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Chapter 6 Capital Budgeting Techniques Sept 2010 Dr. B. Asiri © 2005 Thomson/South-Western
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2 What is Capital Budgeting? The process of planning and evaluating expenditures on assets whose cash flows are expected to extend beyond one year Analysis of potential additions to fixed assets Long-term decisions; involve large expenditures Very important to firm’s future
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3 Generating Ideas for Capital Projects A firm’s growth and its ability to remain competitive depend on a constant flow of ideas for new products, ways to make existing products better, and ways to produce output at a lower cost. Procedures must be established for evaluating the worth of such projects.
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4 Project Classifications Replacement Decisions: Replacement Decisions: whether to purchase capital assets to take the place of existing assets to maintain or improve existing operations Expansion Decisions: Expansion Decisions: whether to purchase capital projects and add them to existing assets to increase existing operations Independent Projects: Independent Projects: Projects whose cash flows are not affected by decisions made about other projects Mutually Exclusive Projects: Mutually Exclusive Projects: A set of projects where the acceptance of one project means the others cannot be accepted
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5 Net Cash Flows for Project S and Project L 1,500 1,200 800 300 400 900 1,300 1,500 ^ Net CashFlows, CF t r edpAExctefte-Tax Year ProjectSPro tL 0$(3,000)$( 0) 1 2 3 4
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6 1. Payback Period: PB The length of time before the original cost of an investment is recovered from the expected cash flows or... How long it takes to get our money back.
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7 Payback Period for Project S = Payback S 2 + 300/800 = 2.375 years Net Cash Flow Cumulative Net CF 1,500 -1,500 800 500 1,200 -300 -3,000 300 800 PB S 01234
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8 = Payback L 3 + 400/1,500 = 3.3 years Net Cash Flow Cumulative Net CF 400 - 2,600 1,300 - 400 900 - 1,700 - 3,000 1,500 1,100 PB L 01234 Payback Period for Project L
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9 Strengths of Payback: Provides an indication of a project’s risk and liquidity Easy to calculate and understand Weaknesses of Payback: Ignores TVM Ignores CFs occurring after the payback period Strengths and Weaknesses of Payback:
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10 2.Net Present Value: NPV Sum of the PVs of Inflows + Outflows Cost is CF 0 and is generally negative. ^ ^ ^
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11 What is Project S’s NPV? k = 10% 1,500 8001,200(3,000) 1,363.64 991.74 601.05 204.90 161.33 300 01234 NPV S =
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12 What is Project L’s NPV? k = 10% 400 1300900(3,000) 363.64 743.80 976.71 1024.52 108.67 1500 01234 NPV L =
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13 Rationale for the NPV method: NPV= PV inflows - Cost = Net gain in wealth. Accept project if NPV > 0. Choose between mutually exclusive projects on basis of higher NPV. Which adds most value?
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14 Using NPV method, which project(s) should be accepted? If Projects S and L are mutually exclusive, accept S because NPV S > NPV L. If S & L are independent, accept both; NPV > 0.
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15 3. Internal Rate of Return: IRR 0123 CF 0 CF 1 CF 2 CF 3 CostInflows IRR is the discount rate that forces PV inflows = cost. This is the same as forcing NPV = 0.
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16 NPV: IRR: Calculating IRR
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17 What is Project S’s IRR? NPV S = IRR S = 13.1% 0 (3,000) IRR = ? 01234 Sum of PVs for CF 1-4 = 3,000 1,5008001,200300
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18 What is Project L’s IRR? NPV L = IRR L = 11.4% 0 IRR = ? 40013009001500 01234 Sum of PVs for CF 1-4 = 3,000 (3,000)
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19 Rationale for the IRR Method: If IRR (project’s rate of return) > the firm’s required rate of return, k, then some return is left over to boost stockholders’ returns. Example: k = 10%, IRR = 15%. Profitable.
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20 IRR acceptance criteria: If IRR > k, accept project. If IRR < k, reject project. Decisions on Projects S and L per IRR If S and L are independent, accept both. IRRs > k = 10%. If S and L are mutually exclusive, accept S because IRR S > IRR L.
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