Shareholder value: Difference between revisions
imported>Doug Williamson (Link with Total shareholder return page.) |
imported>Doug Williamson m (Link with Corporate governance page.) |
||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Corporate finance]] | * [[Corporate finance]] | ||
* [[Corporate governance]] | |||
* [[Corporate value]] | * [[Corporate value]] | ||
* [[Cost of capital]] | * [[Cost of capital]] |
Revision as of 17:37, 28 January 2018
Literally, the value accruing to shareholders.
Shareholder value calculations take account of:
(i) The market value of shares;
(ii) Dividends paid out to the shareholders;
(iii) Capital introduced by the shareholders; and
(iv) Capital returned to the shareholders.
Often the term is used qualitatively to describe the general trend away from focusing on accounts-related measures of performance and towards economic value-based measures of performance.
Shareholder value management emphasises the consequences of management decision-making in terms of resulting market values rather than in terms of purely accounting based measures such as accounting profits or earnings per share.
In simple terms, shareholder value is added or created when the Internal rate of return from the firm's investment projects exceeds the appropriately risk-adjusted Weighted average cost of capital.
See also
- Corporate finance
- Corporate governance
- Corporate value
- Cost of capital
- Dilution
- Earnings per share
- Economic value added
- Internal rate of return
- Market value
- Market value added
- Metric
- Multiples valuation
- Shareholder value analysis
- Total shareholder return
- Value driver
- VBM
- Weighted average cost of capital