Economic value added
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In corporate finance, Economic Value Added or EVA is an estimate of economic profit, which under US accounting can be determined, among other ways, by after making corrective adjustments to GAAP accounting, including deducting the opportunity cost of equity capital. The concept of EVA is in a sense nothing more than the traditional, commonsense idea of "profit," however, the utility of having a separate and more precisely defined term such as EVA or Residual Cash Flow is that it makes a clear separation from dubious accounting adjustments that have enabled businesses such as Enron to report profits while in fact being in the final approach to becoming insolvent. EVA can be measured as Net Operating Profit After Taxes(or NOPAT) less the money cost of capital. EVA is similarto Residual Income (RI), although under some definitions there may be minor technical differences between EVA and RI (for example, adjustments that might be made to NOPAT before it is suitable for the formula below). Another, much older term for economic value added is Residual Cash Flow. In all three cases, money cost of capital refers to the amount of money rather than the proportional cost (% cost of capital). The amortization of goodwill or capitalization of brand advertising and other similar adjustments are the translations that cane be made to Economic Profit to make it EVA. The EVA is a registered trademark by its developer, Stern Stewart & Co.
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[edit] Calculating EVA
In the field of corporate finance, economic values added is a way to determine the value created, above the required return, for the shareholders of a company.
The basic formula is:
where
, called the Return on Invested Capital (ROIC).
is the firm's return on capital, NOPAT is the Net Operating Profit After Tax, c is the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) and K is capital employed.
Shareholders of the company will receive a positive value added when the return from the capital employed in the business operations is greater than the cost of that capital; see Working capital management. Any value obtained by employees of the company or by product users is not included in the calculations.
[edit] Relationship to Market Value Added
The firm's market value added, or MVA, is the discounted sum of all future expected economic value added:
Note that MVA = NPV of company.
[edit] Other measures of shareholder value
[edit] See also
- Business valuation
- Free cash flow
- Enterprise value
- Opportunity cost
- Value added
- Weighted average cost of capital
[edit] References
- G. Bennett Stewart III (1991). The Quest for Value. HarperCollins.
- Erik Stern. The Value Mindset. Wiley.
- Joel Stern and John Shiely. The EVA Challenge. Wiley.
- Al Ehrbar. EVA, the Real Key to Creating Wealth. Wiley.
[edit] External links
- Economic Value Added from Stern Stewart & Company
- [1] Free online PRVit analysis form shares on US Stockmarket
- What's wrong with the Economic Value Added?, Sergei Cheremushkin, 2008
- A Reading List on EVA/Value Based Management from Robert Korajczyk
- Economic Value Added from EVA Dimensions LLC
- Economic Value Added (EVA), Prof. Aswath Damodaran
- EVA valuation tutorial from valuatum.com
- Understanding Economic Value Added, investopedia.com
- All About EVA, investopedia.com
- Economic Value Added: A simulation analysis of the trendy, owner-oriented management tool, Timo Salmi and Ilkka Virtanen, 2001
- Apples & Oranges busıness sımulatıon by Celemı
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