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Economic Value Added (EVA)



                    www.studygalaxy.com/
Today’s Agenda

Need for EVA

What went wrong with existing measurement
tools

Plus and Minus EVA

How to use EVA effectively
Need for EVA

• Previously Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
  techniques such as IRR, NPV were there but no
  tool to measure overall corporate performance
• People concentrated on net-income growth
  (example - East India Company).
• New tools – ROA, RONW, etc – but these gave
  wrong signals such as asset being ↓ to have ↑
  ROA.
You cannot know whether your
    business operation is creating value . .

               UNTIL YOU APPLY

•     the TRUE Cost of Capital
                To
•     ALL the Capital Employed

Most companies have no idea what either amount
 is
How to Calculate EVA?

EVA = (Return on Capital – Cost of Capital)
      × (Capital Invested in Project)
              ALTERNATIVELY
EVA = NOPAT – (Cost of Capital × Capital)
 Note: NOPAT is ‘Net Operating Profit After Tax’
• ‘Cost of capital’ is the minimum rate of return to
  compensate investors who are ready to bear
  the risk of investing in the firm.

• It is dependent on company’s financial
  structure, business risk, current interest level,
  and investors’ expectation.

• ‘NOPAT’ is profit derived from a company’s
  operations after taxes, but before financing
  costs.
• ‘Amount of capital’ is the amount of cash
  invested in the business, net of depreciation.

• Capital Employed will also include investments
  on R&D, marketing, and restructuring related.

• NOPAT is a company’s cash generation
  capability from recurring business activities
  (disregarding its capital structure)

• NOPAT = PAT + Total Adjustments – Tax
  Savings on Adjustments
• Cost of Capital (Kc) is a weighted average of two
  components – (a) cost of debt (Kd); (b) cost of
  equity (Ke).


•  Kc = We*Ke + Wd*Kd


• We, Wd in the above above equation are
  respective weights of individual components.

• Note: Cost of debt (Kd) is always taken post-tax.
• Cost of equity (Ke) is taken based on CAPM model
   Ke = Rf + β(Rm – Rf)
• Where,
• Rf is risk free rate of return (say, t-bill rate)
• β is levered beta of the stock price of the firm
  (w.r.t. market price).
• (Rm – Rf) is also known as market premium
• Rm is the market rate of return on all stocks.
• There are also other ways of calculating Ke
STRATEGIES FOR MAXIMISING E.V.A.
EARN MORE
                             HUNT OUT
 WITHOUT       USE LESS
                               LAZY
INCREASING     CAPITAL
                              CAPITAL
  CAPITAL


  INVEST IN   REDUCE THE
HIGH RETURN     COST OF
  PROJECTS     CAPITAL
• Hence, EVA is a financial technique to measure
  whether a company is creating economic value
  over and above the cost of capital of assets
   .
  employed.

• i.e., it also measures value created during a
  period of time through increased margins and
  profitable deployment of underutilized assets.
More Advantages of EVA …

 EVA in spirit is most closely related to NPV.
 Avoids problems associated with approaches that
  focus on percentage spreads i.e., too high ROA or
  RONW problems.
 It makes top managers responsible for a measure
  that they have control over.
 It is influenced by all the decisions that managers
  have to make within a firm (say, investment decision
  and dividend decisions).
Limitations of EVA
• All calculations in WACC (especially cost of equity
  related) are usually based on ex-post data.
  Actually they should be ex-ante. To that extent, it
  is a questionable concept to bank on.

• It is just a financial number i.e., it misses the
  advantages of ratios [cannot compare EVA of one
  firm with other firms (say, size of a firm is not
  taken care of)].
Market Value Added
• In terms of market and book values of
  shareholder investment, shareholder value
  creation (SVC) may be defined as the excess of
  market value over book value. SVC is also
  referred to as the market value added (MVA):
  Market value added = Market value – invested
                       capital (capital
                                    employed)
Market-to-Book Value (M/B)
• An alternative measure of shareholder
  value creation:
  Market value of equity = Market value of
  the firm – Market value of debt
• The market-to-book value (M/B) analysis
  implies the following:
  – Value creation – If M/B > 1, the firm is creating
    value of shareholders.
  – Value maintenance – If M/B = 1, the firm is not
    creating value of shareholders.
  – Value destruction – If M/B < 1, the firm is
    destroying value of shareholders.
Determinants of EVA
REVENUES


            ROIC       MARGIN



           minus
ECONOMIC                            COSTS
  PROFIT
            WACC

                                  OPERATING
                       INVESTED      WC
             x
                        CAPITAL

            INVESTED
             CAPITAL

                                   NPP & E
INVESTED CAPITAL comprise of…...


