403MSADay18.ppt1 Capital Budgeting Time value of money is a fundamental concept. If the interest rate in the economy is 10%, $1 today is worth $1.10 net.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fin351: lecture 5 Other Investment Criteria and Free Cash Flows in Finance Capital Budgeting Decisions.
Advertisements

© Pearson Education Limited 2008 MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING Cheryl S. McWatters, Jerold L. Zimmerman, Dale C. Morse Cheryl S. McWatters, Jerold L. Zimmerman,
Timothy R. Mayes, Ph.D. FIN 3300: Chapter 9
The Capital Budgeting Decision (Chapter 12)  Capital Budgeting: An Overview  Estimating Incremental Cash Flows  Payback Period  Net Present Value 
Copyright © 2008 Prentice Hall All rights reserved 9-1 Capital Investment Decisions and the Time Value of Money Chapter 9.
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis.
Capital Budgeting Decisions
B280F Introduction to Financial Management
© Mcgraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Farm Management Chapter 17 Investment Analysis.
1 FINANCE 7311 CAPITAL BUDETING. 2 Outline 4 Projects 4 Investment Criteria 4 NPV v. IRR 4 Sources of NPV 4 Project Cash Flow Checklist.
CAPITAL BUDGETING TECHNIQUES
Capital Budgeting Net Present Value Rule Payback Period Rule
2-1 Copyright © 2006 McGraw Hill Ryerson Limited prepared by: Sujata Madan McGill University Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Third Canadian Edition.
ACCT 2302 Fundamentals of Accounting II Spring 2011 Lecture 20 Professor Jeff Yu.
Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria
Chapter 3 Measuring Wealth: Time Value of Money
Chapter 17 Investment Analysis
TIME VALUE OF MONEY Prepared by Lucky Yona.
© 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis.
Key Concepts and Skills
CHAPTER 10 The Basics of Capital Budgeting Omar Al Nasser, Ph.D. FIN
Capital Budgeting Evaluation Technique Pertemuan 7-10 Matakuliah: A0774/Information Technology Capital Budgeting Tahun: 2009.
CAPITAL BUDGETING AND CAPITAL BUDGETING TECHNIQUES FOR ENTERPRISE Chapter 5.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA Copyright.
Classes of External Decisions Investment Decisions Distribution Decisions.
Investment Decision Rules 04/30/07 Ch. 10 and Ch. 12.
Measuring Return on Investments: Investment Decision Rules and Project Interactions 02/04/08 Ch. 5 part 2 and Ch. 6.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Chapter Three Opportunity Cost of Capital and of Capital and Capital Budgeting.
Capital Budgeting Decisions Chapter 14. Capital Budgeting How managers plan significant outlays on projects that have long-term implications such as the.
Economic Concepts Related to Appraisals. Time Value of Money The basic idea is that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow Why? – Consumption.
Topic 9 Time Value of Money.
The Time Value of Money.
Capital Budgeting Chapter 11.
AEC 422 Fall 2014 Unit 2 Financial Decision Making.
Managerial Finance Net Present Value (NPV) Week 5.
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis
Investment Analysis Lecture: 7 Course Code: MBF702.
Return on Investment – Net Present Value Method By R. S. Miolla.
1 Chapter Five Lecture Notes Capital Budgeting. 2 n Capital Budgeting is a process used to evaluate investments in long-term or Capital Assets. n Capital.
Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money
ACCTG101 Revision MODULES 10 & 11 TIME VALUE OF MONEY & CAPITAL INVESTMENT.
Chapter 21 Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis. Project and Time Dimensions of Capital Budgeting.
Investment Appraisal Discounting Methods
Evaluating Financial Investment in IT Projects
Unit 4 – Capital Budgeting Decision Methods
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting
Chapter 6: Time Value of Money
The Capital Budgeting Decision Chapter 12. Chapter 12 - Outline What is Capital Budgeting? 3 Methods of Evaluating Investment Proposals Payback IRR NPV.
TIME VALUE OF MONEY A dollar on hand today is worth more than a dollar to be received in the future because the dollar on hand today can be invested to.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting Chapter Three Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 Capital Budgeting. 2 n Capital Budgeting is a process used to evaluate investments in long-term or Capital Assets. n Capital Assets n have useful lives.
Basics of Capital Budgeting. An Overview of Capital Budgeting.
Financial Planning Skills By: Associate Professor Dr. GholamReza Zandi
CHAPTER 9 Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria.
Capital Budgeting. Typical Capital Budgeting Decisions Capital budgeting tends to fall into two broad categories...  Screening decisions. Does a proposed.
Investment Appraisal. Investment appraisal This refers to a series of analytical techniques designed to answer the question - should we go ahead with.
1 Chapter 5: Essential Formulae in Project Appraisal A Coverage of the Formulae and Symbols Used to Evaluate Investment Projects.
FINANCE FUNCTION PROCUREMENT OF FUND DEPLOYMENT OF FUND DEBTEQUITYLONG TERMSHORT TERM CAPITAL BUDGETING WORKING CAPITAL MGT.
CH 9 NET PRESENT VALUE AND OTHER INVESTMENT CRETERIA.
1 Investment Appraisal Techniques. Investment Appraisal 2 What do you understand by the term Investment Appraisal? Investment appraisal involves a series.
Part Three: Information for decision-making Chapter Thirteen Capital investment decisions: Appraisal methods Use with Management and Cost Accounting 8e.
Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money Net Present Value Internal Rate of Return.
16BA608/FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis
Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis
Chapter 12 - Capital Budgeting
Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis
Lecture: 6 Course Code: MBF702
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis
Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis
Presentation transcript:

