INVESTMENT ANALYSIS OR CAPITAL BUDGETING. What is Capital Budgeting? THE PROCESS OF PLANNING EXPENDITURES ON ASSETS WHOSE RETURN WILL EXTEND BEYOND ONE.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Capital Budgeting.
Advertisements

MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
Copyright © 2008 Prentice Hall All rights reserved 9-1 Capital Investment Decisions and the Time Value of Money Chapter 9.
Capital Budgeting: To Invest or Not To Invest  Capital Budgeting Decision –usually involves long-term and high initial cost projects. –Invest if a project’s.
© John Wiley & Sons, 2005 Chapter 12: Strategic Investment Decisions Eldenburg & Wolcott’s Cost Management, 1eSlide # 1 Cost Management Measuring, Monitoring,
1 The Basics of Capital Budgeting: Evaluating and Estimating Cash Flows Corporate Finance Dr. A. DeMaskey Should we build this plant?
Capital Investments Chapter 12. Capital Budgeting How managers plan significant outlays on projects that have long-term implications such as the purchase.
B280F Introduction to Financial Management
© Mcgraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Farm Management Chapter 17 Investment Analysis.
1 FINANCE 7311 CAPITAL BUDETING. 2 Outline 4 Projects 4 Investment Criteria 4 NPV v. IRR 4 Sources of NPV 4 Project Cash Flow Checklist.
CAPITAL BUDGETING TECHNIQUES
Capital Investment Analysis 28. The Capital Investment Process OBJECTIVE 1: Define capital investment analysis, state the purpose of the minimum rate.
Capital Budgeting Net Present Value Rule Payback Period Rule
Chapter 17 Investment Analysis
Castellanza, 20 th October and 3 rd November, 2010 FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION. Corporate Finance.
EE535: Renewable Energy: Systems, Technology & Economics
1 第四章 資本投資之評估 Evaluating Capital Investment (Capital Budgeting)
Capital Budgeting Evaluation Technique Pertemuan 7-10 Matakuliah: A0774/Information Technology Capital Budgeting Tahun: 2009.
Ch 9 Learning Goals 3. The importance of risk in capital budgeting.
Capital Budgeting MBA Fellows Corporate Finance Learning Module Part I.
CAPITAL BUDGETING AND LEASING Chapter 4. Investment The addition of durable assets to a business Disinvestment is the withdrawal of durable assets from.
Capital Budgeting Investment Rules
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Capital Budgeting Techniques.
Capital Budgeting Decide how to invest money so that its value is maximized.
Investment Decision Rules 04/30/07 Ch. 10 and Ch. 12.
Capital Budgeting Chapter 9 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Measuring Return on Investments: Investment Decision Rules and Project Interactions 02/04/08 Ch. 5 part 2 and Ch. 6.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Chapter Three Opportunity Cost of Capital and of Capital and Capital Budgeting.
Economic Concepts Related to Appraisals. Time Value of Money The basic idea is that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow Why? – Consumption.
Chapter 10 - Cash Flows and Other Topics in Capital Budgeting.
AEC 422 Fall 2014 Unit 2 Financial Decision Making.
T9.1 Chapter Outline Chapter 9 Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria Chapter Organization 9.1Net Present Value 9.2The Payback Rule 9.3The Average.
Long-Term Investment Decisions
Capital Budgeting Decisions. What is Capital Budgeting? The process of identifying, analyzing, and selecting investment projects whose returns (cash flows)
CAPITAL BUDGETING INITIAL INVESTMENT PLANNING HORIZON TERMINAL VALUE REQUIRED RATE OF RETURN NET CASH FLOWS.
