The Economic Value of the R&D Intangible Asset

Posted: 4 Nov 2003

See all articles by Marta Ballester

Marta Ballester

Universidad de Malaga

Manuel Garcia-Ayuso

University of Seville

Joshua Livnat

New York University; Prudential Financial - Quantitative Management Associates

Abstract

This study utilizes firm-specific time-series data to estimate the economic value of the Research and Development (R&D) expenditures that investors consider an asset to the firm. The study uses a modification of the Ohlson (1995) model to estimate the persistence of abnormal earnings, the proportion of current R&D expenditures that represents a source of future benefits to the firm, and the amortization rate of that asset. The parameters are estimated from time-series data of market and book values of equity, earnings, and R&D expenditures. The study further compares the firm-specific estimates with those resulting from an application of a cross-sectional estimation procedure based on all available companies in the sample and industry-specific subsamples. Results indicate the existence of significant differences in some 2-digit SIC code industries between the time-series and the cross-sectional estimates of the parameters and the economic value of the R&D asset. Differences in the capitalization parameter are associated with the growth in R&D, the profitability of the firm, R&D intensity and the concentration of the industry. Differences in the persistence of earnings are related to the concentration ratio. Finally, differences in the estimated economic value of the R&D asset are associated with the profitability of the company as measured by its return on assets. We further compare the associations between the three different estimates of the R&D asset and subsequent stock returns, as well as the contemporaneous difference between the market and book value of companies. Results indicate that the time-series estimates of the R&D asset show stronger associations with both variables, followed by the intra-industry and the cross-industry cross-sectional estimates. Overall, our results provide evidence that market participants behave as if R&D expenditures have significant future economic benefits to the firm, and show that the cross-sectional and time-series approaches followed when assessing its economic value provide significantly different estimates.

Keywords: R&D, Valuation Models, Intangibles, Fundamental Analysis

JEL Classification: M41, G12, G14, O30

Suggested Citation

Ballester Casado, Marta and Garcia-Ayuso, Manuel and Livnat, Joshua, The Economic Value of the R&D Intangible Asset. European Accounting Review, Vol. 12, No. 4, 2003, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=458143

Marta Ballester Casado (Contact Author)

Universidad de Malaga ( email )

Malaga, Málaga 29004
Spain

Manuel Garcia-Ayuso

University of Seville ( email )

Ave. Ramón y Cajal, 1
E-41012 Seville
Spain

Joshua Livnat

New York University ( email )

44 West 4th Street, Suite 10-76
Stern School of Business
New York, NY 10012-1118
United States
212-998-0022 (Phone)
212-995-4004 (Fax)

Prudential Financial - Quantitative Management Associates ( email )

2 Gateway Center
6th Fl.
Newark, NJ 07102
United States

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