Net Operating Profit Less Adjusted Taxes (NOPLAT)
What is NOPLAT?
Net Operating Profit Less Adjusted Taxes (NOPLAT) measures a company’s after-tax operating profit assuming no debt — in other words, its unlevered, after-tax earnings from core operations. It starts with operating income (EBIT) and adjusts the tax expense to reflect taxes related to operating activities, including any adjustments for deferred or overpaid taxes.
Why it matters
- Isolates operating performance from financing decisions (interest, capital structure).
- Serves as the basis for calculating Economic Value Added (EVA) and unlevered free cash flow.
- Widely used in valuation and transaction modeling: discounted cash flow (DCF), mergers & acquisitions (M&A), and leveraged buyout (LBO) analysis.
How to calculate NOPLAT
Basic formula:
* NOPLAT ≈ Operating Income (EBIT) × (1 − Tax Rate)
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Adjustments:
* Add or subtract tax effects from deferred taxes or tax credits to reflect the true tax burden on operating profits.
* Exclude income from non-operating assets; include operating profit generated by invested capital.
Example:
* If EBIT = $200 million and the applicable tax rate = 25%:
* NOPLAT = $200m × (1 − 0.25) = $150m
* If the company has significant deferred tax adjustments, those would be added or subtracted to refine this figure.
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Relationship to other metrics
- EBIT: the starting point — NOPLAT is the after-tax version of EBIT on an unlevered basis.
- NOPAT: often used interchangeably with NOPLAT (Net Operating Profit After Tax), though NOPLAT emphasizes adjustments for deferred taxes.
- Economic Profit / EVA: Economic Profit = NOPLAT − (WACC × Invested Capital). This shows whether operating returns exceed the total cost of capital.
- Free Cash Flow: NOPLAT is a core input for deriving unlevered free cash flow after accounting for reinvestment needs (capex, working capital).
Typical uses
- Valuation models (DCF) to project operating cash flows without the distortion of leverage.
- M&A and LBO analysis to compare target operating performance on a capital-structure-neutral basis.
- Performance measurement and benchmarking across companies or business units.
Limitations and cautions
- Depends on the chosen tax rate and the correct treatment of deferred tax items; differences in accounting or tax timing can distort comparability.
- Excludes non-operating items, so separate analysis is needed for businesses with significant non-operating income or one-time items.
- Requires careful adjustment for unusual tax items and for companies with complex tax structures.
Key takeaways
- NOPLAT is an unlevered, after-tax measure of operating profit that isolates business performance from financing effects.
- It is calculated from operating income net of taxes, with adjustments for deferred or overpaid taxes when appropriate.
- NOPLAT is crucial for valuation, performance measurement, and calculating economic profit and free cash flow.