Team Project 2: Chapter 8: Investment Decision Rules Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
Team Project 2: Chapter 8: Investment Decision Rules Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
Team Project 2: Chapter 8: Investment Decision Rules Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
Chapter 8: Investment
decision rules
Team-2 ITM-2005
Chapter 9: Umbeteeva Amina 8.3 & 9.7
Fundamentals of Capital Sadykova Aiym 8.1 & 9.2
Sekenova Kamila 8.2 & 9.5
Budgeting Kaskin Daniyal 8.6 & 9.4
Chapter 8
Investment decision rules
Introduction to the
chapter 8:
Net present value (NPV) - the Growth rate - the percentage change
difference between the present value of of a specific variable within a specific
cash inflows and the present value of time period.
Cost of capital - the cost of the
cash outflows over a period
company's funds
Mutually Exclusive - a statistical term
Payback Rule
describing two or more events that NPV Rule
cannot happen simultaneously.
Problem 8.1
Net present value (NPV) is the difference between the present value
of cash inflows and the present value of cash outflows over a period
of time. NPV is used in capital budgeting and investment planning to
analyze the profitability of a projected investment or project.
After saving $1500 by waiting tables, you are about to buy a 50-
inch LCD TV. You notice that the store is offering a “one year same
as cash” deal. You can take the TV home today and pay nothing
until one year from now, when you will owe the store the $1500
purchase price.
If your savings account earns 5% per year, what is the NPV of this
offer? Show that its NPV represents cash in your pocket.
01 You are getting something worth
$1500 today (the TV) and in
exchange will need to pay $1500
in one year.
Solution plan
02
You need to compare the
present value of the cost ($1500
in one year) to the benefit today
(a $1500 TV).
Execution
By taking the delayed payment offer, we have extra net cash flows of $71.43
today. If we put $1428.57 in the bank, it will be just enough to offset our $1500
obligation in the future. Therefore, this offer is equivalent to receiving $71.43
today, without any future net obligations
Problem 8.2
Using the payback rule
Payback
The simplest investment rule is the payback
investment rule, which states that you
should only accept a project if its cash flows
The sum of the cash In fact, it will not be until Because the payback
flows for years 1 and 2 year 3 that the cash period for this project
inflows exceed the initial exceeds two years,
$28 × 2 = $56 million, investment Fredrick’s will reject the
which will not cover the project.
$28 × 3 = $84 million.
initial investment of $81.6
million.
Evaluation
While simple to compute, the payback rule requires us to use an arbitrary cutoff period in
summing the cash flows.
Further, also note that the payback rule does not discount future cash flows. Instead, it
simply sums the cash flows and compares them to a cash outflow in the present. In this
case, Fredrick’s would have rejected a project that would have increased the value of the
firm.
Problem 8.3
01 02 03
the cost of capital is the cost of a company's Growth rates refer to the percentage
funds (both debt and equity), or, from an change of a specific variable within a
investor's point of view "the required rate of specific time period. For investors, growth
return on a portfolio company's existing rates typically represent the compounded
securities". It is used to evaluate new projects of annualized rate of growth of a company's
a company. revenues, earnings, and dividends.
Problem
You assume that you would operate
your choice indefinitely, eventually
what to do with it?
leaving the business to your children.
sell it for 220 000$
Bar
Coffee shop
Apparel store
Information about the uses
Initial Cash Flow in the Growth Cost of
Investment First Year (CF1 ) Rate (g) Capital (r)
Solution
Plan Cash flows can be valued as
growing perpetuity, the
present value of the inflows is
The NPV of each investment
will be:
25
20
15
Coffee shop
10
$371.429 Bar
Apparel store
5
$305.882 Selling land
$250.000
0
$220.000
Ranking
Evaluate
All the alternatives have positive NPVs, but you can take
only one of them, so you should choose the one that
creates the most value. Even though the coffee shop has
the lowest cash flows, its lower start-up cost coupled with
its lower cost of capital (it is less risky) make it the best
choice
Problem
Your division at NetIt, a large networking company, has
put together a project proposal to develop a new home
networking router. The expected NPV of the project is $17.7
million, and the project will require 50 software engineers.
NetIt has a total of 190 engineers available, and is unable
to hire additional qualified engineers in the short run.
Problem
Router 17.7 50
Project A 22.7 47
Project B 8.1 44
Project C 14.0 40
Project D 11.5 61
Project E 20.6 58
Project F 12.9 32
Total 107.5 332
Solution
engineers.
In this case, since engineers are our
limited resource, we will use
Router
Project A 0.483
Project B 0.403
0.355
Project C
0.354
Project D 0.350
Project E 0.189
Project F 0.184
Total
If Kellogg pays a 40% tax rate on its pre-tax income, what will it owe in taxes next year without the
new pastry product? What will it owe with the new product?
Solution
Thus, launching the new product reduces Kellogg’s taxes next year by
$184 million - $178 million= $6 million.
Because the losses on the new product reduce Kellogg’s taxable income dollar for dollar, it is
the same as if the new product had a tax bill of negative $6 million.
Problem 9.4
Incorporating Changes in Net
Working Capital
Problem
HomeNet will have no incremental cash or inventory
requirements. However, receivables related to HomeNet
are expected to account for 15% of annual sales, and
payables are expected to be 15% of the annual cost of
goods sold.
Fifteen percent of $13 million in sales is $1.95 million and 15% of $5.5
million in COGS is $825.000. HomeNet’s net working capital
requirements are shown in the following table:
Year 0 1. 2. 3 4. 5
Net Working Capital Forecast ($000s)
Cash Requirements 0 0 0 0 0 0
Inventory 0 0 0 0 0 0
Receivables (15% of Sales) 0 1,950 1,950 1,950 1,950 0
Payables (15% of COGS) 0 -825 -825 -825 -825 0
Net Working Capital 0 1.125 1.125 1.125 1.125 0
Solution
working capital requirements to complete
our estimate of HomeNet’s free cash flow.
In year 1, net working capital increases by
Plan
$1.125 mil- lion. This increase represents a
cost to the firm.
This reduction of free cash flow corresponds
to the fact that in year 1, $1.950 million of the
firm’s sales and $0.825 million of its costs
have not yet been paid.
NPV = FCF/(1+r)ⁿ
FCF - Free cash flow
r - cost of capital
n - year
Problem
Assume that Linksys’s managers believe that the HomeNet
project has risks similar to its existing projects,
for which it has a cost of capital of 12%. Compute the NPV
of the HomeNet project.
Solution
The incremental free cash flows for the HomeNet project are (in $000s):
To compute the NPV, we sum the present values of all of the cash
flows, noting that the year 0 cash outflow is already a present value.
Solution
Book Value = Purchase Price -
Capital Gain = Sale Price - Book Value Accumulated Depreciation
the shutdown of a production line for
a discontinued product
Problem equipment can be sold for a total
price of $50.000
originally purchased 4 years ago for
$500.000
according to the five-year MACRS
schedule
what is the after-tax cash flow you can the marginal tax rate is 35%
expect from selling the equipment?
Use the MACRS schedule to determine
01 the accumulated depreciation.
Solution Plan 03
Determine the capital gain as the sale
price less the book value.
AD = 100.000+160.000+96.000+57.600+57.600 = 471.200
Tax owed:
NPV Rule
while working with mutually exclusive projects
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