Thursday 17 February 2011

Dupont Analysis – Understanding what factors affect your profitability


By Patrick Mayoh

A lot of you guys had a look at my article on cloud computing and I really appreciate that. I Hope you agreed with me that, this was a must-have IT applications for organizations wishing to save on capital investments, willing to improve their team’s flexibility and mobility, mindful about the environment and overall desiring to be trendy.
This week I am going to talk about something quite different. But it is still about efficiency, that is focussing on the elements around your organizations or units that really matter to your profitability and productivity overall.
The Dupont model or analysis is one of those frameworks that allow you to see the big picture, compare yourself to competitors in your industry and make informed decisions regarding where and why you allocate financial resources as well as how you can improve those elements that add value to your organization.

The big picture

Traditionally organizations across all industries and sectors measure profitability using such key indicators as ROCE (Return on Capital employed), ROE (return on equity – for investors and shareholders) and ROA (return on assets – how well your company uses its assets relative to its overall performance). While each of those ratios provides analysts with key figures or proportions regarding their organizations, they fail to tell the whole story. This is with regard to individual factors affecting each of the ratios. Take for example the ROE, which is obtained by simply dividing the net income from the income statement by the owner’s equity from the balance sheet. What you end up getting is simply a single figure that does not tell you much apart from how well or bad your company is doing. A Dupont analysis will break down the same figure and give you a clearer picture of what affects (positively or negatively) that measure of your organization.
Say you want to understand what affects your shareholders’ profitability using the ROE, the dupont analysis breaks it down in the following manner:
ROE=Net profit/Equity=Net profit-pre-tax profit x Pre-tax profit/EBIT x Ebit/Sales x Sales/Assets x Assets/Equity
The good thing is you do not need to calculate each of the elements that can be found in either your balance sheet or income statement, so just playing with the same figures around means you will understand which of those between EBIT, Sales, Assets or Pre-tax profits affect the performance of your organization and in this case the profitability of your shareholders.
This equally works when you want to look at those elements affecting your return on investments say for one of your flagship product.
ROI= Net income/Total Assets= Net Income/Sales x Sales/Total Assets
Lastly the profit margin that helps you to know how much sales affect your net income can be decomposed in the following manner:
ROE= Net profit/Sales x Sales/Assets x Assets/Equity
Conclusively each of those figures helps you and your team to understand what individual factors between assets, sales, EBIT, Equity, Net profit affect your performance.

Comparing yourself to competitors

In an age of free access to financial information, it is easily possible for you to gain access to key financial information of your competitors. The Dupont analysis will actually help to make a comparison between what affect your performance and theirs. In terms of benchmarking, you have the opportunity as a business to understand how the leaders positively affect the performance of their organization. As a rule of thumb for example, retail businesses have high turnovers and very low profit margins while service industries like banks make high profit margin with very few assets. Looking at such elements will likely make you understand what you need to improve on or what you need to work on within your organization to do just like or if not better than your competitors.
Assuming your shop does not turn any profit at all. Maybe the problem lies in your sales, although you make good turnover, there is the possibility that you could improve your sales or that your assets are underutilised. Likewise if you are in a sector that need very few assets to turn a profit and assuming you are not getting much return, maybe you need to invest just a little bit more in assets in terms of IT applications or machinery to name just a few. All these appear clearer when you use a Dupont analysis.

Decision making

You only want to invest money where it really matters. Therefore the Dupont analysis is a good starting point when you want to decide as an organization where money should go and why. Also it is a good framework when you have to decide what elements to scrap or maybe those ones which need more attention from your team. Maybe weak sales affect your profitability because of a weak marketing strategy or it is possible your assets are underutilised which explains why you still cannot make the most out of them.
Informed decision making is possibly one of the greatest benefit this model yields to manager when they have to decide where to invest, how and why.
To conclude you always need to understand as a manager why organization makes or does not make profit and the Dupont model is a good framework for that.

References

Bodie, Z., Kane A and Marcus, A.J. (2004) Essentials of Investments, 5th edition New-York, Mc Graw Hill
Groppello, A.A. and Nikbakjt, E. (2000) Finance, 4th edition New York, Barron’s Educational Series
Ross, S.A., Westerfield, R. And Jaffe, J. (1999) Corporate Finance, 5th edition Mc Graw Hill

0 comments:

Post a Comment