Ch 12: Capital Budgeting Decision Criteria
Chapter 26 Capital Investment Decisions
Unit 4 – Capital Budgeting Decision Methods
1 Relevant Cash Flows and Other Topics in Capital Budgeting Timothy R. Mayes, Ph.D. FIN 3300: Chapter 10.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting
Capital Budgeting Decisions
課程三 :Investment Decision with Certainty 課程重點 : –Introduce MIRR –Identify the relevant cash flows –An example –Discussing capital rationing –Hoemwork assignment.
1 Capital Budgeting Capital budgeting - A process of evaluating and planning expenditure on assets that will provide future cash flow(s).
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 5th Edition Adelman and Marks 10-1 Pearson Higher Education ©2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital.
Chapter 20. Describe the importance of capital investments and the capital budgeting process.
1 Copyright © 2008 Cengage Learning South-Western Heitger/Mowen/Hansen Capital Investment Decisions Chapter Twelve Fundamental Cornerstones of Managerial.
Exam 3 Review.  The ideal evaluation method should: a) include all cash flows that occur during the life of the project, b) consider the time value of.
The Capital Budgeting Decision Chapter 12. Chapter 12 - Outline What is Capital Budgeting? 3 Methods of Evaluating Investment Proposals Payback IRR NPV.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting Chapter Three Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 4th Edition By Adelman and Marks PRENTICE HALL ©2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital Budgeting.
AGEC 407 Investment Analysis Time value of money –$1 received today is worth more than $1 received in the future Why? –Earning potential –Risk –Inflation.
CHAPTER NO. 4 CAPITAL BUDGETING. 2 Capital and Capital Budgeting Capital: is the stock of assets that will generate a flow of income in the future. Capital.
Capital Budgeting: Decision Criteria
Basics of Capital Budgeting. An Overview of Capital Budgeting.
Copyright: M. S. Humayun Financial Management Lecture No. 12 Capital Rationing Batch 3-5.
0 Corporate Finance Ross  Westerfield  Jaffe Seventh Edition 6 Chapter Six Some Alternative Investment Rules.
Chapter 10 - Cash Flows and Other Topics in Capital Budgeting.
FINANCE FUNCTION PROCUREMENT OF FUND DEPLOYMENT OF FUND DEBTEQUITYLONG TERMSHORT TERM CAPITAL BUDGETING WORKING CAPITAL MGT.
CH 9 NET PRESENT VALUE AND OTHER INVESTMENT CRETERIA.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 Financial & Managerial Accounting 2002e Belverd E. Needles, Jr. Marian Powers Susan Crosson.
Part Three: Information for decision-making Chapter Thirteen Capital investment decisions: Appraisal methods Use with Management and Cost Accounting 8e.
Live as if you were to die tomorrow & Learn as if you were to live for ever.
© John Wiley & Sons, 2011 Chapter 12: Strategic Investment Decisions Eldenburg & Wolcott’s Cost Management, 2eSlide # 1 Cost Management Measuring, Monitoring,
Cash Flows and Other Topics in Capital Budgeting
1 CHAPTER 5 Capital Budgeting Techniques. 2 Introduction to capital budgeting Payback period Discounted payback period Net Present value (NPV) Profitability.
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 5th Edition Adelman and Marks PRENTICE HALL ©2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital Budgeting.
INVESTMENT ANALYSIS OR CAPITAL BUDGETING
Bus 512- Capital Budgeting | Dr. Menahem Rosenberg
Presentation transcript:

