Title: Analyzing Performance and Competitive Position
1Chapter 8
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- Analyzing Performance and Competitive Position
2Evaluating Historical Performance
To analyze a companys historical performance, we
proceed in three steps
Analyze ROIC and Economic Profit Return on
invested capital (ROIC) measures the economic
performance of a companys core business. ROIC
is independent of financial structure and can be
disaggregated into measures examining
profitability and capital efficiency. Analyze
Revenue Growth Break down revenue growth into its
four components organic revenue growth, currency
effects, acquisitions, and accounting
changes. Evaluate Credit Health and Financial
Structure Assess the companys liquidity and
evaluate its capital structure in order to
determine whether the company has the financial
resources to conduct business and make short- and
long-term investments.
Slides 2-10
Slides 11-19
Slides 20-25
3Using ROIC to Compare Operating Performance
- To measure historical operating performance,
compute ROIC by comparing NOPLAT to invested
capital
Home Depot and Lowe's Return on Invested Capital
- The ROIC at Home Depot outpaced Lowes by
approximately five percentage points during the
early 2000s. This gap disappeared in 2005, when
Home Depot began acquiring other companies.
4ROIC With or Without Goodwill?
- Compute ROIC both with and without goodwill and
acquired intangibles, because each ratio analyzes
different things. - To measure aggregate value creation for the
companys shareholders, measure ROIC with
goodwill. - ROIC excluding goodwill measures the underlying
operating performance of the company and its
businesses and is used to compare performance
against peers and to analyze trends.
CVS Caremark Return on Invested Capital
Note This presentation sometimes shortens
goodwill and acquired intangibles to goodwill.
5Understanding Value Creation Decomposing ROIC
- in 2008, Home Depots ROIC (8.0) lagged Lowes
ROIC (8.9) by approximately one percentage
point. - But what is driving this drop in performance?
- Can these losses be recovered?
- To better understand ROIC, we can decompose the
ratio as follows
Profit Margin
Capital Efficiency
- As the formula demonstrates, a companys ROIC is
driven by its ability to (1) maximize
profitability, (2) optimize capital efficiency,
or (3) minimize taxes.
This equation can be organized into a tree
6Understanding Value Creation Decomposing ROIC
- From a margin perspective, Home Depots operating
margin was 6.8 percent versus 8.3 percent for
Lowes. The lower operating margin is primarily
attributable to higher selling, general, and
administrative (SGA ) expense. - According to press reports, the rise in SGA
reflects the cost of additional floor personnel
to improve the customer experience. Whether this
translates to higher sales through better service
in the future is a key to the companys valuation.
Home Depot and Lowe's ROIC Tree, 2008
Gross margin
7Understanding Value Creation Line Item Analysis
- To complete a thorough analysis, each tree branch
should examined separately over time and across
competitors. - For operating current assets and liabilities, we
can convert each line item into days, using the
following formula
Home Depot and Lowe's Operating Current Assets
in Days
Inventories have risen slightly at Lowes from
85 to 94 days.
8Understanding Value Creation Nonfinancial Metrics
- In an external analysis, ratios are often
confined to financial performance. - If you are working inside a company, however, or
if the company releases operating data, you
should link operating drivers directly to return
on invested capital. For instance, how can we
use data about employees and miles flown for
airlines?
Financial and Operating Statistics across U.S.
Airlines, 2008
9Nonfinancial Metrics Building an Equation
- To better understand labor expenses, we
disaggregate labor expenses to revenue using the
following equation
How much labor cost is incurred per available
seat-mile (ASM) flown?
Labor Expenses
Labor Expenses
Total Employees
ASMs Flown
Revenue
Total Employees
ASMs Flown
Revenue
Cost Structure
Productivity
Price
Average Salary per
Productivity of Each Full-Time
Miles Needed to
Full-Time
Employee ( Employees to Fly One
Be Flown to
Billion Available Seat-Miles)
Generate 1
Employee
- Note how each terms denominator cancels the next
terms numerator, leaving us with the original
ratio.
10Nonfinancial Metrics Analyzing the Data
- Discount carriers have higher labor cost per
dollar of revenue, when compared to network
carriers. But this statistic is misleading. The
difference is caused by higher prices, not higher
labor costs. - The average labor cost per ASM1 for discount
airlines equals 10.6 cents, versus 14.4 cents for
network carriers.
