Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry

Many studies have been conducted in the last two decades to answer questions such as whether it is really better to use modern value based measures than the traditional performance measures to gauge corporate financial performance, or which performance measure best explains corporations’ change in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Munmun Mohanty, Sanjib Pattnaik (Corresponding Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Srusti Academy of Management 2016-12-01
Series:Srusti Management Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.srustimanagementreview.ac.in/paperfile/1652952_Information%20Content%20of%20Economic%20Value%20Added-Munmun%20Mohanty%20and%20Sanjib%20Pattnaik-Vol.%20-%20IX%20%20Issue%20II%20Jul%20-%20Dec%202016.pdf
_version_ 1818733086192435200
author Munmun Mohanty
Sanjib Pattnaik (Corresponding Author)
author_facet Munmun Mohanty
Sanjib Pattnaik (Corresponding Author)
author_sort Munmun Mohanty
collection DOAJ
description Many studies have been conducted in the last two decades to answer questions such as whether it is really better to use modern value based measures than the traditional performance measures to gauge corporate financial performance, or which performance measure best explains corporations’ change in market value. While there have been quite a few successful EVA stories are to encourage the EVA users, evidence supporting the rhetoric has been primarily anecdotal. There has not been sufficient empirical research to substantiate the claim that EVA is the best performance measure in terms of value relevance. This study is basically motivated by the claims cited above including the interest in EVA in the business press, increasing use of EVA by firms, increasing interest in EVA among academics and potential interest in EVA among accounting policy makers. We have tried to provide independent empirical evidence on the information content of EVA and two mandated performance measures like earnings and operating cash flow. The first part of analysis uses pooled time series, cross sectional data of 34 listed Indian Banks during the period 2—1-2010 to evaluate the usefulness of EVA and other accounting based performance measures. The relative information content indicate that over this period EVA explains some 27 per cent of variation in stock return which is the maximum compared with the other mandated performance measures in our study. Notwithstanding the obvious importance of earnings figures in value relevance studies, EVA is significant at the margin in explaining variation in stock returns. This would support the potential usefulness of EVA type measures for internal and external performance measures. In the second part of the analysis, the components of EVA are specified as explanatory variables in regression with excess returns. When examining components of EVA (which are shared with closely related performance measures) the after tax interest was found to be the most significant component in explaining stock returns. This was followed by CFO and accruals respectively. However, the capital charge was found to have the least information content.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T23:43:52Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e96996956ef84ac7900eaf68f27f4563
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0974-4274
2582-1148
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T23:43:52Z
publishDate 2016-12-01
publisher Srusti Academy of Management
record_format Article
series Srusti Management Review
spelling doaj.art-e96996956ef84ac7900eaf68f27f45632022-12-21T21:28:22ZengSrusti Academy of ManagementSrusti Management Review0974-42742582-11482016-12-01IXII6171Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking IndustryMunmun Mohanty0Sanjib Pattnaik (Corresponding Author)1Associate Professor, School of Management Studies, Ravenshaw University, Cuttack Email:munmunmohanty@redifmail.comAssociate Professor, School of Management Studies, Ravenshaw University, Cuttack Email:pattnaiksanjib@yahoo.comMany studies have been conducted in the last two decades to answer questions such as whether it is really better to use modern value based measures than the traditional performance measures to gauge corporate financial performance, or which performance measure best explains corporations’ change in market value. While there have been quite a few successful EVA stories are to encourage the EVA users, evidence supporting the rhetoric has been primarily anecdotal. There has not been sufficient empirical research to substantiate the claim that EVA is the best performance measure in terms of value relevance. This study is basically motivated by the claims cited above including the interest in EVA in the business press, increasing use of EVA by firms, increasing interest in EVA among academics and potential interest in EVA among accounting policy makers. We have tried to provide independent empirical evidence on the information content of EVA and two mandated performance measures like earnings and operating cash flow. The first part of analysis uses pooled time series, cross sectional data of 34 listed Indian Banks during the period 2—1-2010 to evaluate the usefulness of EVA and other accounting based performance measures. The relative information content indicate that over this period EVA explains some 27 per cent of variation in stock return which is the maximum compared with the other mandated performance measures in our study. Notwithstanding the obvious importance of earnings figures in value relevance studies, EVA is significant at the margin in explaining variation in stock returns. This would support the potential usefulness of EVA type measures for internal and external performance measures. In the second part of the analysis, the components of EVA are specified as explanatory variables in regression with excess returns. When examining components of EVA (which are shared with closely related performance measures) the after tax interest was found to be the most significant component in explaining stock returns. This was followed by CFO and accruals respectively. However, the capital charge was found to have the least information content.http://www.srustimanagementreview.ac.in/paperfile/1652952_Information%20Content%20of%20Economic%20Value%20Added-Munmun%20Mohanty%20and%20Sanjib%20Pattnaik-Vol.%20-%20IX%20%20Issue%20II%20Jul%20-%20Dec%202016.pdfevainformation contentrelativeregression
spellingShingle Munmun Mohanty
Sanjib Pattnaik (Corresponding Author)
Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
Srusti Management Review
eva
information content
relative
regression
title Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
title_full Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
title_fullStr Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
title_full_unstemmed Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
title_short Information Content of Economic Value Added: Evidence from Indian Banking Industry
title_sort information content of economic value added evidence from indian banking industry
topic eva
information content
relative
regression
url http://www.srustimanagementreview.ac.in/paperfile/1652952_Information%20Content%20of%20Economic%20Value%20Added-Munmun%20Mohanty%20and%20Sanjib%20Pattnaik-Vol.%20-%20IX%20%20Issue%20II%20Jul%20-%20Dec%202016.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT munmunmohanty informationcontentofeconomicvalueaddedevidencefromindianbankingindustry
AT sanjibpattnaikcorrespondingauthor informationcontentofeconomicvalueaddedevidencefromindianbankingindustry