403MSADay18.ppt1 Capital Budgeting Time value of money is a fundamental concept. If the interest rate in the economy is 10%, $1 today is worth $1.10 net year, $1.21 two years from today and $1.331 three years from today etc… So, $1.10 next year $1.21 two years from now, $1.331 three years from now are all worth $1 today.

403MSADay18.ppt2 Capital Budgeting Now if I am to get $1.1 next year, $1.21 the year after and $1.331 the third year, what should I be willing to pay for the right to this stream of cash flows assuming that my only other alternative is to put the money in a bank account and get 10% interest? Ans: $3, why? –Each year’s cash inflow is worth a dollar today.

403MSADay18.ppt3 Capital Budgeting If someone wants to sell me this investment for $2.90, my NPV (net present value) of the project is _____ Ans: 10cents. How computed? –The cash inflows are worth $3 in today’s dollars, the outflows are $2.90 in today’s dollars, so the NPV (always in current dollars) is Cash Inflows – Cash Outflows = $0.10.

403MSADay18.ppt4 Capital Budgeting The basic equation of compound interest is shown on p. 96: PV(1+r) n = FV (1+r) n is called the “factor” To get the present value of a stream of cash inflows divide each future inflow amount by the factor for that year (this is called deflating the FV) and add all the deflated inflows … this is the formula on p.97.

403MSADay18.ppt5 Capital Budgeting To get the present value of a stream of cash outflows compute the sum of the deflated cash outflows. To compute NPV of a project subtract PV(outflows) from PV(Inflows). To do the computations by hand you can use special formulas for perpetuities and annuities. We will ignore this. For this course, you should know how to do the computations using a financial calculator.

403MSADay18.ppt6 Capital Budgeting To correctly compute project NPV: –Use cash flows not accounting earnings. Remember to adjust for depreciation (and the tax consequences of depreciation) … see pp –Exclude interest costs from relevant cash flows else you will be double-counting. –Include investment in working capital in funding requirements and discount the required additional investments at future points. –Include opportunity costs, ignore sunk costs.

403MSADay18.ppt7 Capital Budgeting Besides NPV, people also use –Payback period Time taken to earn back the original investment (there is no discounting of any cash flows in this method). This method may be useful when long-term cash flows are uncertain. However it can lead to serious mistakes in project selection since it ignores the “tail” of cash flows beyond the recovery of the initial amount. In effect this method is very conservative and not a good first choice to use.

403MSADay18.ppt8 Capital Budgeting Other measures: –ROI (you know this) –IRR The discount rate that makes the NPV of the project zero. You can compute this on any financial calculator. There may be multiple IRRs for a single project, so this method can produce confusing answers. IRR may be used to prioritize among projects when capital is limited: select projects with the highest IRR till you have used up all your capital. However, this rule can be seriously misleading as well since it assumes that all cash inflows can be invested at the project’s internal rate of return which is an unrealistic assumption.

403MSADay18.ppt9 Capital Budgeting Moral: –Use NPV as the first step in evaluating projects. –If capital is in short supply, try and find the best mix of projects to take using simulation rather than use some arbitrary short-cuts (IRR etc.). –Look at payback period as a second step, especially if the projects are otherwise comparable (in magnitude of investment, life of cash flows). If strategic flexibility in the firm’s investment base matters, payback period is a healthy tool in spite of serious theoretical deficiencies. –In other words, be careful of using only NPV because cash flows in the far future are hard to predict.