The Perpetuity Growth Method (also known as the 'Gordon Growth Model') is a simple but powerful formula used in finance to calculate the future value of a business beyond a typical forecast period. It's a cornerstone of many discounted cash flow (DCF) valuation models. In a nutshell, the method calculates a company's terminal value by assuming its free cash flow will grow at a steady, constant rate forever. Imagine trying to predict a company’s cash flow every single year for the next century—it’s impossible. This method provides a shortcut by taking the cash flow from the last predictable year and applying a single, conservative growth rate to represent all future years combined. It’s a bit like saying, “After year 10, we believe this company will chug along like the general economy, growing slowly and steadily into infinity.” This single number, the terminal value, often represents a huge chunk of a company’s total calculated worth, making the assumptions behind it critically important.
At its heart, the Perpetuity Growth Method is about making a reasonable guess about the very distant future and putting a present-day price on it. It transforms an endless stream of future cash flows into one manageable number.
The classic formula looks like this: Terminal Value = (Final Forecasted Year's Free Cash Flow x (1 + g)) / (R - g) Let's break down the ingredients:
The logic is that the value of a business is its future cash flows discounted back to today. The `(R - g)` in the denominator represents the “capitalization rate”—the effective rate at which future cash flows are valued.
Think of a magical apple orchard. For the first 10 years, you can count the trees and estimate how many apples they'll produce each year. But what about from year 11 to infinity? The Perpetuity Growth Method lets you stop counting individual trees. Instead, you assume that from year 11 onwards, the entire orchard's apple output will grow by a small, steady amount each year—say, 2%, forever. The formula helps you calculate the total value of all those apples from year 11 into the distant future, expressed as a single lump sum value today.
For value investors, who preach caution and a deep understanding of a business, the Perpetuity Growth Method is a useful tool but also a dangerous one. Its simplicity can hide a world of over-optimism.
Legendary investors like Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett built their careers on being realistic, not romantic. The 'g' in this formula is where romance can lead to ruin.
This method is most appropriate for:
It is highly inappropriate for:
Ultimately, because the model relies on such fragile assumptions, the calculated value should always be treated with skepticism. A prudent investor will always demand a deep margin of safety—a significant discount between the calculated value and the price they are willing to pay.
Let's value the distant future of “Steady Co.”
Step 1: Calculate the FCF for the first year of perpetuity (Year 11).
Step 2: Apply the Perpetuity Growth Formula.
This $1.457 billion represents the total value of all of Steady Co.'s cash flows from Year 11 onwards. To find the company's total value today, you would discount this terminal value back 10 years and add it to the discounted value of the cash flows from Years 1-10.