BBA MA Week 9
BBA MA Week 9
BBA MA Week 9
Managerial Accounting
Fall 2022
Professor Taeho Ko
taehoko@hanyang.ac.kr
4
Market measures: limitations
• Controllability
• All but top employees have infinitesimally small
influences on stock prices
• Even for top management, market measures are
affected by many uncontrollable factors
• “Noise” → Reason for (complementary/substitutive)
use of accounting measures
5
Market measures: limitations
• Risks
• Market measures are shaped by future expectations,
but these may not be realized
• In either direction (positive or negative)
• e.g., Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer was “surprised” when stock
price was hammered after announcing “win-win” deal with
Yahoo → Who was right – he or market?
• Proprietary information is kept within company
• Market (in)efficiency
• Markets are not always fully informed and efficient about
firm’s prospects, future cash flows, and risks
• “Anomalies” (e.g. “Friday effect”, “under-reaction to news”)
6
Market measures: limitations
• Feasibility
• Market measures are not available for privately held
firms, wholly owned subsidiaries or divisions, and
not-for-profit organizations
7
Accounting measures: benefits
• Timely: measured in short time period
• Precise: subject to extensive accounting rules
• “Reliability principle”: different people assigned to measure
profit will arrive at approximately same number
• Objective: audited by independent auditors;
examined by regulators and tax authorities; analyzed
by investing public (e.g., institutional and retail
investors, analysts)
8
Accounting measures: benefits
• Congruent:
• Congruent with true firm goal of maximizing shareholder
value, esp. in long run
• Positive correlations between accounting profits and stock
returns
• Cost effective: already required for financial reporting
• Understandable (by market participants)
9
Accounting measures: limitations
• Accounting incomes do not reflect “economic income”
perfectly, because accounting measures are ...
• transaction-oriented
• e.g., patents granted → no immediate accounting effect, but
likely change in firm’s economic value
• dependent on choice of measurement methods
• e.g., depreciation, write-off, reserves
10
Accounting measures: limitations
• Accounting incomes do not reflect “economic income”
perfectly, because accounting measures ...
• are conservatively biased
• exclude some intangibles and working capital
• e.g., research in progress, human capital, customer goodwill
• ignore cost of “equity” capital
• ignore risks
“Economic income”: Change in firm’s
• focus on past economic value, where “economic value”
is obtained by NPV of all future CFs
12
Investment performance measures
• Return on investment (ROI)
• Ratio of accounting profit earned by the unit divided
by investment assigned to it
• ROI = profits ÷ investment base
13
Return on Investment (ROI)
EBIT
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Net Book Value
Acquisition cost
Less: Accumulated depreciation
Net book value
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Net Book Value
• Firm bought equipment worth $10m on Jan 1, 2022
• Good for 4 years, with salvage value = $2m; Straight
line depreciation
• Net book value, December 31, 2022 = $8m
• Net book value, December 31, 2023 = $6m ...
16
Alternative asset measurements
• Current cost: cost of purchasing similar asset today
(“fair value”, “market value”)
• Relevant: current economic returns
• Less reliable: requires active market, information, and
assumptions
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ROI problems
• Numerator = Accounting profits
• Contains limitations associated with profit measures
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ROI suboptimization example 1
• Firm: accept
• Division A: accept
• Division B: reject → under-investment
19
ROI suboptimization example 2
• Firm: reject
• Division A: accept → over-investment
• Division B: reject
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Residual Income (RI)
Residual
income
=
Net
operating -
income
(Average
operating
assets
Minimum
required rate of
return
)
ROI, ROE, RI:
ROI: net operating income earned relative to investment
in average operating assets
ROE: net operating income earned relative to equity
investment
RI: net operating income earned less minimum required
return on equity and debt investment in average
operating assets
21
Residual Income: remedy for suboptimization
• Suboptimization does not occur with RI measures
• Set corporate capital charge at or above cost of capital
• All division managers must earn income above capital
charge → No suboptimization incentives
22
Misleading performance signals
• If use net book value as measure of capital (1/2)
• Both ROI and RI get better merely through time
• Both ROI and RI are overstated if division has many
old assets
• e.g., Invest $100; Depreciation $20/year for 5 years;
Incremental income $7/year; Capital charge 10%
Incremental Capital
Yr NBV Income Charge RI ROI
1 100 7 10 −3 7%
2 80 7 8 −1 9%
3 60 7 6 1 12%
4 40 7 4 3 18%
5 20 7 2 5 35%
23
Misleading performance signals
• If use net book value as measure of capital (2/2)
• Division managers are encouraged to retain assets
beyond optimal life and not invest in new assets
• Corporate managers may be induced to over-allocate
resources to divisions with older assets
• Combined with suboptimization issue, managers of
older assets (hence with higher ROI) are more
reluctant to invest in desirable projects with IRR
higher than COC
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Quick Check 1
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Quick Check 1a
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Quick Check 2
27
Quick Check 2a
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Quick Check 3
29
Quick Check 3a
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Quick Check 4
31
Quick Check 4a
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Quick Check 5
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Quick Check 5a
$3,000 increase in RI
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Learning-by-Doing
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Learning-by-Doing
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Economic Value Added (EVA™)
• Modified/adjusted residual income
• EVA = Adj income – Cost of capital × Adj investment
= NOPAT – WACC × (Total assets – Current liabilities)
• NOPAT = Net operating profit after tax
• WACC = Weighted average cost of capital (after tax)
• Many other adjustments possible
• 164 in total, as suggested by Stern Stewart & Co (EVA creator)
• e.g., capitalize and amortize R&D, advertising, employee
training
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Net income vs EVA
EBIT EBIT
NOPAT
– I – T
– T – Capital Charges (CC)
= Net Income = EVA
I= IC CC = IC × COC
Equity Equity
IC = invested capital
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Example
Investment = $1,500,000
Income = $225,000
ROI = 15%
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Example
Income = $225,000
Cost of investment = $1,500,000 × 8% = $120,000
Residual income = $105,000
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Example
42
Example
44
Week 9-11
• Performance Measurement Issues and Their Effects
• Financial performance measures and their effects
(Week 9)
• Financial performance measures
• Market
• Accounting
• Investment performance
• Return on investment
• Residual income and EVA
Managerial Accounting
Fall 2022
Professor Taeho Ko
taehoko@hanyang.ac.kr