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Cash Flows in Capital Budgeting Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 17.

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Presentation on theme: "Cash Flows in Capital Budgeting Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 17."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cash Flows in Capital Budgeting Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 17

2 Cash Flows in Capital Budgeting Only incremental amounts are considered Two categories of cash flows Operating activities Activities which occur as a result of business operations during the year Found on the income statement Investing activities Acquisition of long-term assets Cash received from sale of long-term assets

3 Investing Cash Flows in Capital Budgeting  Two primary investing cash flows  Purchase of investment assets at year 0  Cash from the sale of long-term assets  Salvage value is an expected cash flow  If sold at the end of the useful life for the salvage value, no gain or loss will occur

4 Cash Basis Provides: Amounts earned Amounts incurred An indicator of real profits Provides: Amounts earned Amounts incurred An indicator of real profits Provides: Cash inflows Cash outflows Provides: Cash inflows Cash outflows Accrual Vs. Cash Basis Accrual Basis Operations can be based on:

5 Capital Budgeting Assumptions  Assume all revenue is received in the period earned  i.e., Revenue = cash inflows  Assume that all expenses are paid in the same period incurred  i.e., All expenses = cash outflows  Non-cash items that are never paid nor received  Depreciation expense  Amortization expense  Gains on disposal of long-term assets  Losses on disposal of long-term assets

6 Indirect Method of Calculating Operating Cash Flows  Begin with accrual basis net income  Remove items that are not cash flows  Add  Noncash expenses (e.g., depreciation, amortization)  Losses from disposition of long-term assets  Subtract  Gains from disposition of long-term assets Note that basic accruals and deferrals need not be adjusted because of the assumptions made in capital budgeting.

7 Direct Method of Calculating Operating Cash Flows  Also known as the shield method  Calculating cash basis net income  Omit all non-cash amounts  Income taxes will be based on cash basis income before taxes  Add/subtract the tax shields

8 Tax Shields  Tax savings/costs due to reporting expenses that have no cash flow effect  Four common tax shields  Depreciation tax shield  Depreciation expense × tax rate  Amortization tax shield  Amortization expense × tax rate  Loss tax shield  Loss on disposal × tax rate  Gain negative tax shield  Gain on disposal × tax rate Tax savings due to reporting an expense that does not use cash Additional tax cost due to reporting a revenue that does not generate cash Depreciation tax shield = Depreciation expense x income tax rate

9 Operating Cash Flows – Indirect Method 9 FiCo is deciding whether to purchase equipment with a cost of $74,000, an estimated residual value of $6,000, and an estimated life of 8 years. FinTru predicts the equipment will reduce annual payroll costs to $360,000 from the current level of $423,000. Cash operating expenses related to the new equipment are expected to be $41,200 per year. FiCo’s cost of capital is 7.4%, its required rate of return is 8.8%, and its income tax rate is 31%. Calculate annual incremental operating cash flows. Incremental payroll cost savings ($423,000 - $360,000) $63,000 Incremental cash operating expenses (41,200) Incremental depreciation ($74,000 - $6,000)/8 (8,500) Income before taxes 13,300 Income taxes expense (31% x $13,300) (4,123) Incremental net income 9,177 Add depreciation 8,500 Operating cash flows $17,677

10 Operating Cash Flows – Shield Method 10 FiCo is deciding whether to purchase equipment with a cost of $74,000, an estimated residual value of $6,000, and an estimated life of 8 years. FinTru predicts the equipment will reduce annual payroll costs to $360,000 from the current level of $423,000. Cash operating expenses related to the new equipment are expected to be $41,200 per year. FiCo’s cost of capital is 7.4%, its required rate of return is 8.8%, and its income tax rate is 31%. Calculate annual incremental operating cash flows. Incremental payroll cost savings $63,000 Incremental cash operating expenses (41,200) Incremental depreciation (8,500) Income before taxes 13,300 Income taxes expense (4,123) Incremental net income 9,177 Add depreciation 8,500 Operating cash flows $17,677 Incremental payroll cost savings $63,000 Incremental cash operating expenses (41,200) Incremental depreciation (8,500) Income before taxes 13,300 Income taxes expense (4,123) Incremental net income 9,177 Add depreciation 8,500 Operating cash flows $17,677 $63,000 (41,200) -- 21,800 (6,758) 15,042 Cash basis income Depreciation tax shield = $8,500 x 31% = $2,635 2,635 $17,677 Tax savings: $6,758 - $4,123 = $2,635 Tax savings: $6,758 - $4,123 = $2,635

11 11 The End


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