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Title: In Search of Shareholder Value by Andrew Black, Philip Wright, John E. Bachman, Phillip Wright ISBN: 0-273-63027-X Publisher: Financial Times Prentice Hall Pub. Date: 15 December, 1997 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $43.50 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.6 (10 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: Easy to read, well laid out for a complex subject
Comment: Most people hate lots of numbers and formulas. This book handles them well. This book clearly describes the concepts of Shareholder Value. I think this book, and many of its SV kind, are great for corporate financial people who have (mostly) accurate accounting numbers.
But for investors looking in from the outside, SV becomes difficult to implement. For example, what truly is EBITDA? Cash Flow? Which one? These illusive investor numbers make the SV process hard to implement for those of us without access to the real corporate books. Or at least, the process of determining the correct numbers is more difficult than the SV process lets on... in the world where accounting numbers and forecasts can be made to be anything the CEO or CFO want.
All in all, this methodology has brought a revolution to the corporate financial world. Divisions can now be compared with more rigor. This book easily and clearly explains the logic. The authors care about their subject and it shows.
John Dunbar
Rating: 5
Summary: Keep it Simple
Comment: I despair of acedemics intent on picking holes in the acedemic rigour of books on shareholder value. Businesses are run by business managers. They leave "trendy" financial concepts for the FD to trot out to the board, in vain and ad infinitum. Bridge the gap between those who run the business and the cerebral numerates who keep score and you will...create shareholder value...hurray. This book does just that.
Rating: 1
Summary: Mr. Black - I stand by my judment, Your book is unscientific
Comment: Dear Mr. Black, as You did critize my review of your pamphlet, I hereby reply, that I stand by my former judgement. My former review does NOT accuse You of 'selling yourself' to SAP, nor does it question the features of SAP-products, or PWC. However, the scientific content of Your book was so low, that it had to be contradicted. These are my main points of criticism: (1) It does not catch the microeconomic logic behind EVA/CFROI: The concept of microeconomic producers rent. EVA is based on a static concept of economic rent, CFROI on a dynamic concept of economic rent.
(2) EVA implies linear simulation, CFROI non-linear simulation (e.g. experience curve effects).
(3) CFROI can be more easily aligned mit Real Options for strategic decisions.(e.g: the experience-curve-effect is a system dynamics modell for a dynamic Cournot/Nash-Oligopoly, which includes a Real Option for capacity extension during the growth phase of an homogenous product one produces with a substitutional technology with an S-shaped path for performance improvements ). If you try to align EVA with Real Options, you run the danger of creating unrealistic scenarios, which violate the laws of oligopolistic theory .
(4) EVA encourages managers to milk a business as it is based on linear depreciation concepts,nominal values,undervalues growth options, and implies linear simulation.
(5) In my 1998 edition there were indeed many mathematical errors (e.g. On the last past text page there was a formula with missing brackets). Your definitions of EVA and CFROI were grossly simplified, and can lead novices to misunderstandings.
(6) Your book fails to mention, that VBM requires consolidated financial statements for the last 5 years, and it does not explain, how to filter the relevant data. E.G: To use VBM in a senseful way, you must factor out transfer pricing, tax shelter effects, accounting distortions by cost budgeting techniques, the shelter effect of financial leverage e.g. Copelands 'Valuation' covers those topics without shocking novices with overly complex formulas - but your book totally ignores these topics.
(7) Some pictures in Your book have got a striking similarity with some charts in earlier editions of Copelands 'Valuation', but You did not have the courtesy to thank Copeland/McKinsey.
(8) You do not warn the reader about the dangers of VBM: Milking a business. If EVA/economic profit had an effect on industrial productivity, we would expect the UK to have the highest productivity in the world, because economic profit was invented by british companies such as BTR and Hanson in the late 1960's. The opposite is true !! In the 1970's the british industry collapsed - because economic profit + primitive linear simulation methods encouraged british managers to milk their companies, keeping prices high and deffering investments, until their assets/market share shrank below minimum-efficient scales.
A chart in Copeland 'Valuation' shows, that in the 1970/1980#s british productivity stagnated both in absolute and relative terms - while german and japanese companies manged to catch up.
Michael Gould "Corporate Level Strategy" ( a Boston Consulting Group publication which dates back to 1994) describes in much detail, how your 'financial controll style' encouraged BTR and Hanson to withdraw from high technology, to burn out assets and employes, to defer any investment in quality, research and education. Poorly applied Economic-Profit-Models were not the only reason for Great Britains industrial decline, but they did reinforce other problems: notoriously confrontational labour-relations and a poor level of professional education. If a CEO milks his company, cutting down investment in education/new machinery, his labour union will retaliate and do the same,asking for higher wages.
Summary: Your book has no scientific value and proposes a grossly simplified approach to VBM, that leads to desastrous, strategic mistakes. Poor Economic-Profit-Models achieved in no more than two decades, what 6 years of incessant bombing by the German Luftwaffe in world war two did NOT achieve: The total desindustrialisation of Great Britain. An industrial heritage created over a period of 100 years was sold off for a few years of high shareholder value.
Does that mean, that VBM is nefarious ? No, it does not.
VBM has got a future, if you ask real experts to simulate CFROI with system dynamics models and Real Options. CFROI, real options and system dynamics were first applied by the Boston Consulting Group back in the early 1970's - about 30 years ago. Therefore I stand by my judgement: Your book is dangerous and not scientific.
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Title: Creating Shareholder Value: A Guide for Managers and Investors by Alfred Rappaport ISBN: 0684844109 Publisher: Free Press Pub. Date: December, 1997 List Price(USD): $35.00 |
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Title: The Quest for Value by G. Bennett Stewart ISBN: 0887304184 Publisher: HarperBusiness Pub. Date: 12 February, 1991 List Price(USD): $50.00 |
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Title: VALUE IMPERATIVE : MANAGING FOR SUPERIOR SHAREHOLDER RETURNS by James M. Mctaggart ISBN: 0029206707 Publisher: Free Press Pub. Date: 28 March, 1994 List Price(USD): $40.00 |
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Title: The Value Mandate: Maximizing Shareholder Value Across the Corporation by Peter J. Clark, Stephen Neill ISBN: 081440605X Publisher: AMACOM Pub. Date: December, 2000 List Price(USD): $40.00 |
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