For this summer?? How in the world...

I did an ER superday with a different BB a few years back and there was a lot of detailed stock pitching. Interviewer kept asking more and more questions to have me break down the pitch as much as possible. Pitch anything you want, just be knowledgeable and confident. Understanding economic drivers will help and being able to speak intelligently on a certain sector as a whole will likely boost your chances as well.

I don't really know what else to say at this point. Since it's so late in the year it might be a fairly easy interview if they're just desperately looking to fill a slot.

 

Recently interviewed for MS full-time associate.. have a long and a short stock pitch and make sure to read a WSJ article beforehand that you can talk about. Hard to prepare for technicals, but know the basics well and more importantly, be able to explain why you're interested in equity research and MS (they like hearing about their training and global reach)

 

Im not in ER, Ill start as an IBD full time this summer. I simply interviewed with JPMorgan ER, because an alumni from my school is an analyst and he was one of my first contacts. I loved the culture at that office though, I felt bad turning them down.

 

Free Cash Flow = NI+DDA-CapEX-NetChgWorkingCapital

How much cash is actually produced by the firm after paying for capital investment, i.e. how much cash is the firm REALLY generating. You calculate free cash flows to forecast future cash flows to run a discounted cash flow analysis to value equity, in your case, or total firm value for banking.

 

I was asked about calculating FCF and a random question about deferred tax assets.. prob won't be too complicated for SA position, but I would study all the valuation methods and be able to walk through each of them

Hope this answer isn't too late.. best of luck with the superday

 

ev is mkt cap plus debt (firm value, takeover price), the value from a dcf is what an analyst thinks the equity is worth given certain assumptions. You run a dcf to decide whether or not the market has the stock correctly valued, in your opinion. Market cap is simply a different valuation based upon a certain multiple of past, or projected future earnings.

 
the value from a dcf is what an analyst thinks the equity is worth given certain assumptions. You run a dcf to decide whether or not the market has the stock correctly valued, in your opinion.
exactly. To answer the initial question accurately, usually* the result of your DCF is EV, then you just have to substract the value of debt to get equity value. Market cap is simply current share price x nb of shares, whereas equity value means fair value of one share (based on your own forecasts and modelling) x nb of shares.

*you can also get to equity value directly by computing FCFE (free-cash-flow to equity) and discounting it @ cost of equity, but the most popular method is to value EV and substract debt.

 

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