Operational Drivers of Labor Expenses to
Revenues, 2008
100 -
11Evaluating Historical Performance
To analyze a companys historical performance, we
proceed in three steps
Analyze ROIC and Economic Profit Return on
invested capital (ROIC) measures the economic
performance of a companys core business. ROIC
is independent of financial structure and can be
disaggregated into measures examining
profitability and capital efficiency. Analyze
Revenue Growth Break down revenue growth into its
four components organic revenue growth, currency
effects, acquisitions, and accounting
changes. Evaluate Credit Health and Financial
Structure Assess the companys liquidity and
evaluate its capital structure in order to
determine whether the company has the financial
resources to conduct business and make short- and
long-term investments.
Slides 2-10
Slides 11-19
Slides 20-25
12Analyzing Revenue Growth
- The value of a company is driven by return on
invested capital, the weighted average cost of
capital, and growth. The ability to grow cash
flows over the long term depends on a companys
ability to grow its revenues organically. - Calculating revenue growth directly from the
income statement will suffice for most companies.
The year-to-year revenue growth numbers sometimes
can be misleading, however. The three prime
culprits affecting revenue growth are - Currency changes. Foreign revenues must be
consolidated into domestic financial statements.
If foreign currencies are rising in value
relative to the companys home currency, this
translation, at better rates, will lead to higher
revenue. - Mergers and acquisitions. When one company
purchases another, the bidding company may not
restate historical financial statements. This
will bias one-year growth rates upward. - Changes in accounting policies. When a company
change its revenue recognition policies,
comparing year-to-year revenues can be misleading.
13Organic Growth vs. Reported Growth
- Compass (based in the United Kingdom) and Sodexo
(based in France) are global providers of canteen
services in businesses, schools, and sporting
venues. - In 2008, total revenues at Compass grew by 11.4
percent, and revenues at Sodexo grew by 1.7
percent. The difference in growth rates appears
dramatic but is driven primarily by changes in
currency values (pounds sterling versus euros),
not by organic revenue growth.
Compass and Sodexo Revenue Growth Analysis
14Analyzing Revenue Growth Currency Changes
- The exhibit below reports the revenue breakout by
geography for Compass and Sodexo. - The companies have similar geographic mixes, with
roughly 40 percent of revenues coming from North
America. Since each company translates U.S.
dollars into a different currency, exchange rates
will affect each company quite differently.
Compass and Sodexo Effect of Currencies on
Revenue Growth
Compass translates U.S. dollars from its North
American business into British pounds. Given the
weakening of the pound against the U.S. dollar
(2.04 per pound in 2007 versus 1.78 per pound
in 2008), Compass reported an increase in
revenues of 5.1 percent attributable to the
weakening pound.
15Analyzing Revenue Growth Currency Changes
- Companies with extensive foreign business will
report revenues using both current and constant
exchange rates (CER). - For instance, IBM reported a year-to-year revenue
change of 9.8 percent in 2003, but a year-to-year
constant currency change of only 2.8 percent.
IBM 2003 Annual Report, Page 51
Had currencies remained at their prior-year
levels, IBM revenue would have been 83.5
billion, rather than the 89.1 billion reported.
16Analyzing Revenue Growth MA
- Stripping the effect of acquisitions from
reported revenues is difficult. Unless an
acquisition is deemed material by the companys
accountants, company filings do not need to
detail or even report the acquisition. - For larger acquisitions, a company will report
pro forma statements that recast historical
financials as though the acquisition were
completed at the beginning of the fiscal year.
Revenue growth then should be calculated using
the pro forma revenue numbers - If the target company publicly reports its own
financial data, you can construct pro forma
statements manually by combining revenue of the
acquirer and the target for the prior year. But
beware The bidder will include partial-year
revenues from the target for the period after the
acquisition is completed.
17Analyzing Revenue Growth MA
- Consider the hypothetical purchase of a target
company in the seventh month of year 3. - Both the parent company and the target are
growing organically at 10 percent per year.
Consolidated revenue growth, however, is reported
at 22.8 percent in year 3 and 18.2 percent in
year 4. - To create an internally consistent comparison for
years 3 and 4, adjust the prior years
consolidated revenues to match the current years
composition.
Effect of Acquisitions on Revenue Growth
18Analyzing Revenue Growth Accounting Changes
- Each year the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (U.S.) and International Accounting
Standards Board (Europe) make recommendations
concerning the financial treatment of certain
business transactions. - Consider EITF 01-14 from the Financial Accounting
Standards Board, which concerns reimbursable
expenses. - Prior to 2002, U.S. companies accounted for
reimbursable expenses by ignoring the expense
entirely. Starting in 2003, U.S. companies can
recognize the reimbursement as revenue and the
outlay as an expense. - This new revenue will artificially increase
year-to-year comparisons.
