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Mutually Exclusive Investments ©Dr. Bradley C. Paul 2002 revised 2009 Note – The concepts covered in these slides can be found in numerous sources dealing.

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Presentation on theme: "Mutually Exclusive Investments ©Dr. Bradley C. Paul 2002 revised 2009 Note – The concepts covered in these slides can be found in numerous sources dealing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mutually Exclusive Investments ©Dr. Bradley C. Paul 2002 revised 2009 Note – The concepts covered in these slides can be found in numerous sources dealing with engineering economics and is therefore considered common knowledge by the author of these slides.

2 Comparative Investment Techniques  For alternatives of similar magnitude  NPV good index  Is scale sensitive  For Portfolio Investing  Economic Efficiency Indicators  IRR for a slash and burn (fluid portfolios)  PVR for max efficiency in a fixed business line  Sometimes picking one investment means not picking another  Implied in bang for the buck investing is that you will be choosing from a wide array of unrelated decisions.

3 The Mutually Exclusive Problem  Investments of different size and significant money not involved will either not be invested or invested at some standard rate  What if deciding to pursue one investment automatically changes the universe of other decisions available  Example – when something is mutually exclusive.

4 Illustrate the Problem  You have $10,000,000 to invest.  You can invest microchips for specialized space shuttle computers  Get PVR of 3.15  Max investment $50,000  You can set up your microchip firm to make gas mileage chips for cars  PVR is 1.92  Max investment $9,950,000  You can’t make your company do both things  Money you don’t invest in the buisiness goes into a general stock fund at PVR 1

5 Straight PVR investor locks onto the high return  Problem is that he made two decisions and only planned for one  NPV for whole portfolio  $50,000 at 3.15 is PV of $157,500  $9,950,000 at 1 PV is 9,950,000  $10,107,500  Other choice  $950,000 at PVR 1.92 is $19,104,000  $50,000 at PVR 1 is $50,000  Total $19,154,000

6 Point  Mutually exclusive picks link decisions together  Need to look at the financial results of the package  Not just lock onto one return number

7 Net Future Value Solution  Take block of money to be invested  Put appropriate amount into each investment  Put the rest into default investment (which could be no investment at all)  Pick an appropriate target time frame for comparison  Do NFV (or NFW for the books terms) on all the alternatives  See which choice gives you the richest portfolio in the end

8 Advantages of NFV  It can compare multiple mutually exclusive alternatives – not just two  It directly measures the bottom line which is what you wanted to maximize anyway  It won’t blow-up with an unconventional cash flow like an IRR could  It doesn’t require standing on your head and drinking a glass of water to decide what it means


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