Category: Value-Creation

Topics related to the value-creation of capital, Return on invested capital (ROIC), Weighted average cost of capital (WACC), and profitability analysis. Value-creation of capital refers to having a positive return on capital after deduction of the cost of capital. The view that profitability originates from internal investment is accompanied by the concept of opportunity costs of capital. Long-lasting productivity is not only the result of sound business management, but also a
token of a reciprocal relation between a firm and providers of capital. Central to this relation are expectations. A distinction can be made between constructive and destructive productivity. The latter involves productivity short of investors’ expectations. Value-creation is a measure of a firm’s
productivity in excess of the cost of capital.

  • Capital Productivity and Value Creation Trends

    Capital Productivity and Value Creation Trends

    The Value Creation of Capital

    This article examines long-term macro trends in capital productivity, the cost of capital, and equity market value creation. The analysis is based on my Master’s thesis, which studies how firm-level economic value creation relates to investment outcomes over time.

    Defining Value Creation

    Value creation – often referred to as Economic Value Added (EVA) – measures the excess return a firm earns on its invested capital. Formally, it is defined as:

    (Return on Invested Capital − Weighted Average Cost of Capital) × Invested Capital

    This framework captures whether firms generate returns above the opportunity cost of capital, making it a more economically meaningful measure than accounting profitability alone.

    Value Creation and Equity Returns: A Structural Break

    Historically, firms with high value creation consistently outperformed firms with low value creation in equity markets. Firms that generated substantial economic value relative to their market capitalization tended to deliver superior long-term returns.

    To formalize this relationship, firms are classified as:

    • Cheap (C): High value creation relative to market capitalization
    • Expensive (E): Low value creation relative to market capitalization

    The return spread between these groups—Cheap Minus Expensive (CME) – historically earned a positive premium.

    However, this relationship has reversed since the global financial crisis of 2008. In the post-2008 period, firms that create relatively little economic value have increasingly outperformed firms that create a lot of value. This represents a clear structural break relative to pre-crisis evidence.

    Data and Methodology

    The analysis is based on firm-level data from approximately 4,000 U.S. publicly listed companies, drawn from 10-Q and 10-K filings in the SEC’s EDGAR database. All reported statistics reflect median firm outcomes, reducing distortion from large-cap outliers.

    Capital Productivity and Cost of Capital

    Two broad macro-level trends emerge across the U.S. equity market:

    1. Capital productivity (ROIC) has declined
    2. The cost of capital (WACC) has increased

    Taken together, these trends imply that firms are earning lower excess returns on capital while facing higher effective financing costs. Despite elevated asset prices, the underlying economics of capital deployment have weakened.

    Decomposing the Cost of Capital

    A decomposition of WACC reveals an important asymmetry:

    • The cost of equity has risen
    • The cost of debt has declined

    While accommodative monetary policy has compressed borrowing costs, equity capital has become increasingly expensive. As a result, firms have strong incentives to rely more heavily on debt financing, even as overall excess returns on capital deteriorate.

    Rising Capital Intensity, Falling Productivity

    As economic profitability declines, firms increasingly sustain aggregate value creation not by improving productivity, but by deploying more capital. In effect, growth in invested capital offsets weaker excess returns. This shift reflects rising capital intensity rather than genuine improvements in operational efficiency.

    Leverage and Share Buybacks

    Low borrowing costs have also enabled firms to substitute equity with debt through leveraged share repurchase programs. These buybacks increase capital payouts to shareholders but do not improve underlying capital productivity. Excess returns on invested capital remain weak, suggesting that financial engineering has replaced productive investment as a primary driver of shareholder returns.

    Operating Income Versus Economic Profitability

    At the aggregate level, operating income – measured using conventional income-statement definitions – appears to trend upward. However, when profitability is measured using cash operating income adjusted for accruals, performance has remained largely flat since 2008. This divergence indicates that accounting earnings overstate improvements in true economic performance.

    Summary of Findings

    At the median firm level across U.S. equities:

    • Capital productivity has declined
    • The cost of capital has increased
    • Firms that create relatively little economic value now outperform firms that create substantial value – contrary to historical patterns

    Interpreting the Shift

    Three non-mutually exclusive explanations are consistent with the evidence:

    1. Monetary policy distortions may incentivize capital payouts over long-term investment in productive assets.
    2. Elevated investor risk aversion may suppress returns on high-value-creating firms whose payoffs are longer-dated.
    3. A valuation premium on expensive firms may reflect preferences for short-term payouts rather than productivity-enhancing investment, raising the possibility of a valuation bubble.

