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CAPITAL INVESTMENT AND FINANCIAL RISK Chapter 10.

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Presentation on theme: "CAPITAL INVESTMENT AND FINANCIAL RISK Chapter 10."— Presentation transcript:

1 CAPITAL INVESTMENT AND FINANCIAL RISK Chapter 10

2 Present Value  Present Value: the value today of an amount of money in the future  When we are calculating present value, we are discounting.  PV=FV n ÷(1+r) n where n=number of periods and r=rate of return (discount rate)

3 Present Value Using Present Value Table  Calculating present value using financial tables  PV=FV n × PV factor  Where the interest rate and the period intersect is the PV factor

4 Present Value Example What is the present value of a project that is expected to earn a one-time cash flow of $25,400 in 3 years with a discount rate of 9%? PV=FV n ÷(1+r) n =$25,400 ÷ (1+0.09) 3 =$25,400 ÷ (1.295) =$19,614

5 Present Value of an Annuity  Ordinary Annuity: a continuous stream of equal payments made at specific times over a stated period  Present value of an ordinary annuity is found by calculating the present value of each individual payment and then adding all the results together for the sum present value

6 Present Value of an Annuity  Can also use a financial table to find the present value  PV A = A × PVAF  Where A=annuity payment per period and PVAF=present value of annuity factor  Use table intersection of interest rate and period as PVAF  This method can also be used with a stream of unequal payments (see p10.8 for example)

7 Net Present Value (NPV)  The present value of all future cash inflows and outflows at a specified cost of capital minus the initial investment  NPV= -C 0 +(C t ÷(1+r) t )+ … +(C n ÷(1+r) n ) Where C 0 =Initial investment, C t =payment at period t=n, r=discount rate, n=number of periods

8 Net Present Value  Can also use a financial table to find the NPV such as the one on p10.10  Using the NPV rule, if the calculated NPV is positive, the investment should be made

9 Net Present Value Example A business is trying to determine today whether to make an $18,000 investment in a 3-year equipment maintenance project. The business requires a 6% return rate. The business projects to save $6,200 at the end of each of the first two years and $8,900 the third year. Should the business make this investment? NPV= -C 0 +(C t ÷(1+r) t )+ … +(C n ÷(1+r) n ) = -$18,000 + [$6,200÷(1+.06) 1 ] + [$6,200÷(1+.06) 2 ] + [$8,900÷(1+.06) 3 ] = -$18,000 + [$5,849] + [5,518] + [7,473] = $840

10 Capital Budgeting and Expenditures  The planning process a business goes through to determine if projects such as building a new factory or investing in a long-term proposal is worth pursuing  2 Types of Expenditures:  1. Operating expenditures  2. Capital expenditures (focus of capital budgeting)

11 Using the NPV Method  NPV=PV(sum of future net cash flows) – PV(initial investment)  Info needed to evaluate capital investment proposals:  Initial investment  Acceptable rate of return  Differential annual after-tax net cash flows over useful life  Salvage value if any

12 Risk Return Tradeoff  Risk-return trade-off: the idea that the potential return rises with an increase in risk  Used for evaluating the after-tax net cash flows that are part of a capital investment project

13 Cash Flow Analysis  Recognizing any accidental losses in a one-time control cost added to the initial investment and continuously implementing loss control techniques throughout the project  Sensitivity analysis

14 Risk Financing Techniques  The use of hedging to manage cash flows is typical for businesses that are not able to handle fluctuations in their production results  Forward contracts  Future contracts  Call option contracts


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