Free Cash Flow DCF Valuation
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Free Cash Flow (FCF) is the cash a business generates after accounting for the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base. It represents the actual cash available to all investors — equity holders and debt holders alike — after the company has paid for its operating expenses and reinvested in its business. Unlike net income, which is an accounting construct subject to non-cash adjustments and accrual timing, FCF is rooted in actual cash movements and is far harder to manipulate. FCF is considered by many professional investors to be the most important metric for valuing a company. Warren Buffett refers to it as 'owner earnings' — the cash that a business could theoretically distribute to its owners every year without impairing its competitive position. Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) models are built entirely on projected FCF streams, discounted at WACC to arrive at enterprise value. There are two common ways to compute FCF. The most widely used approach starts with Operating Cash Flow (from the Statement of Cash Flows) and subtracts capital expenditures. A more analytical approach starts with EBIT, applies the tax rate, adds back depreciation (a non-cash charge), and subtracts changes in working capital and capex. This second approach allows analysts to decompose FCF and understand what is driving changes year to year. Positive FCF signals a healthy business that can fund growth, pay dividends, repurchase shares, reduce debt, or make acquisitions from internally generated cash. Sustained negative FCF is not always bad — rapidly growing companies often burn cash to fund expansion — but it must be financed by equity or debt and cannot continue indefinitely. The quality of FCF matters too: FCF generated from working capital release (collecting receivables faster, delaying payables) is less sustainable than FCF from genuine operating improvement.
FCF = Operating Cash Flow − Capital Expenditures Alternative (analytical approach): FCF = EBIT × (1 − Tax Rate) + Depreciation & Amortization − Change in Working Capital − Capital Expenditures FCF to Equity (FCFE): FCFE = Net Income + D&A − Change in Working Capital − Capex + Net Borrowing
- 1Obtain the Operating Cash Flow from the company's Statement of Cash Flows. This number already adjusts net income for non-cash items (D&A, stock compensation) and changes in working capital.
- 2Find Capital Expenditures in the investing section of the cash flow statement. This is typically labeled 'Purchase of property, plant and equipment' or 'Additions to PP&E'.
- 3Subtract capex from operating cash flow: FCF = OCF − Capex. This gives you Free Cash Flow to the Firm (FCFF).
- 4For the analytical approach: start with EBIT, multiply by (1 − tax rate) to get NOPAT, add back D&A, subtract increases in net working capital, and subtract capex.
- 5Interpret the result: positive FCF indicates the company generates surplus cash; negative FCF indicates it is consuming cash (which must be funded externally). Track FCF margin (FCF / Revenue) and FCF yield (FCF / Market Cap) as valuation benchmarks.
- 6Distinguish between maintenance capex (keeping existing assets functioning) and growth capex (expanding capacity). The former is a true cash cost; the latter is optional and discretionary.
This large consumer goods company generates $700M in annual FCF — an 82% conversion rate from operating cash flow. With a stable business and modest capex needs, it can return most of this cash to shareholders via dividends and buybacks. An FCF yield of 5–6% on a $12B market cap would suggest reasonable valuation.
Despite generating positive operating cash flow, this company is FCF-negative because it is aggressively building out fulfillment centers and technology infrastructure. This is not necessarily alarming — the $450M capex is largely growth investment that should generate future returns. Investors must judge whether the return on that capex will justify the cash burn.
NOPAT = $300M × 0.75 = $225M. Add D&A: $225M + $80M = $305M. Subtract working capital increase: $305M − $20M = $285M. Subtract capex: $285M − $60M = $225M. The working capital increase is a cash use because the company is building inventory or extending customer credit faster than its payables grow.
For a small business: OCF = Net Income + D&A − ΔWC = $120K + $30K − $10K = $140K. FCF = $140K − $25K capex = $115K. This $115K represents the maximum sustainable cash the owner could extract from the business without impairing its operations. It's the true measure of the business's annual earning power in cash terms.
FCFE = $500M + $120M − $30M − $200M − $50M = $340M. This is the cash available specifically to equity holders after servicing debt. Dividing FCFE by shares outstanding gives FCF per share, a useful metric comparable to EPS but based on cash rather than accounting earnings.
DCF valuation: the numerator in every enterprise value calculation
Dividend sustainability analysis: can the company sustain its dividend from FCF alone?
Debt capacity: lenders assess FCF coverage of debt service obligations
Share buyback capacity: how many shares can be repurchased from annual FCF generation?
Private equity: LBO models are built on FCF projections used to model debt paydown
Lease accounting: Under ASC 842/IFRS 16, operating lease payments are now split
Lease accounting: Under ASC 842/IFRS 16, operating lease payments are now split into interest and principal in the cash flow statement, which can distort OCF and FCF comparisons vs. pre-2019 periods. Adjust for comparability.
Acquisitions: Large M&A deals appear in investing cash flows and should be
Acquisitions: Large M&A deals appear in investing cash flows and should be excluded from maintenance-capex FCF calculations. Some analysts split capex into organic growth capex and acquisition capex.
