Asset Utilization Analysis
Asset Utilization Analysis
UTILIZATION
ANALYSIS
Chapter 13
CHAPTER 13 OBJECTIVES
Explain how the definitions of
investment, capital and assets affect
asset utilization analysis.
Indicate the significance of return on
investment measures in the analysis of
asset productivity.
Compute return on assets and equity
measures and their components.
CHAPTER 13 OBJECTIVES
Discuss the need for technical
adjustments to return on investment
measures.
Present a preliminary asset utilization
analysis for a company or industry.
OBJECTIVE FOR ANALYZING ASSET
UTILIZATION
Future performance
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
Return on investment is the primary
means for measuring asset utilization
The term investment has multiple
meanings
Its definition is context specific
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
(CONT.)
Asset Valuation
Most assets are measured on the basis
of historical cost
Trend toward more market based
valuations
Revisions only occur when reliable market
data exist
Examples include security investments and
derivative instruments
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
(CONT.)
Reporting limitations affect asset
valuation
Underreported items—for example,
research and development costs
Unreported items—for example, human
capital
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
(CONT.)
Capital is any form of wealth used to produce
additional wealth
Assets are an entities’ capital as defined in its
broadest sense
Shareholders’ equity is a narrower definition of capital
Legal equity is the regulatory view of capital; it is
even more restrictive than shareholders’ equity
definition
An analyst can modify GAAP-based investment
disclosures to gain additional insights about asset
utilization
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
(CONT.)
Asset utilization is a function of how
capital is defined
Return on assets (ROA) and return on
equity (ROE) measure asset utilization
ROA is based on the total asset definition
of capital
ROE is based on the shareholders’ equity
definition of capital
RETURN ON ASSETS
Reports the percentage of income
earned for each dollar invested in an
entity’s resources
Computed as: net income / average
total assets
It is a measure of the productivity of an
enterprise’s total resources
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
Managerial orientation
Analysts use ROA to assess managerial
performance
Measures manager’s ability to create
wealth with its given store of value
Reports their efficiency in creating that
wealth
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
Components of return on assets
Analysts gain greater insight about ROA results by
examining the measure’s components
Profit margin measures the earnings per revenue
dollar
Computed as net income / revenues
Asset turnover measures the revenues produced
per dollar invested in assets
Computed as: revenues / average total assets
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
An infinite number of profit margins and
asset turnover ratios produce an
equivalent ROA (Exhibit 13-1B)
Increasing one ROA component to a
greater extent than a decrease in the
other one increases overall ROA (Exhibit
13-1C)
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
Technical adjustments to return on
assets
Financial leverage
Substitution of fixed-charged financing for
common equity financing
Financial leverage can either increase or
decrease ROA, depending on its cost and
the return on assets
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
Technical adjustments to return on
assets
Debt Cost
Interest expense affects net income
(Exhibit 13-2)
The actual cost of debt is less than the
effective rate of borrowing because interest
expense is tax deductible
RETURN ON ASSETS (CONT.)
Computational procedure for interest
adjustment
Undertaken to eliminate bias in assessing
managerial effectiveness
Adds net interest expense back to net
income in computing overall return on
assets and the profit margin component to
ROA
RETURN ON EQUITY
Reports the percentage of income
earned for each dollar invested by the
owners of an entity
Common shareholder orientation
Analysts use ROE to determine the rate of
earnings produced by the owners’
investment
Measures wealth creation accruing to risk
capital
RETURN ON EQUITY (CONT.)
Return on Equity (ROE) Ratio
Computed as: net income / average
common shareholders’ equity
Disaggregating the ratio into its
components produces more information
RETURN ON EQUITY (CONT.)
Financial structure leverage ratio
A component of the ROE ratio
Computed as: average total assets /
average common shareholders’ equity
It is multiplied by profit margin and asset
turnover (the components of ROA) to
produce ROE
RETURN ON EQUITY (CONT.)
Components of return on equity
The profit margin and asset turnover
(the components of ROA) are multiplied
by the financial structure leverage ratio
to yield ROE
Computed as: ROE = profit margin *
asset turnover * financial structure
leverage ratio
RETURN ON EQUITY (CONT.)
