Title: 11.5 Accounting Costs vs. Economic Value
111.5 Accounting Costs vs. Economic Value
- Accounting numbers are very important management
tools. - But they can never account for all opportunity
costs. Managers must see these within their own
organization. - Sometimes managers only focus on accounting
numbers and, not understanding them, drive firms
into bankruptcy.
2Some Elementary Differences
- You start a new oil company in 2013.
- Accounting Expenses
- Land and oil equipment leases 100,000
- Wages and salaries 200,000
- Total expenses 300,000
- Total revenue 0
- You strike oil worth an estimated 10 million
when well is developed. What is the accounting
book value of the firm at the end of the year? - The economic value?
3Primary roles
- Accounting
- Following strict rules, it records and tracks
receipt of and expenditure of money. - Helps establish responsibility for assets and
reduce theft. - Help managers determine if operations are working
as expected and are required by regulatory
authorities. - It is a system of controls based on rules.
4Primary roles
- Economics
- Considers the value of assets determined by
usefulness to owner compared to alternative means
of producing same services and considers
potential use (opportunity cost) to other
possible owners of the assets. - Both accounting cost and economic costs are
important tools of analysis.
5Economic Value
- The economic value of an asset requires an
estimate of the net cash flow expected from the
asset, discounted. - Hence, valuation is continuous and subjective -
an educated guess about expected cash flows. Past
cash flows (accounting data) from assets can
provide useful information to a manager in making
valuation decision but may not be relevant as to
future opportunities.
6Need deep understanding of accounting number
meanings. U.S. banks in 2013 appeared more
profitable because they moved more cash into net
revenue. 18 of net revenue is cash set aside to
prepare for covering bad loans.
7Practical Problem Intangible Assets
- A firm spends cash on research, development and
marketing because managers believe the present
value of the expenditures is positive. That is, a
profitable venture by the company. - But, accounting records expenditures as if no
value was created. - Similarly, costs of training personnelall
expense in an accounting sense. There is no
immediate offsetting revenue but should be an
economically valuable activity.
8Even True Numbers Can Mislead. P/E ratios
change in A YEAR for same time periodONE BASED
on Analysts Earnings Estimates the other on
later Real data
Data for SP 500
9Other Practical Problems
- SEC and PCAOB want assets reported at market
value annually. How much is your customer list
worth? Better come up with a defensible number. - Income and Expenses Accounting books do not
reflect changes in assets due to changes in
demand for output of changes in replacement cost
of inventories of effects of new regulations. So
accounting expenses may go over or below changes
in real economic value. Lehman Brothers, as a
firm, was worth tens of billions but vanished
overnight.
10Accounting Methods Matter
- Three firms. Each buys 100 units of inputs per
month at 110 per unit in January. Price rises
10/month, so in December cost is 220 per unit.
Total accounting cost for year is therefore
198,000. - During the year, 800 units are sold for total
revenue of 160,000. - 400 units remain in inventory at the end of the
year. - What is the value of the inventory?
- What is the cost?
- What is the profit?
11It Depends on the Accounting Method
- Inventory Ending Annual Cost Annual Gross
- Method Inventory of goods sold Profits/Sales
- FIFO 82,000 116,000 44,000
- LIFO 50,000 148,000 12,000
- AC 66,000 132,000 28,000
- Three firmssame number good in and out and money
flow the same, but accounting methods differed.
What is the economic value? Current opportunity
costnone of the above. (Oil industry uses LIFO
to help cut tax burden.)
12Problems that Have No Solution
- If a firm produces different products, how do you
assign labor costs? Lump sum? Per unit? Based on
total wage cost or per hour estimate? You cannot
figure that out from accounting (or any other)
numbers. - Any method may be useful to managers to
understand labor costs, but same costs may look
very different across identical firms. - What about retirement benefits for workers? Is it
overhead or labor cost? A liability or a cost?
13Example GM
- For decades, worker pension costs not recognized.
Not well funded nor explicitly calculated as
liability. Company falsely profitable for
decades. - Does not know how much it costs to build a car.
Part of problem traditionally came from internal
pricing gaming (gradually being corrected).
Divisions would sell parts to other divisions
at inflated prices to make the division look
good. The parts looked good the whole did not.
14More Problems
- Warranty Accruals (set aside in reserve)some
firms count call center costs as warranty cost
others do not. Some put product recall under
warranty cost others do not. Apples accruals
doubled 11 over 10. Products worse? Caterpillar
accruals dropped although sales rose. Products
better? - Firm adopts its own performance measure, such as
paid memberships or other metric. These dont
meet FASB rules, so SEC does not like themit
wants all companies to report similar data.
Apples to apples, but companies are apples and
oranges.
15What Is a Name Worth? Is the Apple brand worth
33.5 billion or 183 billion?
16Measuring Depreciation
- Depreciation of assetsmultiple methods are used.
All are legitimate, but same situation can look
very different to an observer of the books. - Assume an asset expected to provide net cash flow
of 200,000 at end of year one. Cash flow
expected to decrease 20,000/yr. over 6 year life
when cash flow is 100,000 and asset expected to
have scrap value of 18,000. At 10 discount
rate, present value is 818,000. Assume that is
also the purchase price of asset.
17Which Method Is Best? ( 000)
- Net Depreciation Expense Net Profit
- Year Cash SL SYD DDB SL SYD DDB
- 1 200 133 229 273 67 -29 -73
- 2 180 133 191 182 47 -11
-2 - 3 160 133 152 121 27 8 39
- 4 140 133 114 81 7 26 59
- 5 120 133 76 54 -13 44
66 - 6 100 133 38 36 -33
62 64 - SL Straight Line Depreciation SYD Sum of
Years Digits DDB Double Declining Balance.
Cost is the same, but looks very different. None
are related to real economic value, but
consistency important for managers.
18Impact of One Change in One Cost Rule
- FASB (U.S.) and IASB (Intl.) rules differed for
long-term leases. Leases are now average cost
over life (10-25 years) rather than annual
obligation. Change to IASB mean about 1 trillion
in new costs being recognized (front-loaded) on
the books in the U.S. - Example Whole Foods reported 639 million in
long-term liabilities for 2006. New accounting
rule Must include lease obligations on stores it
does not own that expense rose to 4.8 billion,
reducing return on assets from 7.2 to 3.7 and
increasing debt/equity ratio from 38 to 169.
19Shift from GAAP to IFRS can cause changes in
apparent profitability
- Daimler-Chrysler moved Chryslers books from GAAP
to IFRS. - Result Loss suffered by Chrysler dropped from
1.5 billion to 682 million. - Overall most firms, when shift to IFRS report
higher earnings and higher increase in equity
value of firm. - Note Gradual merging of IFRS and FASB in rules
employed.
20Too Bad Manulife Financial Is Canadian
- Posted 1.28 billion loss in 2010 under Canadian
(international) accounting rules. - It would have posted a 2.2 billion profit under
U.S. rules and shown 16 billion more in
shareholder value.
21Its Magic!
- 100 Largest Corporate Pension Plans had funding
deficit of 390.7 billion at the end of Dec.
2012. Six months later, the deficit was down to
179.3 billion! - Did firms put 210 billion into the funds?
- No, the rate on corporate bonds used to calculate
the present value of payments to retirees rose
0.80 thereby reducing the liability.
22Keep It Straight
- Accounting numbers are very important managerial
tools. - Butdo not think they tell the full story of real
value and real cost. - Managers must know their firm and their market to
know of opportunities that mean changing
opportunities inside an organization and in the
market.