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Basic Principles of Cash Flow Estimation

The document outlines four key principles of cash flow estimation: 1) Separation principle - the investment and financing sides of a project have separate cash flows. For example, interest payments are considered on the financing side but as a cost on the investment side. 2) Incremental principle - cash flows must be measured incrementally, considering the difference between cash flows with and without the project. Guidelines include considering all incidental effects and opportunity costs. 3) Post-tax principle - cash flows should be measured on an after-tax basis to reflect the investor's perspective. Some firms discount pre-tax cash flows at a higher rate to compensate. 4) Consistency principle - cash flows and discount rates should be
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5K views8 pages

Basic Principles of Cash Flow Estimation

The document outlines four key principles of cash flow estimation: 1) Separation principle - the investment and financing sides of a project have separate cash flows. For example, interest payments are considered on the financing side but as a cost on the investment side. 2) Incremental principle - cash flows must be measured incrementally, considering the difference between cash flows with and without the project. Guidelines include considering all incidental effects and opportunity costs. 3) Post-tax principle - cash flows should be measured on an after-tax basis to reflect the investor's perspective. Some firms discount pre-tax cash flows at a higher rate to compensate. 4) Consistency principle - cash flows and discount rates should be
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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BASIC PRINCIPLES OF CASH FLOW ESTIMATION

o o o o

The following principles are consider in cash flows of the project: Separation principle. Incremental principle. Post-tax principle. Consistency principle.

SEPARATION PRINCIPLE
Different

sides of the project are: Investment side. Financing side. Cash flow associated with both sides.

EXAMPLE:
Financing side Time =0 Cash flow = +1000 Time = 1 Cash flow = -1150
Cost

Investment side Time = 0 Cash flow = -1000 Time = 1 Cash flow = +1200
Rate

of capital =15%

of return =

20%

Cash

flow in investment side does not reflect in financing side. The 15% interest in financing side is reflected in investment side as cost of capital by which rate of return is evaluvated.

INCREMENTAL PRINCIPLE
The

cash flow of a project must be measured in incremental terms. Incremental cash flow is considered with the project and without the project. There are guidelines for this principle which are followed as the base.

GUIDELINES
Consider all incidentals effects. Product cannibalization. Ignore sunk cost. Include opportunity cost Allocation of overhead cost. Estimate net working capital.

POST-TAX PRINCIPLE
Cash flows should be measured on an after tax basis. Some firms may ignore tax payments and compensate this by discounting the pre-tax cash flows at a higher rate than capital of firm. As there is no reliable way of fixing the discount rate.

CONSISTENCY PRINCIPLE
Cash flows and the discount rates applied should be consistent with respect to investor group and inflation. Investor group: The cash flow of a project estimated from investors point of view. Investors view of cash flow is considered after paying the taxes and investment needs.

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