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EnCom Corporation The Analysis of Earnings Quality

EnCom Corporation The Analysis of Earnings Quality. Defining Earnings Quality. What criteria would a high quality accounting system satisfy?

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EnCom Corporation The Analysis of Earnings Quality

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  1. EnCom CorporationThe Analysis of Earnings Quality

  2. Defining Earnings Quality • What criteria would a high quality accounting system satisfy? • Accounting rate of return on equity (ROE) would provide good measure of internal rate of return (IRR) on the portfolio of projects that firm is currently invested in. • Book value would provide a good measure of invested capital. • High quality earnings equals ROE times book value under this high quality accounting system.

  3. Stage 1 of EnCom Example • Business is started and engages in operating activities for 5 periods, with data as follows: • initial investment in PP&E of $1,000, with no salvage value • sales/period of $1,200, with half of cash received this period and half received in the following period • gross margin of 40%, with all inventory acquired in the period prior to the one in which it is sold • no other income or expenses • At end of each period, all free cash flow is paid as out as a dividend • discount rate of 10%

  4. Stage 1 Questions 1. What is the total initial investment that is required at the beginning of the first period in order to start EnCom? PP&E + Inventory = $1,000 + 60% of $1,200 = $1000 + $720 = $1,720

  5. Stage 1 Questions 2. Compute the value of EnCom immediately after the initial investment at the beginning of period 1 using the discounted free cash flow method. 3. Compute EnCom’s internal rate of return.

  6. Solution (double click to see computations)

  7. Stage 1 Questions 4. Prepare financial statements (income statements and balance sheets) for EnCom for each of the five periods that it is in business.

  8. Solution (double click to see formulas)

  9. Stage 1 Questions 5. Compare EnCom’s free cash flows and earnings for each of the five periods. Overall, which of the two measures do you think provides the best measure of EnCom’s periodic performance? Why? Earnings, because they provide a more timely and a less noisy measure of periodic performance.

  10. Stage 1 Questions 7. Compute EnCom’s return on equity for each of the five periods. Compare EnCom’s ROE for each period to EnCom’s IRR and provide a qualitative explanation for any major differences. ROE does a reasonable job of approximating IRR in this case. Major exception is in year 5, when ROE is too high. Reason is that straight line depreciation is too conservative, leading to significant understatement of investment and overstatement of ROE with old plant. This phenomenon is often referred to as the ‘old plant trap’.

  11. Stage 2 of EnCom Example • An incremental investment project is available to EnCom, with data as follows: • EnCom can engage in a marketing campaign during period 1, with total marketing costs of $300, payable in cash at the end of period 1. • The marketing project increases cash inflows at the end of periods 1, 2 and 3 by $150 per period. • All other facts remain the same.

  12. Stage 2 Questions 1. Compute the value of EnCom with the incremental project immediately after the initial investment at the beginning of period 1 using the discounted free cash flow method. Should EnCom invest in the incremental project? 2. Compute EnCom’s IRR with the incremental investment project.

  13. Solution (double click to see computations)

  14. Stage 2 Questions 3. Assume that EnCom accounts for the incremental marketing project by expensing all marketing costs in the period that they are incurred. Prepare financial statements for each of the five periods under this accounting assumption. Do you think that this accounting assumption is aggressive, conservative or neutral?

  15. Solution (double click to see formulas)

  16. Stage 2 Questions 4. Assume that EnCom accounts for the incremental marketing project by capitalizing marketing costs and then amortizing them in proportion to the benefits received. Prepare financial statements for each of the five periods under this accounting assumption. Do you think that this accounting assumption is aggressive, conservative or neutral?

  17. Solution (double click to see formulas)

  18. Stage 2 Questions 5. Assume that EnCom accounts for the incremental marketing project by capitalizing marketing costs and then expensing all of these costs in the first period in which no benefits are received from the project. Prepare financial statements for each of the five periods under this accounting assumption. Do you think that this accounting assumption is aggressive, conservative or neutral?

  19. Solution (double click to see formulas)

  20. Stage 2 Questions 6. Which of the above three accounting methods do you think provides the best measure of EnCom’s periodic performance? Why? Amortizing over 3 years, because it matches the costs of the marketing project with the benefits that it generates.

  21. Stage 2 Questions 7.Compute EnCom’s ROE for each of the five periods using each of the above three accounting methods. Explain how each of the different accounting methods impacts EnCom’s ROE. • Immediately expensing the costs temporarily depresses ROE, but leads to inflated ROE in the future. This is conservative accounting. • Write-off of the costs after they no longer yield any benefits temporarily inflates ROE, but leads to depressed ROE in the future. This is aggressive accounting.

  22. Stage 2 Questions 8. Using the insights from the EnCom example, provide a qualitative explanation of the impact of aggressive and conservative accounting on a firm’s ROE relative to its IRR. • Aggressive accounting involves the overstatement of investment. In periods of growth in investment, it leads to inflated ROE, but when growth slows, ROE is depressed. • Conservative accounting involves the understatement of investment. In periods of growth in investment, it leads to depressed ROE, but when growth slows, ROE is inflated.

  23. Stage 3 Questions 1. Provide a separate residual income valuation for EnCom immediately after the start of business using each of the three accounting methods from Stage 2.

  24. Solution (double click to see computations)

  25. Stage 3 Questions 2. In question 1 above, you should have arrived at the same valuation regardless of the accounting method employed. Provide a qualitative explanation as to why the different accounting methods have no impact on the valuation. The accounting technique selected has no effect on cash flows or dividends, and hence has no impact on the valuation. Note that conservative accounting leads to low residual income in earlier years and high residual income in later years. Conversely, aggressive accounting leads to high residual income in earlier years and low residual income in later years.

  26. Exploiting Information in Accruals: Sloan (1996) • Accruals represent the difference between earnings and cash flows, so earnings consists of an ‘accrual component’ and a ‘cash flow component’. • In long run, earnings = cash flows and accruals=0. • Accruals are the less reliable component of earnings, and represent the component that is typically used to manage/manipulate earnings: • Artificially high accruals temporarily inflate earnings and accounting rates of return • Artificially low accruals temporarily depress earnings and accounting rates of return

  27. Measuring Accruals: Sloan (1996) • Sloan’s definition of accruals: Accruals = (DCurrent Assets – DCash) - (DCurrent Liabilities – DST Debt) – Depreciation Expense Note that: Earnings - Cash from Operations = Accruals Deflate by total assets • High Accruals => temporarily high earnings and accounting rates of return • Low Accruals => temporary low earnings and accounting rates of return

  28. Accounting Rates of Return and Earnings: Sloan (1996)

  29. Accounting Rates of Return and Accruals: Sloan (1996)

  30. Accounting Rates of Return and Cash Flows: Sloan (1996)

  31. Future Stock Returns and Accruals: Sloan (1996)

  32. Concluding Comments • Quality of earnings analysis yields significant insights into the sustainability of earnings, and these insights do not appear to be incorporated into stock prices on a timely basis. • Quantitative methods, like those just covered, work well. Detailed fundamental analysis should yield further rewards.

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