Abstract

Orientation: Empirical knowledge regarding which financial statement variables are linked to firm value is critical for profitable equity investment. Research purpose: The study examines the impact of earnings before interest and taxes from continuing operations (EBITCOs) and tangible book value (TBV) on firm value variants (enterprise value and market capitalisation) in South Africa. Motivation for the study: The need to determine the impact of book value and operating income on firm value post-global financial crisis motivated this study. Furthermore, conflicting empirical results motivated this investigation to determine if value relevance depends on the measure of firm value used by employing two variants of firm value. Research approach/design and method: A dynamic panel of 50 firms was used, employing an autoregressive distributed lag model in two-step system generalised method of moments (GMM). Main findings: Results showed that EBITCO is value relevant regardless of the firm value variant used. Tangible book value lacks value relevance irrespective of the firm value measure used. Practical/managerial implications: During a takeover bid, investors should use EBITCO in valuing target firms and disregard TBV. New owners in an acquisition are guaranteed value for their money because of the link between EBITCO and enterprise value. Accounting standards setters should maintain the requirement that mandates companies to produce comprehensive financial statements. Company executives should implement strategies that boost EBITCO as a way of maximising shareholder value. Contribution/value-add: Conservative measures of variables were adopted, something rarely done by scholars. Thus, the study contributes to the scant body of knowledge on value relevance that utilises conservative financial statement variable measures.

Highlights

  • The value of a firm to an equity investor is contingent upon the amount of information regarding operating performance of that particular firm that the investor is able to get

  • This study examines the impact of tangible book value (TBV) and earnings before interest and taxes from continuing operations (EBITCOs) on firm value variants on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) following the aftershocks of the 2007 to 2009 global financial crisis (GFC)

  • Whilst the discord between share prices and financial statement variables may be understood because of the negative sentiment associated with the GFC, the trend continued after the crisis period

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The value of a firm to an equity investor is contingent upon the amount of information regarding operating performance of that particular firm that the investor is able to get. In the year 2011, the All-share Index had a return of a mere 2.6% and in the year 2016, it recorded another 2.6% return (FTSE Russell JSE Factsheet) In both years, TBV and EBITCO recorded good positive growth for the majority of firms in the All-share Index. During the other years between 2010 and 2017, the performance of the All-share Index and firm performance are not in tandem This shows a detachment between the source of firm performance information (financial statements) and the outcome variable (share prices or firm value). This detachment is a cause for concern because investors rely on financial statements https://www.jefjournal.org.za

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call