Title: Value-Based Management and Course Summary
1Value-Based Management andCourse Summary
2Maximize Shareholders Wealth
- Management seeks financial policies and
strategies that increase value of shares - Policies and strategies that produce returns
larger than investors opportunity costs increase
value (economic value added) - Sustained ability of management to add economic
value increases the value of the firms assets
relative to investment costs (market value added)
3Market and Economic Value Added
4Positive NPVs, MVA and EVA
- Positive net present value projects earn higher
than the discount rate - The discount rate captures the opportunity cost
of capital being tied up - The dollar amounts of free cash flow earned above
the opportunity rate is EVA - The present value at the discount rate of EVA is
MVA
5Advisors and Service Providers
- Investment bankers assist management in adding
value - Advice
- Implementation
- Venture capitalists create value
- For their investors through excess returns
- For the clients through realization of investment
plans (LBOs and venture capital)
6Performance Assessment
- For public companies, share price performance is
the first step in assessing managements
performance - To dig into details, must use accounting data
- Dupont analysis
- Analysis of operations and segments
- Objective is to identify realized or potential
sources of value
7Market Value of the Firm
- Value of the entire firm entity value
- Copland et al and PVFIRM calculate market value
of the entity market value of D E - Entity value is present value of all free cash
flows, available for division among all
investors, whether in form of debt or equity - Cash flows to entire firm discounted at weighted
average cost of capital
8Advantages of Entity Approach
- Focuses on operations and not financing, avoiding
problem of changing capital structure through
time - Focuses on free cash flow and pinpoints impact of
alternative strategies - Free cash flow is net operating profit less an
allowance for taxes (NOPLAT) minus necessary
investments in working capital and fixed assets - Can focus on explicit forecast period and
continuing values after explicit forecast period
9Free Cash Flow
- Free cash flow is standard approach
- Net Operating Profit less Adjustment for Taxes
(NOPLAT) - Net Investments - Free cash flow does not include interest expenses
(or other financing costs) - Net investments are from working capital and
capital expenditures - Need sales, operating costs, cash, accounts
receivable, accounts payable, and inventory
assumptions
10Financial Analysis
- Required for assumptions concerning future
performance - Require historical and comparable firm data but
future may not be like the past - You can use my handout Financial Statement
Analysis and Assumptions for Valuation - Always apply plausibility check to both ratios,
assumptions, and projections - Ratio analysis of projections useful in assessing
plausibility of assumptions
11Dupont Analysis of Performance
- Dupont Analysis focuses on return on equity (RWJ,
p. 39) - Closest to goal of management
- Ratios can be calculated in different ways
- Year-ending number balance sheet number or
averages of two years - Before tax or after tax
12Abbreviations used in Ratios
- Abbreviations for accounting values usedROE
return on equityEAC earnings available to
commonBVE book value of equityEBT earnings
before taxEBIT earnings before tax and
interestSLS salesASSTS total operating
assets
13Basic Ratio Approach
- ROE can be decomposed into elements
- Focus first on gross return on assets (p. 38)
- ROA Earning Power determined by gross profit
margin and asset turnover
14Gross Profit Margin (p. 38)
- Sales
- Components of Costs
- Materials
- Labor
- SGA
- Other
- Common size income statement valuable
- Need assumptions for future on these
15Asset Turnover (p. 35)
- Working Capital
- Inventories
- Accounts Receivable
- Look at liquidity and activity ratios
- Turnover, days
- Current liabilities trade and bank debt
- Fixed Assets
- Net vs. Gross
- Turnover, average age
- Need assumptions to project these
16Valuation is Critical to Finance
- Three critical factors in valuation
- Cash flows
- Discount rates
- Calculation of net present value
- Where does value come from?
- Ability to earn excess returns (EVA)
- Sustained ability to invest at excess returns
(results in MVA)
17Markets and Firms
- Firms operate in markets
- Goods and services (products and investments)
- Financial markets
- Efficient market theory is benchmark for analysis
in finance - No excess returns possible
- Forces close examination on sources of value
- Inefficiencies or inability to arbitrage are
sources of value
18Financial Theory and Practice
- Well-defined objective function (maximize
shareholders wealth) - Theories of how corporate policies and strategies
influence value - Investments
- Capital structure
- Dividends
- All require analysis of cash flows, discount
rate, and present value
19Course Summary Apr. 27, 2006
- Prepare Vyaderm Pharmaceutical case (no write-up
required) but bring analysis - Begin review for final examination by looking
over past cases analyses and reviewing issues
raised