Working capital seasonality: Retailers often show negative FCF in Q3 (building
Working capital seasonality: Retailers often show negative FCF in Q3 (building holiday inventory) and very positive FCF in Q4. Use trailing twelve-month FCF rather than quarterly FCF to smooth seasonality.
Negative book equity: High buybacks can create negative book equity, but this
Negative book equity: High buybacks can create negative book equity, but this does not affect FCF calculation — FCF is a cash-based metric independent of balance sheet structure.
| Industry | Typical FCF/OCF Ratio | Key FCF Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Software / SaaS | 80–95% | Minimal capex; mainly R&D (expensed) |
| Consumer Staples | 70–85% | Moderate capex; stable working capital |
| Healthcare / Pharma | 60–80% | Manufacturing capex; IP amortization |
| Retail | 50–75% | Store capex; inventory working capital |
| Industrials / Manufacturing | 40–70% | Heavy equipment capex |
| Telecom / Cable | 30–55% | Network infrastructure capex |
| Utilities | 20–40% | Regulatory capex requirements |
| Energy (E&P) | 10–40% | Highly volatile; capex-intensive drilling |
Why is FCF more reliable than net income for valuation?
Net income includes non-cash items (depreciation, amortization, stock-based compensation) and accrual-based revenues and expenses that may not reflect actual cash timing. Companies can also manipulate net income through accounting choices (revenue recognition timing, reserve changes). FCF is harder to fake because it tracks actual cash inflows and outflows, making it a more reliable measure of economic performance for valuation purposes.
What is a healthy FCF margin?
FCF margin (FCF / Revenue) varies widely by industry. Software companies with subscription revenues often achieve 20–35% FCF margins. Consumer staples companies typically run 8–15%. Capital-intensive industries like manufacturing and utilities may run 5–10%. The key is consistency and growth trend rather than hitting a specific number — sustained improvement in FCF margin indicates genuine operational progress.
What is the difference between FCFF and FCFE?
Free Cash Flow to the Firm (FCFF) is cash available to all capital providers (both equity and debt holders) before any financing cash flows. It is used with WACC in enterprise value DCF models. Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) is cash available specifically to equity holders after debt service and is used with the cost of equity as the discount rate in equity value DCF models. For a debt-free company, FCFF and FCFE are identical.
Can a company have positive net income and negative FCF?
Yes, and this is a major red flag. It happens when a company is building working capital faster than profits (e.g., receivables ballooning because customers aren't paying), making large capital investments, or when earnings quality is poor due to aggressive revenue recognition. Sustained positive earnings with negative FCF often signals accounting manipulation or a business model that consumes cash despite appearing profitable.
How does depreciation affect FCF?
Depreciation reduces EBIT and therefore net income, but it does not reduce cash because it is a non-cash charge. In the OCF calculation, depreciation is added back to net income. However, depreciation represents real economic wear on assets that must eventually be replaced with real cash (capex). A business that depreciates its assets and never reinvests will show high FCF temporarily but will deteriorate competitively over time.
What is normalized or adjusted FCF?
Analysts often adjust reported FCF for one-time items that inflate or deflate the number: unusual working capital swings (year-end customer prepayments), lumpy capex (a one-time factory purchase), litigation settlements, or restructuring cash costs. Normalized FCF removes these distortions to show the sustainable, recurring free cash flow generation capacity of the business.
How do I use FCF to value a company?
The most common approach is a DCF model: project FCF for 5–10 years, estimate a terminal value (using a perpetuity growth rate or exit multiple), and discount all cash flows at WACC. The sum of present values equals enterprise value. Alternatively, use the FCF yield (FCF / Market Cap) as a relative valuation metric — a higher yield suggests better value, comparable to an earnings yield. FCF per share divided by a sector-appropriate multiple gives a quick fair value estimate.
Why might a fast-growing company have negative FCF even with strong unit economics?
High-growth companies often invest heavily in working capital (building inventory, extending credit) and capex (opening stores, building infrastructure) ahead of the revenue that investment will eventually generate. The cash outflows come first, the revenue comes later. This is actually a sign of management confidence in future returns. The question investors must answer is whether the return on invested capital (ROIC) will exceed the cost of that capital over time.
Pro Tip
Track FCF conversion rate (FCF / Net Income) over time for any business you analyze. A declining rate suggests working capital or capex problems; a rising rate suggests improving cash efficiency. The best businesses sustain conversion rates above 100% (FCF exceeds net income), typically because depreciation exceeds maintenance capex.
Did you know?
Amazon reported near-zero or negative FCF for most of its first 20 years as it invested aggressively in warehouses and technology. Investors who understood that this represented high-return investment — not operational failure — were richly rewarded. Amazon's FCF turned consistently positive around 2016 and has since grown to tens of billions annually.
References
- ›Damodaran – Investment Valuation (3rd ed.) — Chapter on Cash Flows
- ›CFA Institute – Free Cash Flow Valuation
- ›Koller, Goedhart & Wessels – Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies (McKinsey)
- ›Investopedia – Free Cash Flow Definition
- ›Warren Buffett – 1986 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter (Owner Earnings concept)