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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -1 The Investment Timing Decision ◦ Sometimes you have the ability to defer an investment and select a time that is more ideal at which to make the investment decision ◦ The decision rule is to choose the investment date that results in the highest NPV today Example: ◦ You can buy a computer system today for $50,000. Based on the savings it provides to you, the NPV of this investment ~ $20,000 ◦ However, you know that these systems are dropping in price every year ◦ When should you purchase the computer? LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -2 Decision rule for investment timing: Choose the investment date which results in the highest NPV today LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -3 Long-Lived vs. Short-Lived Equipment ◦ Suppose you must choose between buying two machines with different lives. Machines D and E are designed differently, but have identical capacity and do the same job. Machine D costs $15,000 and lasts 3 years. It costs $4,000 per year to operate. Machine E costs $10,000 and lasts 2 years. It costs $6,000 per year to operate. ◦ Which machine should the firm acquire? LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -4 Cash Costs [outflows] in Dollars Project:C 0 C 1 C 2 C 3 PV @ 6% Machine D15444$25.69 Machine E1066-$21.00 We cannot compare the PV of costs of assets with different lives LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -5 For comparing assets with different lives, we need to compare their Equivalent Annual Costs The Equivalent Annual Cost is the cost per period with the same PV as the cost of the machine LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -6 An example of calculating equivalent annual cost Cash Flows in Dollars Project:C 0 C 1 C 2 C 3 PV @ 6% Machine D15444$25.69 Equivalent Annual cost:???$25.69 The equivalent annual cost is calculated as follows: Equivalent Annual Cost= PV of Costs / Annuity Factor = $25.69 / 3 Year Annuity Factor = $25.69 / 2.673 = $9.61 per year LO4
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© 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 -7 If mutually exclusive projects have unequal lives, then you should calculate the equivalent annual cost of the projects Picking the lowest EAC allows you to select the project which will maximize the value of the firm Cash Flows in Dollars Project:PV @ 6% Equivalent Annual Cost D $25.69$9.61 E $21.00$11.45 LO4
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Replacing an old machine ◦ You are operating an old machine that will last two more years before it gives up the ghost. ◦ It costs $12,000 per year to operate. ◦ You can replace it now with a new machine, which costs $25,000 but is much more efficient ($8,000 per year in operating costs) and will last for five years. ◦ Should you replace it now or wait a year? ◦ The opportunity cost of capital is 6 percent. © 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 - 8 LO4
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Costs, $000s Year: 0 1 2 3 4 5 PV at 6% New machine - 25 8 8 8 8 8 58.70 Equivalent 5-year annuity 13.93 13.93 13.93 13.93 13.9358.70 Cash flow will be $13,930 for new machine Cash flow will be $12,000 for old machine Why replace an old machine with a new one that will cost $1930 more to run? Wait the two years © 2012 McGraw-Hill Ryerson LimitedChapter 8 - 9 LO4
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