Post on 15-Dec-2015
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 1
Capital Budgeting
Net Present Value Rule
Payback Period Rule
Discounted Payback Period Rule
Average Accounting Return
Internal Rate of Return
Profitability Index
Practice of Capital Budgeting
Incremental Cash Flow
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 2
Net Present Value (NPV) Rule• Net Present Value (NPV) =
Total PV of future CF’s + Initial Investment
• Estimating NPV:– 1. Estimate future cash flows: how much? and when?– 2. Estimate discount rate– 3. Estimate initial costs
• Minimum Acceptance Criteria: Accept if NPV > 0• Ranking Criteria: Choose the highest NPV
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 3
Assume you have the following information on Project X:
Initial outlay -$1,100 Required return = 10%
Annual cash revenues and expenses are as follows:
Year Revenues Expenses
1 $1,000 $500
2 2,000 1,000Calculate its NPV.
Example
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 4
The Payback Period Rule• How long does it take the project to “pay back” its
initial investment?• Payback Period = number of years to recover
initial costs• Minimum Acceptance Criteria:
– set by management• Disadvantages
– Ignores the time value of money– Ignores cash flows after the payback period– Biased against long-term projects
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 5
Initial outlay -$1,000
Year Cash flow
1 $200
2 400 3 600
Accumulated
Year Cash flow
1 2 3
Payback period =
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 6
Discounted Payback Period Rule
• How long does it take the project to “pay back” its initial investment taking the time value of money into account?
• By the time you have discounted the cash flows, you might as well calculate the NPV.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 7
Initial outlay -$1,000
R = 10%
PV of Year Cash flow Cash flow
1 $ 200 $ 182 2 400 331 3 700 526 4 300 205
Accumulated: Year discounted cash flow
1 $ 182 2 513 3 1,039 4 1,244
Discounted payback period is
Example
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 8
Average Accounting Return Rule
• Another attractive but fatally flawed approach.• Ranking Criteria and Minimum Acceptance Criteria
set by management• Disadvantages:
– Ignores the time value of money– Uses an arbitrary benchmark cutoff rate– Based on book values, not cash flows and market values
• Advantages:– The accounting information is usually available– Easy to calculate
Investent of ValueBook Average
IncomeNet AverageAAR
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 9
Internal Rate of Return (IRR) Rule
• IRR: the discount that sets NPV to zero • Minimum Acceptance Criteria:
– Accept if the IRR exceeds the required return.• Ranking Criteria:
– Select alternative with the highest IRR• Reinvestment assumption:
– All future cash flows assumed reinvested at the IRR.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 10
ExampleConsider the following project:
0 1 2 3
$50 $100 $150
-$200
The internal rate of return for this project is 19.44%
32 )1(
150$
)1(
100$
)1(
50$0
IRRIRRIRRNPV
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 11
NPV Payoff Profile for The Example
Discount Rate NPV
0% $100.004% $71.048% $47.3212% $27.7916% $11.6520% ($1.74)24% ($12.88)28% ($22.17)32% ($29.93)36% ($36.43)40% ($41.86)
If we graph NPV versus discount rate, we can see the IRR as the x-axis intercept.
IRR = 19.44%
($60.00)
($40.00)
($20.00)
$0.00
$20.00
$40.00
$60.00
$80.00
$100.00
$120.00
-1% 9% 19% 29% 39%
Discount rate
NP
V
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 12
Problems with the IRR Approach• Multiple IRRs.
• The Scale Problem.
• The Timing Problem.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 13
Multiple IRRsThere are two IRRs for this project:
0 1 2 3
$200 $800
-$200
- $800
($150.00)
($100.00)
($50.00)
$0.00
$50.00
$100.00
-50% 0% 50% 100% 150% 200%
Discount rate
NP
V
100% = IRR2
0% = IRR1
Which one should we use?
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 14
The Scale ProblemWould you rather make 100% or 50% on your
investments?
What if the 100% return is on a $1 investment while the 50% return is on a $1,000 investment?
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 15
The Timing Problem (page 161)
0 1 2 3
$10,000 $1,000$1,000
-$10,000
Project A
0 1 2 3
$1,000 $1,000 $12,000
-$10,000
Project B
The preferred project in this case depends on the discount rate, not the IRR.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 16
Mutually Exclusive vs. Independent Project
• Mutually Exclusive Projects: only ONE of several potential projects can be chosen, e.g. acquiring an accounting system. – RANK all alternatives and select the best one.
