Value-Based Management (VBM) with Economic Value Added (EVA): A Simple Explanation

Richard Clarke

Value-Based Management (VBM) with Economic Value Added (EVA): A Simple Explanation

What is VBM with EVA?

Value-Based Management (VBM) aligns business decisions with shareholder value creation. Economic Value Added (EVA), a key VBM metric, measures profit after deducting the cost of capital. In the ACCA APM exam, you’ll calculate EVA to assess performance and recommend strategic improvements.

Let’s apply EVA to a manufacturing division.


Key Components of EVA Calculation

EVA shows whether a business earns more than its capital cost:

  1. Net Operating Profit After Tax (NOPAT): Profit after tax, adjusted for non-cash items.
  2. Capital Employed: Total assets used in operations, minus non-interest-bearing liabilities.
  3. Cost of Capital: Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) × Capital Employed.

Formulae

  • NOPAT = Operating Profit × (1 - Tax Rate) (adjust for distortions if needed)
  • Capital Charge = Capital Employed × WACC
  • EVA = NOPAT - Capital Charge

Numeric Example

A manufacturing division’s performance in 2025:

  • Operating Profit: $500,000 (before tax)
  • Tax Rate: 20%
  • Capital Employed: $2,000,000 (assets - current liabilities)
  • WACC: 10% (blend of 6% debt and 15% equity costs)
  • Adjustments: Add back $50,000 depreciation to reflect economic profit.

Step 1: Calculate NOPAT

  • Pre-Adjustment: $500,000 × (1 - 20%) = $500,000 × 0.8 = $400,000
  • Adjusted NOPAT: $400,000 + $50,000 = $450,000 (depreciation added back)

Step 2: Calculate Capital Charge

  • Capital Charge = $2,000,000 × 10% = $200,000

Step 3: Calculate EVA

  • EVA = $450,000 - $200,000 = $250,000

Step 4: Interpret Results

  • EVA ($250,000): Positive, meaning the division creates $250,000 value beyond capital costs.

What Does This Mean?

  • NOPAT ($450,000): Economic profit exceeds accounting profit by including depreciation.
  • Capital Charge ($200,000): Cost of using $2M in capital.
  • Positive EVA: The division adds value, justifying investment.

Management might ask: Can we reduce capital employed? Should we invest more at this return?


Why It Matters for ACCA APM

EVA in VBM tests your ability to:

  • Measure performance beyond traditional profit metrics.
  • Adjust financial data for strategic insights (e.g., NOPAT adjustments).
  • Link results to management decisions (e.g., cost reduction, investment).

Practice with multi-division scenarios or WACC variations to excel in APM!


We use cookies to help make our website better. We'll assume you're OK with this if you continue. You can change your Cookie Settings any time.

Cookie SettingsAccept