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Bain Final Round interview Estimation Question: How would you value Spain?

Bain & Company estimation
New answer on Mar 22, 2024
7 Answers
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Anonymous A asked on Mar 21, 2024

I have got a friend who was asked at Bain Final Round Interview the following question “Bill Gates wants to buy Spain. How would you value it?”.

What would you structure this problem ?

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Iman
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replied on Mar 21, 2024
Systemiq | Ex-BCG | 10 years experience with 8+ specialising in sustainability | Free Intro | Ex-PrepLounge candidate

This is a cool question!

I actually think the more vague the question, the more the interviewer wants insight into how you think. They're looking to see whether you can be a good brainstorm/sparring partner and how you think on your feet. Key will be to demonstrate (1) basic problem solving skills and (2) thinking outside the box.

As with all case interviews, always feel comfortable clarifying the question and get the interviewer to reveal more information that might be relevant. After all, we wouldn't write a proposal or start a real client case without confirming the scope etc from the client. This isn't "interview technique" - this models what happens in real life client engagement.

So definitely cover your bases by thinking through typical economic health metrics/measures such as GDP, assets including financial assets etc. 

You could also go beyond the obvious and talk about less tangible measures of wellbeing (i.e. not just economic wellbeing). Things like Gross National Happiness (used by Bhutan) or the UN Human Development Index (HDI) - both include metrics that indicate potential future value such as health, education, productivity etc. You could think about measures of Natural Capital, including carbon offsetting potential (more relevant for nature-rich countries that can monetise forestry and agricultural offsets). 

At the end of the day it would be meaningless to ‘fold’ all these dimensions into a singular dollar value so implementing a calculation is not the goal of exploring other dimensions, but by thinking laterally you are demonstrating that (1) you can go beyond the obvious and (2) you recognise that there are often intangible value drivers that make something distinctive (whether we're talking about countries, companies or candidates).

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Karim replied on Mar 21, 2024
I am a young professional transitioning into a career in consulting.

I would assume that the direction we would have to take is to calculate the GDP of Spain. This would help quantify in monetary value, all of the final goods and services. The equation for GDP is the following:

GDP = Consumer spending + Business Investment + Government Spending + (Total Exports - Total Imports)

I hope this helps!

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Pedro on Mar 21, 2024

While technically correct, that formula is not very helpful in this context, as the candidate will not be able to estimate any of its components. Something like: GDP = population * average income per capita is more useful, as one should be able to provide a close-enough number for population and can use a benchmark to get to an adequate average income (e.g. Spain is approximately EU average, or 20% below France, which in turn is probably 30% below US - please note these are not the real numbers, just assumptions one can easily make).

Cristian
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Content Creator
replied on Mar 21, 2024
#1 rated MBB & McKinsey Coach

That's a really strange one. 

So, the more vague the problem statement is, the more you're in trouble. 

The first step I would take is to clarify with the interviewer ‘what they mean by Spain’.

Are we talking about Spain's economy? 

Are we talking about Spain's assets? 

Are we including the people? The art? The natural reserves? The religion? 

Asking these questions is already a huge step forward because you are showing to the interviewer how you are thinking through the question. 

Most likely, the interviewer at this point will suggest that you focus on the economy/assets and take a GDP-related approach. 

Feel free to come up with a few suggestions yourself, and I'll be happy to provide feedback.

Best,
Cristian

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Florian
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replied on Mar 21, 2024
Highest-rated McKinsey coach (ratings, offers, sessions) | 500+ offers | Author of The 1% & Consulting Career Secrets

Hi there,

This is a tough one that requires a lot of additional probing in the very beginning to define the scope first. Otherwise, you are boiling the ocean and might go into an unfavorable direction.

Things to consider early on and clarify with the interviewer:
 

  • Area: Define what constitutes "Spain" in terms of land and infrastructure.
  • Assets: Define whether the valuation includes income (GDP), assets (land, buildings, infrastructure), financial assets, and intangible assets (brand value, cultural heritage).

The interviewer might give you a preference and that's where the real market sizing starts…

Based on whatever that is you could follow one of the three:

  • Income: Estimate the present value of future income streams that the country can generate. This could include GDP as a proxy for national income, potential growth rates, and applying a discount rate to calculate net present value (NPV). Relatively straightforward with the right assumptions.
  • Market: Compare it with similar transactions or market values, although this is challenging as countries do not get bought or sold. However, you could estimate other large transactions and then extrapolate. Medium tricky.
  • Cost: Value the country based on the cost of its tangible assets. This includes the cost to rebuild its infrastructure, cities, and other physical assets. Very tricky as its very granular.

All the best,

Florian

 

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Udayan
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replied on Mar 21, 2024
Top rated Case & PEI coach/Multiple real offers/McKinsey EM in New York /12 years recruiting experience

There are many ways to do this - three listed below :

  1. GDP-Based Valuation: Apply a multiple to the annual GDP, similar to valuing a company based on its earnings. Countries, however, have more complex economic dynamics, and the appropriate multiple can vary widely based on growth prospects, stability, and other macroeconomic factors.
  2. Asset-Based Valuation: Estimating the value of all tangible and intangible assets. (complicated as you need to include natural resources, real estate, infrastructure, and state-owned enterprises etc.)
  3. Net Present Value (NPV) of Future Cash Flows: Estimating the net present value of future government revenues (taxes, profits from state-owned companies, etc.), minus expenses with assumptions about future economic growth rates, discount rates, and fiscal policies.
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Ian
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replied on Mar 22, 2024
#1 BCG coach | MBB | Tier 2 | Digital, Tech, Platinion | 100% personal success rate (8/8) | 95% candidate success rate

Hi there,

The answer depends completely on the clarifying questions + answers.

Ultimately, you could decide to go economic, in which you need their GDP + proejcted growth and the NPV of that.

Alternatively, you could try their financial/economic + intrinsic value as well.

Check out this for more market sizing practice: Market Sizing Analysis: Approaches, Techniques, and Exercises (preplounge.com)

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Pedro
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replied on Mar 21, 2024
30% off in April 2024 | Bain | EY-Parthenon | Roland Berger | Market Sizing | DARDEN MBA

First, you need to get clarity on the Goal. 

Are you estimating how much is Bill Gates willing to pay for Spain (and that requires knowing what he wants to do with it); or what is the “market value” of Spain? These will lead to different approaches.

On how to do it afterwards, you already have some good answers here.

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Iman gave the best answer

Iman

Systemiq | Ex-BCG | 10 years experience with 8+ specialising in sustainability | Free Intro | Ex-PrepLounge candidate
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