• Independent Projects: accepting or rejecting one project does not affect the decision of the other projects.– Must exceed a MINIMUM acceptance criteria.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 17
Discount rate
2% 6% 10%
14% 18%
60
40200
– 20– 40
Net present value
– 60
– 80
– 100
22%
IRR A IRR B
0
140
12010080
160
Year
0 1 2 3 4
Project A: – $350 50 100 150 200
Project B: – $250 125 100 75 50
26%
Crossover Point
Which project is good?
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 18
HOW TO FIND CROSS POINT
PROJECT A PROJECT B A - B
-350 -250 -10050 125 -75
100 100 0150 75 75200 50 150
12.91% 17.80% 8.07%IRR(A3: A7) IRR(B3: B7) IRR(C3: C7)
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 19
Decision Rule• If required rate of return < crossover return,
take the project with lower IRR• If required rate of return > crossover return,
take the project with higher IRR• Don’t think a project with higher IRR is
always good• Projects with higher NPV is always good
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 20
Profitability Index (PI) Rule
• Minimum Acceptance Criteria: Accept if PI > 1
• Ranking Criteria: Select alternative with highest PI
• Disadvantages: Problems with mutually exclusive investments
• Advantages:– May be useful when available investment funds are
limited
– Easy to understand and communicate
– Correct decision when evaluating independent projects
Investent Initial
FlowsCash Future of PV TotalPI
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 21
Practice of Capital Budgeting
• Varies by industry:– Some firms use payback, others use accounting
rate of return.
• The most frequently used technique for large corporations is IRR or NPV.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 22
Example of Investment RulesCompute the IRR, NPV, PI, and payback period for the following two projects. Assume the required return is 10%.
Year Project A Project B0 -$200 -$1501 $200 $502 $800 $1003 -$800 $150
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 23
Incremental Cash Flows
• Cash flows matter—not accounting earnings.• Sunk costs don’t matter.• Incremental cash flows matter.• Opportunity costs matter.• Side effects like cannibalism and erosion matter.• Taxes matter: we want incremental after-tax cash flows. • Inflation matters.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 24
Cash Flows—Not Accounting Earnings
• Consider depreciation expense.
• You never write a check made out to “depreciation”.
• Much of the work in evaluating a project lies in taking accounting numbers and generating cash flows.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 25
Incremental Cash Flows• Sunk costs are not relevant
– Just because “we have come this far” does not mean that we should continue to throw good money after bad.
• Opportunity costs do matter. Just because a project has a positive NPV that does not mean that it should also have automatic acceptance. Specifically if another project with a higher NPV would have to be passed up we should not proceed.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 26
Incremental Cash Flows
• Side effects matter (page 180)– Erosion
– Synergy
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 27
Estimating Cash Flows• Cash Flows from Operations
– Recall that:
Operating Cash Flow = EBIT – Taxes + Depreciation
• Net Capital Spending– Don’t forget salvage value (after tax, of course).
• Changes in Net Working Capital– Recall that when the project winds down, we enjoy a
return of net working capital.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 28
The Baldwin Company: An Example(page 181)
Costs of test marketing (already spent): $250,000.
Current market value of proposed factory site (which we own): $150,000.
Cost of bowling ball machine: $100,000 (depreciated according to ACRS 5-year life). Salvage value of 30,000.
Increase in net working capital: $10,000. Production (in units) by year during 5-year life of the machine: 5,000, 8,000, 12,000, 10,000, 6,000.
Price during first year is $20; price increases 2% per year thereafter.
Production costs during first year are $10 per unit and increase 10% per year thereafter.
Annual inflation rate: 5%
Tax rate is 34 percent
Working Capital: initially $10,000 changes with sales.
Chapters 6 & 7 – MBA504 29
Key Issues• Dis-regard sunk costs• Consider incremental cash flow – additional cash
flows • Figure out revenue, cost, depreciation, tax, capital
spending, addition to net work capital• Refer to this example when you take advanced
corporate finance to deal with capital budgeting or meet this kind of problem in your work