MVA Calculator
Calculate market value added from market value of capital and invested capital.
Last Updated: May 2026
Corporate Finance
Inputs
Market Value Added
$35,000,000.00
MVA / Invested Capital
38.89%
Market Value
$125,000,000.00
Invested Capital
$90,000,000.00
Calculation Details
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Market value of capital | $125,000,000.00 |
| Invested capital | $90,000,000.00 |
Investment Planning Notice
Results support education and scenario analysis. They do not provide personalized investment, tax, accounting, or legal advice.
Reviewed For Methodology, Labels, And Sources
Every CalculatorWallah calculator is published with visible update labeling, linked source references, and review of formula clarity on trust-sensitive topics. Use results as planning support, then verify institution-, policy-, or jurisdiction-specific rules where they apply.
Reviewed By
Laxman Kumawat, Finance & Engineering Calculator Owner, reviews methodology, labels, assumptions, and trust-sensitive publishing decisions for this topic area.
Review editor profileTopic Ownership
Financial calculators, Engineering calculators, Electrical and HVAC planning calculators, Investment, salary, loan, and technical design-estimate workflows
See ownership standardsMethodology & Updates
Page updated May 2026. Finance and engineering calculators are reviewed when formulas, rate assumptions, or technical references change, and during broader category refreshes.
How to Use the MVA Calculator
Step 1: Set Market value of capital
Start with market value of capital such as $125000000 so the mva calculation has the correct base.
Step 2: Complete the scenario inputs
Add invested capital using the same period and quote convention as your source data.
Step 3: Review MVA
Read the mva result first, then check the supporting values to confirm the formula used the expected inputs.
Step 4: Compare against a benchmark
Compare the result with industry peers, company history, weighted average cost of capital, or analyst estimates.
How This MVA Calculator Works
MVA Calculator applies Market value of capital - Invested capital to the values entered in the form. Percentage inputs are converted to decimals during calculation, while currency, count, and list inputs keep their displayed units.
Corporate finance metrics depend on clean financial statement inputs, consistent period definitions, and capital or tax assumptions. The result should be read with the example inputs and formula reference below so the metric is tied to the exact scenario being modeled.
What You Need to Know
Worked Example Setup
The default setup follows the page scenario: Calculate market value added from market value of capital and invested capital. Start with these values to check the formula, then replace each input with your own source data.
| Input | Example value | How to treat it |
|---|---|---|
| Market value of capital | $125000000 | Use the market value of capital from the same scenario as the other inputs. |
| Invested capital | $90000000 | Use the invested capital from the same scenario as the other inputs. |
Formula Reference
| Metric | Formula | Use |
|---|---|---|
| MVA | Market value of capital - Invested capital | Value created above capital invested |
Formula Terms Explained
The formula is only useful when each term comes from the same scenario. The table below maps the fields in the calculator to the values used in the worked example.
| Formula term | Example value | How the calculator uses it |
|---|---|---|
| Market value of capital | $125000000 | Used directly as the market value of capital term in the scenario. |
| Invested capital | $90000000 | Used directly as the invested capital term in the scenario. |
Worked Example Walkthrough
| Step | Example detail |
|---|---|
| 1. Start with the example inputs | Market value of capital: $125000000; Invested capital: $90000000 |
| 2. Normalize the inputs | The default inputs are used in their displayed units. |
| 3. Preserve list order | No ordered cash-flow or value list is needed for this formula. |
| 4. Apply the formula | MVA = Market value of capital - Invested capital |
| 5. Interpret the output | Read the mva result with the supporting rows from the calculator widget before comparing it with a benchmark. |
When to Use MVA Calculator
| Use case | How it helps |
|---|---|
| Company analysis | Translate statement data into a performance metric. |
| Peer comparison | Compare operating efficiency or value creation across companies. |
| Valuation support | Prepare cleaner inputs for DCF or return-on-capital analysis. |
Interpreting MVA
The output turns accounting or market data into an operating performance, value creation, or trailing-period metric.
The result is most useful when compared with prior periods, peers, cost of capital, or management targets.
Compare the result with industry peers, company history, weighted average cost of capital, or analyst estimates. Accounting definitions vary, so verify whether the source uses EBIT, operating income, invested capital, or adjusted figures.
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Mismatched periods | Trailing, annual, and quarterly figures should not be mixed. |
| Adjusted versus GAAP confusion | Use the same definition across companies. |
| Ignoring capital base | Profit alone does not show how efficiently capital is used. |
Before You Use the Result
| Review point | What to confirm |
|---|---|
| Same-period inputs | MVA is easier to trust when every input uses the same time period, currency, and quote convention. |
| Benchmark selected | Compare the result with industry peers, company history, weighted average cost of capital, or analyst estimates. |
| Risk and cost review | Check taxes, fees, liquidity, downside risk, and data quality before treating the output as an investment decision. |
| Known limitation | Accounting definitions vary, so verify whether the source uses EBIT, operating income, invested capital, or adjusted figures. |
Keep the research moving with NOPAT Calculator, TTM Calculator – Trailing Twelve Months, Discounted Cash Flow Calculator (DCF), and CAGR Calculator.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Calculators
NOPAT Calculator
Calculate net operating profit after tax from operating income and tax rate.
Use NOPAT CalculatorTTM Calculator – Trailing Twelve Months
Calculate trailing twelve months total from the most recent four quarterly values.
Use TTM Calculator – Trailing Twelve MonthsDiscounted Cash Flow Calculator (DCF)
Discount projected cash flows and terminal value to estimate present enterprise value.
Use Discounted Cash Flow Calculator (DCF)CAGR Calculator
Annualize start and end values into a comparable compound growth rate.
Use CAGR CalculatorROI Calculator
Compare net profit, total ROI, annualized ROI, and benchmark delta.
Use ROI CalculatorSources & References
- 1.SEC Investor.gov - Financial Calculators(Accessed May 2026)
- 2.Corporate Finance Institute - Investment and Finance Formulas(Accessed May 2026)
- 3.CFA Institute - Investment Foundations(Accessed May 2026)