A practical look at the two numbers that quietly determine most valuation outcomes In the world of investing, few things look as scientific as a spreadsheet filled with discounted cash flow models. Columns of numbers stretch across the screen, formulas hum quietly in the background, and the final output delivers a valuation with impressive precision—often down to the cent. Yet hidden inside those elegant models are two assumptions that quietly control the entire outcome. Terminal growth. And the discount rate. These two variables are the gravitational forces of valuation. Change them slightly and the entire financial universe of a company shifts. For late-stage companies—firms that have moved past hypergrowth but still have long operating runways—these assumptions become especially important. The reason is simple: most of the value in a discounted cash flow (DCF) model often comes from the terminal value, which itself depends heavily on growth and discount rate assumptions. Unde...
In the early life of a company, capital behaves like fuel in a rocket. Every dollar is expected to ignite something—new markets, new products, new customers, and occasionally entirely new industries. Investors don’t expect dividends during this phase because the logic is simple: reinvest everything and grow faster. But companies do not remain rockets forever. Eventually the growth rate slows. Markets become saturated. The once-scrappy disruptor becomes a global institution with tens of billions in revenue and cash flows so large they start piling up faster than management can reinvest them. That’s the moment when something interesting happens. The company begins to rethink what to do with its cash. Instead of pouring every dollar back into expansion, it begins returning money to shareholders through dividends, stock buybacks, or other capital return programs. This shift marks one of the most important transitions in corporate finance: the evolution from pure growth company to mat...