INVESTMENT ANALYSIS OR CAPITAL BUDGETING

What is Capital Budgeting? THE PROCESS OF PLANNING EXPENDITURES ON ASSETS WHOSE RETURN WILL EXTEND BEYOND ONE YEAR.

INVESTMENT THE ADDITION OF DURABLE ASSETS TO A BUSINESS

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES MAINTENANCE AND REPLACEMENT OF DEPRECIABLE CAPITAL ITEMS ADOPTION OF COST-REDUCING INVESTMENTS ADOPTION OF INCOME-INCREASING INVESTMENTS A COMBINATION OF THE PRECEDING

STEPS IN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS: 1.IDENTIFY POTENTIALLY PROFITABLE INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES 2.COLLECT RELEVANT DATA ON: CAPITAL OUTLAYS COSTS RETURNS

3.USE AN APPROPRIATE METHOD TO ANALYZE THE DATA. 4.DECIDE WHETHER TO ACCEPT OR REJECT THE INVESTMENT OR SELECT THE TOP RANKING AMONG MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE PROJECTS.

CAPITAL BUDGETING METHODS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING PAYBACK METHOD SIMPLE RATE OF RETURN NET PRESENT VALUE INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN

PAYBACK METHOD THE PAYBACK METHOD GIVES THE NUMBER OF YEARS NECESSARY TO RECOVER THE INITIAL INVESTMENT. DOES NOT ACCOUNT FOR THE TIMING OF CASH FLOWS.

P = I / E WHERE: P = PAYBACK PERIOD IN YEARS I= INITIAL INVESTMENT OUTLAY E = ANNUAL NET CASH FLOWS (CASH RECEIPTS LESS CASH EXPENSES)

SIMPLE RATE OF RETURN EXPRESSES THE AVERAGE ANNUAL NET INCOME AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE AMOUNT INVESTED. THIS MAY BE IN TERMS OF THE INITIAL CAPITAL OUTLAY OR THE AVERAGE AMOUNT INVESTED OVER THE USEFUL LIFE OF THE INVESTMENT.

RETURN AS A PERCENT OF INITIAL CAPITAL OUTLAY SRR = Y/I WHERE: SRR =SIMPLE RATE OF RETURN Y =AVERAGE ANNUAL NET INCOME (DEPRECIATION TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT) I =INITIAL INVESTMENT OUTLAY

CALCULATION OF ANNUAL NET INCOME Y =(E – D) WHERE: Y =AVERAGE ANNUAL NET INCOME E =TOTAL EXPECTED ANNUAL NET CASH RECEIPTS D= TOTAL ANNUAL DEPRECIATION

STRAIGHT LINE DEPRECIATION D =(INITIAL COST – SALVAGE VALUE) / DEPRECIABLE LIFE

RETURN AS A PERCENT OF AVERAGE AMOUNT INVESTED SRR / = Y/ (I + S)/2 WHERE: I = INITIAL INVESTMENT S = SALVAGE VALUE

NET PRESENT VALUE (NPV) WITH THE NPV, THE CASH FLOWS OF THE INVESTMENT ARE DISCOUNTED BY A MINIMUM ACCEPTABLE COMPOUND ANNUAL RATE OF RETURN.

THE INVESTMENT IS JUDGED TO BE ACCEPTABLE IF THE PRESENT VALUE OF THE NET CASH FLOWS EXCEEDS THE INITIAL INVESTMENT OUTLAY.

NPV = - INV + P 1 /(1+i) + P 2 /(1+i) 2 + …. + P N /(1+i) N + V N /(1+i) N WHERE: INV = INITIAL INVESTMENT P N = ANNUAL NET CASH FLOWS ATTRIBUTED TO THE INVESTMENT V N = SALVAGE VALUE OR TERMINAL INVESTMENT VALUE

N = LENGTH OF PLANNING HORIZON I = THE INTEREST RATE OR REQUIRED RATE-OF-RETURN OR DISCOUNT RATE

INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN (IRR) THE IRR IS THE COMPOUND INTEREST RATE THAT EQUATES THE PRESENT VALUE OF THE FUTURE NET CASH FLOWS WITH THE INITIAL OUTLAY. OR IN OTHER WORDS THE DISCOUNT RATE THAT GIVES A NPV = ZERO

BOTH THE NPV AND IRR TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY. THE PURPOSE OF THESE INVESTMENT ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES IS TO EVALUATE THE ACCEPTABILITY OF INVESTMENTS RELATIVE TO AN ACCEPTABLE RATE OF RETURN.

