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Is Universal Display's Management Creating Value?

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Warren Buffett's partner, Charlie Munger, once said, "I think I've been in the top 5% of my age cohort all my life in understanding the power of incentives, and all my life I've underestimated it. And never a year passes but I get some surprise that pushes my limit a little farther."

When corporate boards use bad incentives for management's pay, disaster often ensues. (Think Lehman Brothers.) Incentives based on singular metrics such as revenue growth, EBITDA, ROE, or earning per share are easily manipulated and gamed. Fortunately, there is a better way: EVA momentum.

Creator Bennett Stewart of EVA Dimensions, who also co-created EVA (economic value added), calls EVA momentum "the only percent metric where more is always better than less. It always increases when managers do things that make economic sense."

So what does this mean for investors? A positive EVA momentum reading means a company has created more value by increasing its EVA while a negative EVA momentum reading means EVA has decreased, signaling less value creation. EVA momentum is one of the few, if not the only, performance measures with such a clear dividing line between good and bad performance.

The best companies, then, create value in excess of their cost of capital, as reflected by positive EVA momentum. The higher the EVA momentum, the faster management is creating value.

Let's look at Universal Display (Nasdaq: PANL  ) and three of its peers to see how effectively they create value. Here are the trailing four quarters' worth of EVA momentum figures for each company over the past three years, and rankings by percentile versus the Russell 3000 for the past 12 months' EVA momentum.

Related Companies

2009 Q1 TFQ

2010 Q1 TFQ

2011 Q1 TFQ

Russell 3000 Percentile

Universal Display (27%) 13.8% (23.9%) 5
LG Display (NYSE: LPL  ) 0.1% (1.1%) 3.8% 70
Cree (NYSE: CREE  ) (2.7%) 11.3% 5.2% 78
Koninklijke Philips Electronics (NYSE: PHG  ) (2.5%) 0.3% 2.2% 59

Source: EVA Dimensions LLC. TFQ = Trailing Four Quarters.

With an EVA momentum of -23.9%, Universal Display's economic value added decreased year over year, placing it in the fifth percentile of all companies in the Russell 3000. All of the three remaining companies had positive EVA momentum over the past 12 months.

Businesses with high EVA momentum are effectively creating value. It will be interesting to see how useful this extremely new metric proves for companies and investors. If it lives up to its promise, EVA momentum will be an essential tool in investors' arsenals.

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Dan Dzombak's musings and articles he finds interesting can be found on his Twitter account: @DanDzombak.

Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Universal Display. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On July 25, 2011, at 2:28 PM, sidneyleejohnson wrote:

    Going out on a limb here but I think there is a high chance that the warrant offsets are interfering with these calculations for PANL. Show us the exact figures used in calculations for EVA: ((1-Tax Rate)* EBIT) - ([Total Assets - Current Liabilities] x WACC).

    In particular PANL has no debt so what was the cost of Equity used for WACC? Frankly I think the WACC formula is so open to artistic interpretation that it renders this equation largely into the realm of pure fantasy. Only when one uses the same approach repeatedly for WACC across the universe would it bring the equation back into remotely useful:

    However given that there are 3 options:

    Use a flat rate, such as your own required rate of return.

    Take a page from Warren Buffett and use the 5-year or 10-year treasury rate plus four to seven points.

    Use the capital asset pricing model to calculate the cost of equity.

    How do we know that the figures for PANL are nothing but pure imagination?

  • Report this Comment On July 25, 2011, at 2:38 PM, sidneyleejohnson wrote:

    PS. CAPM is also full of it too. Nearly all of the assumptions of CAPM don't hold water in the real world. Money managers are the custodians of their clients dreams. These dreams should not be built upon the pure fantasy land that are the following assumptions of CAPM:

    Aim to maximize economic utilities.

    Are rational and risk-averse.

    Are broadly diversified across a range of investments.

    Are price takers, i.e., they cannot influence prices.

    Can lend and borrow unlimited amounts under the risk free rate of interest.

    Trade without transaction or taxation costs.

    Deal with securities that are all highly divisible into small parcels.

    Assume all information is available at the same time to all investors.

    PSS: The behavior studied in 1965 by Fama/French was nothing but normal... and formed the basis for nearly all of MPT. Its time to throw this false conclusions and its prophets out of their ivory and sometimes gold towers...

  • Report this Comment On July 25, 2011, at 2:40 PM, sidneyleejohnson wrote:

    sorry the above remarks meant to include

    "All investors:" at the top of assumptions.

    Reference:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_asset_pricing_model

  • Report this Comment On July 25, 2011, at 2:42 PM, sidneyleejohnson wrote:

    If you throw out CAPM you are either left with a completely arbitrary number or Buffet's approach which seems to rely upon a really twisted treasury market (QE1/2/3?) at the moment. It all sounds good in theory until you dive into the details...

    and stare the devil in the face.

  • Report this Comment On July 25, 2011, at 2:45 PM, sidneyleejohnson wrote:

    Lastly look carefully at the quarter to quarter swings in the warrant offset amounts. I'm guessing these amounts will throw off these calculations big time based on stock price volatility from q to q. Until the warrants expire this approach is even more likely to be delusional.

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:00 PM
PANL $29.87 Up +0.07 +0.23%
Universal Display CAPS Rating: ***
PHG $17.84 Down -0.11 -0.61%
Koninklijke Philip… CAPS Rating: ****
LPL $8.52 Down -0.15 -1.73%
LG Philips LCD Co.… CAPS Rating: ****

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