Title: Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria
1Foundations of FinanceArthur J. Keown John D.
MartinJ. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr.
- Chapter 9
- Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria
2Principles Used in this Chapter
- Principle 2 The Time Value of Money A Dollar
Received Today is Worth More Than a Dollar
Received in the Future. - Principle 5 The Curse of Competitive Markets
Why Its Hard to Find Exceptionally Profitable
Projects.
3Capital Budgeting
- Investments in fixed assets
- An approach to source and evaluate profitable
projects - Evaluating the profitability of projects
- Often choosing between one or more projects
4R D
- Typically, a firm has a research development
department that searches for ways of improving
existing products or finding new projects.
5Capital Budgeting
- Payback Period
- Net Present Value
- Profitability Index
- Internal Rate of Return
- Capital Rationing
6Payback Period
- Number of years needed to recover the initial
cash outlay of a capital budgeting project - Deals with cash flows
- Ignores the time value of money and does not
discount these free cash flows back to the
present.
7Payback Period
- Example
- Project with an initial cash outlay of 10,000
with following free cash flows for 5 years.
YEAR CASH FLOW BALANCE
1 2,000 ( 8,000)
2 4,000 ( 4,000)
3 3,000 ( 1,000)
4 3,000 2,000
5 10,000 12,000
Payback is 3 1/3 years
8Payback Period
- Ignores the time value of money and does not
discount these free cash flows back to the
present.
9Net Present Value or NPV
- Present value of the free cash flows less the
initial outlay - Gives a measurement of the net value of a project
in todays dollars - If NPV gt 0, accept
- If NPV lt 0, reject
10Net Present Value or NPV
- Example Project with an initial cash outlay of
40,000 with following free cash flows for 5
years. - Yr FCF Yr FCF
- Initial outlay -40,000 3 13,000
- 1 14,000 4 12,000
- 2 13,000 5 11,000
- The firm has a 12 required rate of return and
the present value of the FCFs is 47,678.
Subtracting the initial cash outlay of 40,000
leaves an NPV of 7,678. NPVgt0, therefore we
accept.
11NPV
- Examines cash flows, not profits
- Recognizes time value of money
- By accepting only positive NPV projects,
increases value of the firm
12Profitability Index
- Benefit-cost ratio
- Ratio of the present value of the future free
cash flows to the initial outlay - Generates same results as NPV
- PI PV FCF/ Initial outlay
- PI gt 1 accept PI lt 1 reject
13Profitability Index
- A firm with a 10 required rate of return is
considering investing in a new machine with an
expected life of six years. The initial cash
outlay is 50,000.
14Profitability Index
FCF PVF _at_ 10 PV
Initial Outlay -50,000 1.000 -50,000
Year 1 15,000 0.909 13,635
Year 2 8,000 0.826 6,608
Year 3 10,000 0.751 7,510
Year 4 12,000 0.683 8,196
Year 5 14,000 0.621 8,694
Year 6 16,000 0.564 9,024
15Profitability Index
- PI (13,635 6,6087,510 8,196 8,694
9,024) / 50,000 - 53,667/50,000
- 1.0733
- Project PI gt 1
- Therefore, accept.
-
16NPV and PI
- When the present value of a projects cash flows
are greater than the initial cash outlay, the
project NPV will be positive. - PI will also be greater than 1.
- NPV and PI will always yield the same decision
17Internal Rate of Return or IRR
- Discount rate that equates the present value of a
projects future net cash flows with the
projects initial cash outlay - If IRR gt Required rate of return, accept
- IF IRR lt Required rate of return, reject
18IRR and NPV
- If NPV is positive, IRR will be greater than the
required rate of return - If NPV is negative, IRR will be less than
required rate of return - If NPV 0, IRR is the required rate of return.
19IRR
- Purchase 3,817
- Cash flows Yr.11,000, Yr. 22,000, Yr.
33,000 - Discount rate PV
- 15 4,356
- 20 3,958
- 22 3,817
- IRR is between 22 because the NPV equals the
initial cash outlay
20Modified IRR
- Primary drawback of the IRR relative to the net
present value is the reinvestment rate assumption
made by the internal rate of return - Modified IRR allows the decision maker to
directly specify the appropriate reinvestment
rate - MIRRgt required rate of return Accept
- MIRRlt required rate of return Reject
21Capital Rationing
- Limit on the dollar size of the capital budget
- Often a firm may select a set of projects with
the highest NPV subject to the capital
constraint - May preclude accepting the highest ranked project
in terms of PI or IRR
22Ranking Problems
- Size Disparity
- Time Disparity
- Unequal Life
23Ethics in Capital Budgeting
- Ethics do play a role in capital budgeting
- Any actions that violate ethical standards can
cause a loss of trust which can have a negative
and long lasting effect on the firm
24Popularity of Capital Budgeting Techniques
- Percent of Firms Using Each
- Method used Primary Secondary Total
- Method Method Firms
- IRR 88 11 99
- NPV 63 22 85
- Payback 24 59 83
- PI 15 18 33
Source Harold Bierman, Jr.,Capital Budgeting in
1992 A Survey, Financial Management (Autumn
1993)24.
25The Multinational Firm Capital Budgeting
- The key to success in capital budgeting is
finding good projects - Often these projects are overseas in todays
global environment - Joint ventures and strategic alliances are
current trends - Some companies have gt 50 of their revenues from
sales abroad
26How Do Financial Managers Use this Material?
- If you dont take on new projects, a company
couldnt continue to exist - Finding new projects and correctly evaluating
them are key - Whatever decision made results in an investment
in fixed assets - Process often called strategic planning but
involves the Capital Budgeting Process