Blog - Investing Notes
July 22, 2008 - Perspectives on Earnings Growth Forecasts
How should investors view corporate earnings estimates as determinants of stock
valuations? Are analyst and management forecasts of any value? Is high growth
inherently unsustainable? Is the source of growth important? In his June 2008
paper entitled "Growth
and Value: Past Growth, Predicted Growth and Fundamental Growth", Aswath
Damodaran examines the patterns and broad lessons of research on growth forecasts.
Using results from past studies and new analyses of earnings data for 1997-2007,
he concludes that:
- In general, historical growth rates do not persist. Firms with high past
growth rates are just as likely to experience low growth as high growth in
the future.
- While expert (analyst and management) forecasts contain some information,
they have substantial errors and low predictive power.
- Analyst forecasts are generally more accurate than simple
extrapolations of past earnings, but this advantage deteriorates as forecast
horizon increases.
- Management uses guidance more to manage short-term earnings
with respect to analyst expectations rather than to inform long-term growth
forecasts.
- Earnings growth derives from: (1) marginal returns on new investments; and/or,
(2) improved efficiency.
- The value of growth depends upon the associated excess return (return on
equity minus cost of equity). For firms with excess returns greater than 10%
(negative excess returns), each 1% increase in growth rate translates into
an average increase of 1.31 (0.35) in price-earnings ratio. Also, the portion
of the price-earnings ratio explained by forecasted growth declines with the
excess return.
- Mature firms with poor returns on equity have elevated potential for efficiency
growth, but such growth is generally unsustainable.
- High growth rates tend to moderate over long periods as growing firms increase
in size and attract competition.
The following table, taken from the paper, decomposes 2007 sector operating
earnings growth rates into growth from new investments and efficiency growth.
Nearly two thirds of overall earnings growth is efficiency growth (as has been
the case for much of the last decade). As efficiency growth fades, earnings
growth rates will revert to the sustainable growth rate.

In summary, assessing the valuation implications of earnings growth requires
delving into the sources of that growth (investments in new products/capabilities
versus improvements in efficiency).
For related research, see Blog
Synthesis: Valuation Based on Fundamentals. See also Earnings
Trends.