Archive for July, 2008

Starbucks puts on the brakes – what does it mean for the current valuation

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

This week Starbuck’s (SBUX) announced it was closing 500 US locations and cutting 7% of its workforce. At Valuecruncher we decided to have a look at some projected financial numbers to analyse what this means for the slower brewing coffee giant utilising our on-line valuation tool.

This is the quantitative take on Starbucks – for a qualitative take; Portfolio magazine profiles Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz in this month’s issue.

SBUX Valuation

Starbucks grew revenues from US$5.3 billion in 2004 to US$9.4 billion in 2007 – a 21% compound annual growth rate. Our assumptions of revenues for the next three years are US$10.5 billion in 2008 growing to US$12.5 billion in 2010 – a 9% compound annual growth rate. We have projected EBITDA margins to be flat at 10%. We have used a terminal growth rate of 4.5%. We calculated this terminal growth rate based on year three growth of 8.7% dropping to a 4% stable growth rate by year 10. We used a terminal capital expenditure number of US$800 million. We have used a WACC (discount rate) of 10%.

Valuecruncher Valuation SBUX

Our analysis incorporates the cash and debt on the Starbucks balance sheet – Valuecruncher calculates a net debt number.

Our analysis gives a valuation of US$15.07 which is 4.3% below the current share price of US$15.74.

Based on our analysis the current valuation looks slightly overvalued. Play with our assumptions – what does your analysis say?

Valuecruncher has a database of over 1,000 companies on major international exchanges. You can explore, create and share valuations for any of these companies.

More on this topic (What's this?)
Starbucks Throws in the Towel
Starbucks Wakes Up to Smell the Coffee
Starbucks To Close 600 US Stores
Read more on Starbucks at Wikinvest

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