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KBR, Inc. KBR NYSE

NYSE • Industrials • Engineering & Construction • US • USD

SharesGrow Score
54/100
3/7 Pass
SharesGrow Intrinsic Value
$84.23
+131.7%
Analyst Price Target
$51.67
+42.1%

The estimated intrinsic value of KBR, Inc. (KBR) using a 20-year Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model is $84.23 (based on the recommended Operating Cash Flow method), compared to the current stock price of $36.36. This suggests the stock may be undervalued by 131.7% relative to its intrinsic value.

The model uses a growth rate of 7.52% for years 1-5, 6.92% for years 6-10, and 4% as the terminal rate, with a discount rate of 4.09% (CAPM-derived from beta of 0.50). Intrinsic values across all methods: Operating Cash Flow (OCF): $84.23 | Free Cash Flow (FCF): $76.00 | Net Income (NI): $62.87.

ℹ Why does our Intrinsic Value (IV) differ from analyst targets?
Our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model estimates Intrinsic Value (IV) at $84.23, while the analyst consensus target is $51.67 — a 63% gap.
  • High debt relative to cash flow. Our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model deducts net debt from the present value of future cash flows, which significantly reduces equity value per share. Analyst price targets typically do not subtract debt in the same way.
Tip: Try adjusting the growth rate and discount rate below to see how different assumptions affect the valuation.
DCF-20 Year
KBR

Intrinsic Value Calculator — KBR, Inc.

USD 36.36 ▼ 1.44%
Recommended: No strong signal detected. Recommend to Use: Discounted Operating Cash Flow. Adjust the method manually if needed.
Operating Cash Flow (M) FY2026
USD
Total Debt (M)
USD
Cash & Investments (M)
USD
Discount Rate (%)
%
r  =  RFR  +  β  ×  MRP  =  2.43%  +  0.5  ×  3.31%  =  4.09%   
RFR 2.43% Risk-Free Rate (government bond yield) · US market
MRP 3.31% Market Risk Premium (expected excess return over RFR)
β 0.5 (floor) Beta: stock volatility relative to market (5-year monthly regression vs S&P 500) · raw β = 0.499; floor 0.5 applied — very low-beta stocks still carry some market risk
Shares Outstanding (M)
Growth Rate based on analyst consensus EPS — same across OCF / FCF / NI
Year 1–5 (%)
%
Year 6–10 (%)
%
Year 11–20 (%)
%
Growth Rate Derivation — Analyst Consensus EPS
Fiscal Year 2026202720282029 Reg. g1
EPS (USD) 3.814.014.184.50 7.52%
Linear regression on actual & estimated EPS. Dashed amber line = g1 projection. g1 = 5-yr forward CAGR implied by fitted curve.
Undervalued Overvalued
Intrinsic value
USD —
Intrinsic Price
USD
Stock Price
USD 36.36
20-Year DCF Breakdown
Year Projected CF (M) Discount Factor Present Value (M)
Discounted Cash Flow over 20 years using Operating Cash Flow as the base metric, projected across three growth phases and discounted to present value.
High Growth Phase — Years 1–5
The company is assumed to be in its strongest growth period. Cash flows are projected at the highest rate g₁, reflecting rapid expansion, market share gains, or strong earnings momentum over the next 5 years.
Transition Phase — Years 6–10
Growth begins to moderate as the business matures and competition intensifies. Cash flows in years 6–10 are projected at a lower rate g₂, bridging the gap between early explosive growth and long-term stability.
Terminal Phase — Years 11–20
The company is assumed to be fully mature, growing in line with the broader economy. The terminal growth rate g₃ (typically 3–4%, close to long-run GDP growth) is applied to years 11–20, representing sustainable perpetual growth.
IV Intrinsic Value per share — the estimated true worth of one share based on discounted future cash flows over 20 years
OCF0 Operating Cash Flow — cash generated from core business operations, including D&A, before capital expenditures
g1 High growth rate (Yr 1–5) — auto-calculated from 3-year historical CAGR of cash flows; adjust based on your outlook
g2 Transition growth rate (Yr 6–10) — typically 60% of g₁, reflecting slowing momentum as the business matures
g3 Terminal growth rate (Yr 11–20) — long-run sustainable growth, typically 3–4% matching nominal GDP growth
r Discount rate — converts future cash to today's value; auto-calculated via CAPM = Risk-Free Rate + β × Equity Risk Premium
D Total Debt — sum of short-term and long-term borrowings; deducted from IV because debt is a prior claim on cash flows
C Cash & Short-term Investments — liquid assets held by the company; added back to IV as they belong directly to shareholders
N Shares Outstanding — divides total company value into per-share terms, making it directly comparable to the market price
Same 20-year DCF structure using Free Cash Flow (Operating Cash Flow minus CapEx) — reflects cash actually available to shareholders after reinvestment.
High Growth Phase — Years 1–5
Free cash flow projected at the highest rate g₁ for years 1–5, capturing the company's peak earnings expansion period.
Transition Phase — Years 6–10
FCF growth slows to g₂ in years 6–10, reflecting business maturation and increasing competition eroding excess returns.
Terminal Phase — Years 11–20
FCF grows at the terminal rate g₃ (≈ GDP growth) for years 11–20, representing the steady-state long-run rate a mature business can sustain.
FCF0 Free Cash Flow = Operating Cash Flow − CapEx. Represents cash truly available to shareholders after reinvestment needed to maintain the business
g1, g2, g3 Three-phase FCF growth rates, auto-calculated from historical FCF CAGR
r Discount rate (CAPM) = Risk-Free Rate + β × Equity Risk Premium
D, C, N Total Debt, Cash & Investments, Shares Outstanding — same definitions as OCF method
Same 20-year DCF using Net Income as the base metric. Suitable for asset-light businesses where earnings closely track distributable value.
High Growth Phase — Years 1–5
Net income projected at the highest rate g₁ for years 1–5. Best suited for asset-light companies (software, financials, consumer brands) where net income closely tracks shareholder value.
Transition Phase — Years 6–10
Earnings growth decelerates to g₂ in years 6–10 as profit margins normalise and competitive moats are tested.
Terminal Phase — Years 11–20
Earnings grow at terminal rate g₃ for years 11–20. This phase often dominates total present value, so the choice of terminal rate significantly impacts the final IV estimate.
NI0 Net Income = Revenue − all expenses, interest & taxes. For asset-light companies, NI closely approximates distributable cash to shareholders
g1, g2, g3 Three-phase Net Income growth rates, auto-calculated from historical earnings CAGR
r Discount rate (CAPM) = Risk-Free Rate + β × Equity Risk Premium. Higher beta → higher discount rate → lower IV estimate
D, C, N Total Debt, Cash & Investments, Shares Outstanding — same definitions as OCF method
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