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Dividend discount model

The dividend discount model (DDM) values a share as the present value of all its expected future dividends; its constant-growth form, the Gordon growth model, prices the share as next year's dividend divided by the required return minus.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkDividend discount model

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Castellana Bank's current dividend of €2.00 is expected to grow 4% a year, giving D₁ = €2.08. Investors require a 10% return, so the Gordon growth model divides €2.08 by the 6% gap between that return and the growth rate, valuing the share at €34.67. Trading at €30, the share looks undervalued against this estimate.

Where it fits
SubjectCorporate FinanceCoreTopicBond & Equity ValuationCore

The formula

LaTeX
P0=D1rgP_0 = \frac{D_1}{r - g}

Variables

intrinsic value (current share price) ()
expected dividend in the next period ()
required rate of return on equity (decimal)
constant perpetual dividend growth rate (decimal)

The Gordon growth model applies only when r > g. For a firm with near-term non-constant growth, discount each near-term dividend individually, then apply this formula as a terminal value at the point growth stabilises.

Dividend discount model — Edlintics Glossary