COMPARING NPV AND IRR AS THE DISCOUNT RATE USED TO CALCULATE NET PRESENT VALUE IS INCREASED THE NPV WILL DECREASE THE IRR IS THE DISCOUNT RATE THAT GIVES A NPV OF ZERO

REINVESTMENT ASSUMPTION THE IRR METHOD IMPLICITLY ASSUMES THAT NET CASH INFLOWS FROM AN INVESTMENT ARE REINVESTED TO EARN THE SAME RATE AS THE INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN. THE NPV METHOD ASSUMES THAT NET CASH INFLOWS CAN BE REINVESTED AT THE DISCOUNT RATE USED.

WHICH REINVESTMENT RATE IS MORE REALISTIC? THE DISCOUNT RATE USED TO CALCULATE THE NPV HAS THE ADVANTAGE OF BEING CONSISTENTLY APPLIED TO ALL INVESTMENTS BEING EVALUATED.

CASH FLOWS FOR THREE INVESTMENTS YEARINV AINV BINV C 0-20,000 12,0005,80010,000 24,0005,8008,000 36,0005,8006,000 48,0005,8003, ,0005,8001,000 AVG6,0005,8005,600

PAYBACK PERIOD A20000/6000 = 3.33 YEARS B20000/5800 = 3.45 YEARS C20000/5600 = 3.57 YEARS

SIMPLE RATE OF RETURN A( )/5 = /20000 = % B( )/5 = /20000 = 0.099% C ( )/5 = /20000 = 0.088% * Assume that the investment is fully depreciated in 5 years

NET PRESENT VALUE A NPV = /(1.08) /(1.08) /(1.08) /(1.08) /(1.08) 5 + 0/(1.08) 5 NPV = NPV = 2730

NET PRESENT VALUE AND INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN ANPV = 2730IRR = BNPV = 3158IRR = CNPV = 3766IRR = 17.57

WHAT GOES INTO THE DISCOUNT RATE? THE DISCOUNT RATE SHOULD REFLECT THE COST OF CAPITAL OR THE COST OF FUNDS USED TO FINANCE THE BUSINESS. AN INVESTMENT IS NOT ACCEPTABLE UNLESS IT GENERATES A RETURN SUFFICIENT TO COVER THE COST OF FUNDS.

THE DISCOUNT RATE CONTAINS THREE COMPONENTS: REAL RISK-FREE RATE RISK PREMIUM INFLATION EXPECTATIONS

WEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF CAPITAL THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF CAPITAL INVESTED IN A BUSINESS: DEBT CAPITAL EQUITY CAPITAL COST OF DEBT COST OF EQUITY

WEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF CAPITAL K c = w d K d + w e K e Where: K c is the weighted average cost of capital w d is the proportion of assets financed with debt K d is the cost of debt capital w e is the proportion of assets financed with equity K e is the cost of equity capital

PROFITABILITY INDEX USED TO ALLOCATE LIMITED CAPITAL AMONG SEVERAL INDEPENDENT PROJECTS PRESENT VALUE OF THE CASH INFLOWS DIVIDED BY THE INITIAL CASH OUTLAY

ANNUITY EQUIVALENT USED TO COMPARE NPVs WITH UNEQUAL LIVES. DETERMINES THE SIZE OF ANNUAL ANNUITY FOR THE ECONOMIC LIFE OF THE INVESTMENT THAT COULD BE PROVIDED BY A SUM EQUAL TO THE PRESENT VALUE OF ITS PROJECTED CASH FLOW STREAM, GIVEN THE COST OF CAPITAL.

ANNUITY EQUIVALENT IS CALCULATED BY SETTING THE NPV OF THE INVESTMENT AS THE PV AND THEN SOLVING FOR THE PMT USING THE SAME PLANNING HORIZON AND DISCOUNT RATE TO DETERMINE NPV.

FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY ONCE YOU HAVE EVALUATED AN INVESTMENT, THE FINANCING OF THE PROJECT SHOULD BE DETERMINED. AFTER-TAX CASH FLOWS MAY NOT BE SUFFICIENT TO MEET DEBT REPAYMENT REQUIREMENTS.