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Gedalanon BSA-IV
Investment Center
An investment center is a responsibility center having revenues, expenses, and an
appropriate investment base. When a firm evaluates an investment center, it looks at
the rate of return it can earn on its investment base.
Typical investment centers are large, autonomous segments of large companies. The
centers are often separated from one another by location, types of products, functions,
and/or necessary management skills. Segments such as these often seem to be
separate companies to an outside observer. But the investment center concept can be
applied even in relatively small companies in which the segment managers have control
over the revenues, expenses, and assets of their segments.
evaluation bases that include the concept of investment base in the analysis are ROI
(return on investment) and RI (residual income).
Determining the investment base to be used in the ROI calculation is a tricky matter.
Normally, the assets available for use by the division make up its investment base. But
accountants disagree on whether depreciable assets should be included in the ROI
calculation at original cost, original cost less accumulated depreciation, or current
replacement cost. Original cost is the price paid to acquire the assets. Original cost less
accumulated depreciation is the book value of the assets—the amount paid less total
depreciation taken. Current replacement cost is the cost of replacing the present assets
with similar assets in the same condition as those now in use. A different rate of return
results from each of these measures. Therefore, management must select and agree on
an appropriate measure of investment base prior to making ROI calculations or
interdivision comparisons.
Each of the valuation bases has merits and drawbacks, as we discuss next. First, cost
less accumulated depreciation is probably the most widely used valuation base and is
easily determined. Because of the many types of depreciation methods, comparisons
between segments or companies may be difficult. Also, as book value decreases, a
constant income results in a steadily increasing ROI even though the segment’s
performance is unchanged. Second, the use of original cost eliminates the problem of
decreasing book value but has its own drawback. The cost of old assets is much less
than an investment in new assets, so a segment with old assets can earn less than a
segment with new assets and realize a higher ROI. Third, current replacement cost is
difficult to use because replacement cost figures often are not available, but this base
does eliminate some of the problems caused by the other two methods. Whichever
valuation basis is adopted, all ROI calculations that are to be used for comparative
purposes should be made consistently.
Residual Income
When a company uses ROI to evaluate performance, managers have incentives to
focus on the average returns from their segments’ assets. However, the company’s best
interest is served if managers also focus on the marginal returns.
Residual income (RI) is defined as the amount of income a segment has in excess of
the segment’s investment base times its cost of capital percentage. Each company
based on debt costs establishes its cost of capital coverage and desired returns to
stockholders. The formula for residual income (RI) is: