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Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria

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Foundations of Finance Arthur J. Keown John D. Martin J. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr. Chapter 9 Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria Principles Used in this ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria


1
Foundations of FinanceArthur J. Keown John D.
MartinJ. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr.
  • Chapter 9
  • Capital-Budgeting Decision Criteria

2
Principles 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.

3
Capital 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

4
R D
  • Typically, a firm has a research development
    department that searches for ways of improving
    existing products or finding new projects.

5
Capital Budgeting
  • Payback Period
  • Net Present Value
  • Profitability Index
  • Internal Rate of Return
  • Capital Rationing

6
Payback 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.

7
Payback 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
8
Payback Period
  • Ignores the time value of money and does not
    discount these free cash flows back to the
    present.

9
Net 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

10
Net 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.

11
NPV
  • Examines cash flows, not profits
  • Recognizes time value of money
  • By accepting only positive NPV projects,
    increases value of the firm

12
Profitability 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

13
Profitability 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.

14
Profitability 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
15
Profitability 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.

16
NPV 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

17
Internal 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

18
IRR 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.

19
IRR
  • 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

20
Modified 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

21
Capital 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

22
Ranking Problems
  • Size Disparity
  • Time Disparity
  • Unequal Life

23
Ethics 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

24
Popularity 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.
25
The 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

26
How 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
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