paid
Book Value
Return on Equity
Payout Ratio
Retained Earnings

Fair Value Calculation

Next Year's Excess Return per Share
Discount Rate 7.9%
Growth In Perpetuity 2.5%
Book Value of Equity
+ Present Value of Future Excess Returns
= Fair Value
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Discounting Cash Flows

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