Net Fixed Assets less Capital WIP
Net Current Assets
Investments
R & D Expenses
Bad Debt Reserves added to
 Receivables

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Economic value added (eva)

  • 1. Economic Value Added (EVA) www.studygalaxy.com/
  • 2. Today’s Agenda Need for EVA What went wrong with existing measurement tools Plus and Minus EVA How to use EVA effectively
  • 3. Need for EVA • Previously Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) techniques such as IRR, NPV were there but no tool to measure overall corporate performance • People concentrated on net-income growth (example - East India Company). • New tools – ROA, RONW, etc – but these gave wrong signals such as asset being ↓ to have ↑ ROA.
  • 4. You cannot know whether your business operation is creating value . . UNTIL YOU APPLY • the TRUE Cost of Capital To • ALL the Capital Employed Most companies have no idea what either amount is
  • 5. How to Calculate EVA? EVA = (Return on Capital – Cost of Capital) × (Capital Invested in Project) ALTERNATIVELY EVA = NOPAT – (Cost of Capital × Capital) Note: NOPAT is ‘Net Operating Profit After Tax’
  • 6. • ‘Cost of capital’ is the minimum rate of return to compensate investors who are ready to bear the risk of investing in the firm. • It is dependent on company’s financial structure, business risk, current interest level, and investors’ expectation. • ‘NOPAT’ is profit derived from a company’s operations after taxes, but before financing costs.
  • 7. • ‘Amount of capital’ is the amount of cash invested in the business, net of depreciation. • Capital Employed will also include investments on R&D, marketing, and restructuring related. • NOPAT is a company’s cash generation capability from recurring business activities (disregarding its capital structure) • NOPAT = PAT + Total Adjustments – Tax Savings on Adjustments
  • 8. • Cost of Capital (Kc) is a weighted average of two components – (a) cost of debt (Kd); (b) cost of equity (Ke). •  Kc = We*Ke + Wd*Kd • We, Wd in the above above equation are respective weights of individual components. • Note: Cost of debt (Kd) is always taken post-tax.
  • 9. • Cost of equity (Ke) is taken based on CAPM model  Ke = Rf + β(Rm – Rf) • Where, • Rf is risk free rate of return (say, t-bill rate) • β is levered beta of the stock price of the firm (w.r.t. market price). • (Rm – Rf) is also known as market premium • Rm is the market rate of return on all stocks. • There are also other ways of calculating Ke
  • 10. STRATEGIES FOR MAXIMISING E.V.A. EARN MORE HUNT OUT WITHOUT USE LESS LAZY INCREASING CAPITAL CAPITAL CAPITAL INVEST IN REDUCE THE HIGH RETURN COST OF PROJECTS CAPITAL
  • 11. • Hence, EVA is a financial technique to measure whether a company is creating economic value over and above the cost of capital of assets . employed. • i.e., it also measures value created during a period of time through increased margins and profitable deployment of underutilized assets.
  • 12. More Advantages of EVA …  EVA in spirit is most closely related to NPV.  Avoids problems associated with approaches that focus on percentage spreads i.e., too high ROA or RONW problems.  It makes top managers responsible for a measure that they have control over.  It is influenced by all the decisions that managers have to make within a firm (say, investment decision and dividend decisions).
  • 13. Limitations of EVA • All calculations in WACC (especially cost of equity related) are usually based on ex-post data. Actually they should be ex-ante. To that extent, it is a questionable concept to bank on. • It is just a financial number i.e., it misses the advantages of ratios [cannot compare EVA of one firm with other firms (say, size of a firm is not taken care of)].
  • 14. Market Value Added • In terms of market and book values of shareholder investment, shareholder value creation (SVC) may be defined as the excess of market value over book value. SVC is also referred to as the market value added (MVA): Market value added = Market value – invested capital (capital employed)
  • 15. Market-to-Book Value (M/B) • An alternative measure of shareholder value creation: Market value of equity = Market value of the firm – Market value of debt • The market-to-book value (M/B) analysis implies the following: – Value creation – If M/B > 1, the firm is creating value of shareholders. – Value maintenance – If M/B = 1, the firm is not creating value of shareholders. – Value destruction – If M/B < 1, the firm is destroying value of shareholders.
  • 17. REVENUES ROIC MARGIN minus ECONOMIC COSTS PROFIT WACC OPERATING INVESTED WC x CAPITAL INVESTED CAPITAL NPP & E
  • 18. INVESTED CAPITAL comprise of…... Net Fixed Assets less Capital WIP Net Current Assets Investments R & D Expenses Bad Debt Reserves added to Receivables