    Key Takeaways

    • Economic value creation has weakened despite rising market valuations
    • Capital allocation has shifted away from productivity and toward payouts
    • Current market dynamics represent a sharp departure from historical norms

    Whether this inversion reflects a durable regime change or a transient distortion remains an open – and economically consequential – question.

  • The Value-Creation Pricing Factor: Improving the Fama-French Five-Factor Model

    The Value-Creation Pricing Factor: Improving the Fama-French Five-Factor Model

    Master’s Thesis: Improve the Fama-French Five Factor Model ?

    The Value-Creation Pricing Factor is a metric derived from the distance between a company’s return on capital and its cost of capital. This article summarizes the core idea of the Value-Creation Pricing Factor, as introduced in my Master’s thesis on improving the Fama-French five-factor model.

    What Is the Value-Creation Pricing Factor?

    Definition: The Value-creation Pricing factor measures how effectively a firm generates returns in excess of its cost of capital. Formally, it is based on the concept of Economic Value Added (EVA) – which equals the difference between a company’s Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) and its Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC), multiplied by the invested capital. Wikipedia

    This factor can be interpreted as:

    The amount of economic value a firm creates after compensating all capital providers (both equity and debt). Wikipedia

    This contrasts with traditional accounting profits by explicitly charging capital costs, uncovering whether a firm truly creates value for investors rather than merely reporting accounting gains. Investopedia

    Why It Matters for Asset Pricing

    In my thesis, I examine whether replacing the traditional value factor in the Fama-French five-factor model with the Value-Creation Pricing Factor provides a better explanation of asset returns. In my thesis, I examine whether replacing the traditional value factor in the Fama-French five-factor model with the value-creation pricing factor provides a better explanation of asset returns.

    Key findings

    • Improved explanatory power: Adding the Value-Creation Pricing Factor to asset pricing regressions significantly reduces pricing errors (“alpha”) compared to models without it.
    • Stronger description of returns: The factor enhances explanation of returns for portfolios sorted on characteristics such as size, investment, profitability, and value-creation relative to market equity.
    • Measured pricing anomaly: Stocks with low market equity relative to value-creation – labelled as “Cheap” – have historically outperformed stocks with high market equity relative to value-creation – labelled as “Expensive.”

    This pattern suggests that markets historically have rewarded firms that create strong economic value. The value-creation pricing factor captures this systematic effect better than some traditional factor definitions.

    How It Works

    Value creation and productivity

    • Value creation (EVA): Shows the surplus return a firm generates beyond its cost of capital. Wikipedia
    • ROIC vs WACC: When ROIC exceeds WACC, the company is creating economic value; when it does not, it is destroying value. Financial Modeling Prep
    • Pricing in market terms: Expressing value-creation relative to market equity helps answer questions such as: When is a productive asset expensive? or When is an unproductive asset cheap?

    By quantifying this relationship, the Value-Creation Pricing Factor highlights differences in expected returns linked to fundamental economic performance rather than accounting profit alone.

    Research question

    The central question addressed in the thesis is:

    Does replacing the traditional value factor in the Fama-French model with the Value-Creation Pricing Factor improve the description of asset returns?

    This approach stems from the observation that some small or highly invested firms exhibit return patterns inconsistent with traditional value measures — a phenomenon that may reflect destructive investment behavior rather than genuine value creation.

    Results and Implications

    The results demonstrate that:

    • The Value-Creation Pricing Factor improves return descriptions across multiple portfolio sort specifications.
    • In certain regressions, some traditional risk factors (e.g., investment and size) become redundant when the value-creation pricing factor is included.

    These outcomes suggest the factor captures meaningful systematic variation in returns that conventional models may miss.

    Key Takeaways

    • The Value-Creation Pricing Factor quantifies the difference between real economic output and capital costs.
    • It strengthens asset pricing models by providing deeper insight into how true economic value influences expected returns.
    • Using value-creation rather than traditional value measures can offer better explanatory power in financial research.

    FAQ

    What is Economic Value Added (EVA)?
    EVA is a financial metric that measures a company’s economic profit after charging the cost of capital – calculated as ROIC minus WACC, multiplied by invested capital. Wikipedia

    How does the Value-Creation Pricing Factor improve the Fama-French model?
    By replacing the standard value factor with a metric grounded in economic profitability, the model better explains returns across different portfolio sorts.

    What does ROIC represent?
    ROIC is a profitability ratio that shows how efficiently a firm generates operating profits relative to invested capital. Wikipedia

    Why is WACC important?
    WACC represents the average return investors expect for providing capital; it serves as the benchmark a firm’s returns must exceed to create value. Wikipedia

    Click here for the defense presentation (PDF)

    Click here to see the full thesis (PDF)