Free Cash Flow (FCF) is the cash a company generates from its core business operations after funding the capital expenditures necessary to maintain and grow its asset base — representing the true economic earnings available to all capital providers before financing decisions. The concept was popularized for equity valuation by Warren Buffett's notion of "owner earnings," introduced in his 1986 Berkshire Hathaway annual letter, where he described the cash that could hypothetically be extracted from a business without impairing its competitive position. In formal finance, FCF is distinguished from net income because it excludes non-cash accounting items (depreciation, amortization) and includes the real cash cost of sustaining the business (capital expenditures), making it far more resistant to earnings management than GAAP net income. There are two common variants: Free Cash Flow to the Firm (FCFF), used in DCF analysis to value the entire enterprise before paying debt holders, and Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE), which deducts net debt payments and is used in equity-focused models; MiniValuator uses FCFF as its primary DCF input.
Alphabet (Google) reported operating cash flow of approximately $101 billion for fiscal year 2024, against capital expenditures of roughly $52 billion, yielding free cash flow of approximately $49 billion. With roughly 12.3 billion diluted shares outstanding, that translates to FCF per share of about $4.00. Applying a DCF model with 10% FCF growth over five years, 5% growth for years 6–10, and a 3% terminal growth rate discounted at 9% WACC produces an enterprise value in excess of $2 trillion — consistent with Alphabet's market capitalization, indicating the market is pricing in high but not unreasonable growth. The contrast with a capital-intensive peer is instructive: an airline with the same operating cash flow but $45 billion in capex generates only $6 billion in FCF, drastically reducing its DCF value even though reported EBITDA might appear similar.
FCF is the most important single financial metric for DCF valuation because it measures what a business actually earns for its owners in cash terms, free from the distortions of accounting convention. Damodaran has written extensively that the gap between reported earnings and free cash flow is one of the most important diagnostic tools for assessing business quality: high-quality businesses like software platforms and consumer franchises convert 70–90% of net income to FCF, whereas capital-intensive businesses like semiconductor fabs or integrated oil companies may convert only 30–50%, which fundamentally limits their stock valuation potential. Research by Sloan (1996) in The Accounting Review demonstrated that companies with high earnings but low cash flow (i.e., earnings inflated by accruals) subsequently underperformed the market, providing academic validation for FCF-focused investing. From a practical standpoint, FCF is considerably more difficult for management to manipulate than earnings: while CFOs have wide latitude over accruals, reserves, and amortization schedules, cash receipts and capital spending are recorded transactions that flow through the cash flow statement. The key limitation of FCF is its volatility: a single large capital investment cycle — like Meta's multi-year data center buildout — can produce temporarily low or negative FCF even as the underlying business grows strongly, requiring analysts to normalize FCF over a multi-year period rather than relying on a single year's figure.
MiniValuator uses trailing twelve-month free cash flow (operating cash flow minus capital expenditures) auto-fetched from financial statements as the baseline FCF input for the DCF model. This figure is the starting point from which all future FCF projections are grown at the user-specified high-growth and terminal growth rates. Because a single year's FCF can be distorted by one-time capex events or working capital swings, MiniValuator also displays the three-year average FCF alongside the trailing figure, allowing users to choose whichever better represents normalized earnings power before running the stock valuation.
Ready to apply this concept? Try the MiniValuator DCF Calculator — calculate intrinsic value for any US stock in under 60 seconds.