The multiplicative nature of the financial
structure leverage ratio increases ROE if
the profit margin and asset turnover
ratios are positive
The multiplicative nature of the financial
structure leverage ratio decreases ROE
if the profit margin is negative
eSTUFF’S ASSET
UTILIZATION RATIOS
Asset Utilization Ratios 2003 2002 2001
Unadjusted profit margin -0.687% 1.855% 1.750%
Unadjusted asset turnover 1.523 1.418 1.486
Unadj. financial structure leverage 1.534 1.577 1.633
Unadjusted return on assets -1.05% 2.63% 2.60%
Unadjusted return on equity -1.61% 4.15% 4.25%
Adjusted profit margin 0.229% 2.823% 2.750%
Adjusted asset turnover 1.52 1.42 1.49
Adj. financial structure leverage 1.53 1.58 1.63
Adjusted return on assets 0.35% 4.00% 4.09%
Adjusted return on equity -1.61% 4.15% 4.25%
Financial structure index -460.30% 103.64% 103.92%
ADDITIONAL ASSET UTILIZATION
CONSIDERATIONS
Asset impairment
Exists when an asset’s expected cash flow
is less than its book value
Losses on impaired assets are reported as
part of other gains and losses
Judgment is required in determining if and
when an asset is impaired
Some entities attempt to bury impaired
assets as part of restructuring charges
ADDITIONAL ASSET UTILIZATION
CONSIDERATIONS (CONT.)
Segment returns
Companies report revenues, income, and assets of
their business divisions
Management determines what its segments are and
reports on them accordingly
Analysts use segment disclosures to determine how
well various aspects of the enterprise have fared
Segment ROA can be computed
Segment ROE cannot be calculated, due to an
inability to divide shareholders’ equity into segments
ADDITIONAL ASSET UTILIZATION
CONSIDERATIONS (CONT.)
Knowledge-based assets
Knowledge and information increasingly produce
value and wealth
Such items are more difficult to measure than
traditional resources
They are often underreported or unreported on
the balance sheet
Their existence limits the usefulness of return on
investment measures, especially for new economy
firms
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY
Intellectual Asset Factors
Property, plant, and equipment compose a
very small proportion of industry resources
Financial reporting requirements reduced asset
disclosures on the balance sheet
Underreported assets, such as research and
development
Aggressive elimination of other intangibles, such as
goodwill and in-process research and development
Unreported assets, such as human capital
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY (CONT.)
Component purchases and out sourcing
reduce fixed asset requirements
Knowledge-based, relatively small sized
products also decrease demand for
fixed assets
Industry emerged toward product
creation and distribution from product
manufacturing
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY (CONT.)
Return on assets--data indicated diverse
results
Dell provided the highest rate of return on assets
in the industry (Exhibit 13-6)
Gateway demonstrated steady improvement,
except for 1997
Compaq’s poor ROA in 1998 offset an otherwise
steady rate of return
Apple lagged its competition, even in its profitable
years
PC Industry
Annual Return on Assets
40%
30%
20%
10%
%
0%
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
-10%
-20%
-30%
20%
15%
10%
%
5%
0%
Apple Compaq Dell Gateway
-5%
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY (CONT.)
ROA components reflected overall ROA results
Dell increased its profit margin and asset turnover
throughout the period analyzed (Exhibit 13-7A)
The asset turnovers for Gateway, Compaq, and
Apple decreased over time (Exhibit 13-7B)
Apple’s profit margin and asset turn lagged those
of the other firms
Lack of debt financing precluded the need to
adjust ROA and profit margin for the effect of
interest expense on net income (Exhibit 13-9)
PC Industry
Annual Net Profit Margin
10%
5%
0%
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
-5%
%
-10%
-15%
-20%
8%
7%
6%
Number of Times
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY (CONT.)
Return on Equity
None of the four firms were highly leveraged,
due to
Small fixed asset bases
A history of venture equity capital
Substantial retention of earned income
Dell earned substantially higher returns on
common shareholders’ equity than its competition
ANALYSIS OF THE PC
INDUSTRY (CONT.)
The PC industry illustrates the dual nature of
financial leverage (Exhibit 13-11A and 13-
11B)
It can produce returns on equity that are greater
than returns on assets
For example, the equity returns earned by Dell
and Gateway
It can produce ROE that are less than ROA
For example, the negative equity returns earned
by Apple in 1996 and 1997
PC Industry
Annual Returns on Equity
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
%
0%
-20% 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
-40%
-60%
-80%
16%
14%
12%
10%
8%
%
6%
4%
2%
0%
-2% Americas Europe Asia