A Tutorial on Residual Income Valuation and Value Added Valuation
Kenth Skogsvik ()
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Kenth Skogsvik: Dept. of Business Administration, Stockholm School of Economics, Postal: P.O. Box 6501, S-113 83 Stockholm, Sweden
No 1999:10, SSE/EFI Working Paper Series in Business Administration from Stockholm School of Economics
Abstract:
Two valuation models based on accounting concepts and measurements are specified and discussed in the paper - a "residual income valuation" model and a "value added valuation" model. Given clean surplus accounting, the first model is identical to a model where future expected dividends and a horizon value of owners' equity are discounted to a present value. Similarly, the second model is identical to a free cash flow valuation framework, as specified in the well-known "McKinsey model" (Copeland, Koller & Murrin, 1994). The valuation models being specified in the paper use accounting measures of capital, capital growth and return on capital to calculate a fundamental value of owners' equity. As a certain connection between the required market rate of return ("cost of capital"), the accounting return on capital and capital growth can be expected to hold in the long run, the valuation models provide for some simplification of typical prediction problems inherent in fundamental valuation analysis.
Keywords: Conservative accounting; economic value added; financial ratios; fundamental analysis; residual income; valuation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 25 pages
Date: 1999-10-27, Revised 2002-09-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cfn
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)
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