Total System Services, Annual Report, page F-7
Reimbursable Expenses As a result of the
Financial Accounting Standards Boards (FASBs)
Emerging Issues Task Force 01-14 (EITF 01-14),
formerly known as Staff Announcement Topic D-103,
Income Statement Characterization of
Reimbursements Received for Out-of-Pocket
Expenses Incurred, the Company has included
reimbursements received for out-of-pocket
expenses as revenue. Historically, TSYS had not
reflected such reimbursements in its consolidated
statements of income.
19Understanding Value Creation Decomposing Growth
- Once revenues have been disaggregated, analyze
revenue growth from an operational perspective.
The most standard decomposition is
Home Depot and Lowes Revenue Growth Analysis,
2008
- Growth trees can be built using advanced versions
of the decomposition formula presented above. - How is Home Depot driving revenue growth?
20Evaluating Historical Performance
To analyze a companys historical performance, we
proceed in three steps
Analyze ROIC and Economic Profit Return on
invested capital (ROIC) measures the economic
performance of a companys core business. ROIC
is independent of financial structure and can be
disaggregated into measures examining
profitability and capital efficiency. Analyze
Revenue Growth Break down revenue growth into its
four components organic revenue growth, currency
effects, acquisitions, and accounting
changes. Evaluate Credit Health and Financial
Structure Assess the companys liquidity and
evaluate its capital structure in order to
determine whether the company has the financial
resources to conduct business and make short- and
long-term investments.
Slides 2-10
Slides 11-19
Slides 20-25
21Credit Health and Capital Structure
- In the final step of historical analysis, focus
on how the company has financed its operations.
Ask - How is the company financed? That is, what
proportion of invested capital (IC) comes from
creditors versus equity holders? - Is this capital structure sustainable?
- Can the company survive an industry downturn?
- To assess the aggressiveness of a companys
capital structure, examine - Liquiditythe ability to meet short-term
obligations. We measure liquidity by examining
the interest coverage ratio. - Leveragethe ability to meet long-term
obligations. Leverage is measured by computing
the market-based debt-to-value ratio.
22Credit Health and Capital StructureLiquidity
- The interest coverage ratio measures a companys
ability to meet short-term obligations - EBITDA/interest measures the ability to meet
short-term financial commitments using profits,
as well as depreciation dollars earmarked for
replacement capital. - EBITA/interest measures the ability to pay
interest without having to cut expenditures
intended to replace depreciating equipment.
Home Depot Measuring Interest Coverage
23Credit Health and Capital StructureLiquidity
- EBITDA interest coverage (times interest earned)
is the most widely used ratio for large companies
with access to public capital markets.
- Although interest coverage is the primary driver
of a companys rating, it is not the only driver.
Other drivers include capital intensity, debt to
value, among others.
24Credit Health and Capital StructureLeverage
- To better understand the power (and danger) of
leverage, consider the relationship between
return on equity (ROE) and ROIC.
- The use of leverage magnifies the effect of
operating performance. - The higher the leverage ratio (IC/E), the greater
the risk. - Specifically, with a high leverage ratio (a very
steep line), the smallest change in operating
performance can lead to enormous changes in ROE.
25Median Leverage Ratios Across Industries
- To place the companys current capital structure
in the proper context, compare its capital
structure with those of similar companies. - Industries with heavy fixed investment in
tangible assets tend to have higher debt levels. - High-growth industries, especially those with
intangible investments, tend to use very little
debt.
Median Debt to Value by Industry1
Note Market value of debt proxied by book
value. Enterprise value proxied by book value of
debt plus market value of equity.
26Closing Thoughts
- Understanding a companys past is essential for
forecasting its future. Through historical
analysis, we can test a firms ability to create
value - over time by analyzing trends in operating and
financial metrics, and - as compared to other companies within the firms
industry. - When analyzing historical performance, keep the
following in mind - Look back as far as possible (at least 10 years).
Long-term horizons will allow you to evaluate
company and industry trends and whether
short-term trends will likely be permanent. - Disaggregate value drivers, both ROIC and revenue
growth, as far back as possible. If possible,
link operational performance measures with each
key value driver. - Identify the source when there are radical
changes in performance. Determine whether the
change is temporary or permanent, or merely an
accounting effect.