Professional Documents
Culture Documents
9-1
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Outline
• Capital Budgeting Process
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-2
Chapter Outline
(continued)
• The Average Accounting Return
9-3
Chapter Outline
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-4
Capital
Structure
Dividend Cost of
Policy Capital
Profits or Capital
Losses Budgeting
9-5
Capital
Structure
Dividend Cost of
Policy Capital
Profits or Capital
Losses Budgeting
9-6
Uses of Capital Budgeting
Replace Expand
Maintenance Current Product
or or
Obsolescence Current Service
9-7
Comparison Valuations
Bond
0 1 2 3
P0 C C C
Common Stock M
0 1 2 3
P0 D1 D2 D3 D∞
Project
0 1 2 3
9-10
Bonds, Stocks and Project
Differences
• With bonds and stock our goal is to
determine the value today (P0); our goal
with projects is to determine if we will
exceed our cost with the cash flows
identified.
9-11
Our Task:
To determine if we
should purchase the
project
9-12
And how will we
accomplish our
task?
9-13
B Bring
A All
E Expected
F Future
E Earnings
I Into
P Present
V Value
9-14 T Terms
Just remember:
BAEFEIPVT
9-15
Chapter Outline
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-16
Payback Period
Definition: How long does it take to get the
initial cost back in a nominal
sense?
Computation:
1. Estimate the cash flows
2. Subtract the future cash flows
from the initial cost until the
initial investment has been
recovered
9-17
Project Example
Information
You are reviewing a new project and have estimated
the following cash flows:
Year 0: CF = -165,000
Year 1: CF = 63,120; NI = 13,620
Year 2: CF = 70,800; NI = 3,300
Year 3: CF = 91,080; NI = 29,100
Average Book Value = 72,000
Your required return for assets of this risk level is
12%.
9-18
Project Example - Visual
R = 12%
1 2 3
So….Deal
or No Deal?
9-23
Payback Decision
We need to know “management’s number. “
What does the firm use for the evaluation
of its projects when they use payback?
9-24
Payback Decision
Our computed
payback was 3 years
The firm’s uses 4
years as it’s criteria,
so…
YES, we Accept this
project as we recover
our cost of the
9-25
project early.
Capital Budgeting Decision
Criteria Comparison
Technique Units Accept if:
Payback Time Payback < Mgt’s #
9-26
Good Decision Criteria
We need to ask ourselves the following questions
when evaluating capital budgeting decision rules:
9-29
Payback’s Advantages
• Easy to understand and
compute (you just
subtract!)
• Adjusts for uncertainty
of later cash flows
• Biased toward liquidity
9-30
Payback’s Disadvantages
• Ignores the time value of
money
• Requires an arbitrary cutoff
point
• Ignores cash flows beyond the
cutoff date
• Biased against long-term
projects, such as research and
9-31
development, and new projects
Chapter Outline
• Capital Budgeting Process
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-32
Discounted Payback Period
Definition: How long does it take to get the
initial cost back after you bring all of the
cash flows to the present value.
Computation:
1. Estimate the present value of the cash flows
2. Subtract the future cash flows from the
initial cost until the initial investment has
been recovered
9-33
Discounted Payback
Computation Step 1
R = 12%
1 2 3
9-38
Decision Criteria Test –
Discounted Payback
1. Does the discounted payback rule account for
the time value of money?
• Easy to understand
• Biased towards liquidity
9-40
Discounted Payback’s
Disadvantages
• Requires an arbitrary cutoff point
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-42
Net Present Value
Definition: The difference between the
market value of a project and its cost
Computation:
1. Estimate the future cash flows
9-44
Project Example - NPV
R = 12%
1 2 3
9-45
Net Present Value Computation
Step 1
R = 12%
1 2 3
9-48
Capital Budgeting Decision
Criteria Comparison
Technique Units Accept if:
Payback Time Payback < Mgt’s #
9-52
Decision Criteria Test - NPV
• Does the NPV rule account for the time
value of money?
9-54
Net Present Value
Disadvantages
• Requires the use of the time value of
money, thus a bit more difficult to
compute
• Projects that differ by orders of
magnitude in cost are not obvious in the
NPV final figure
9-55
Calculating NPVs with a
Spreadsheet
• Spreadsheets are an excellent way to
compute NPVs, especially when you have
to compute the cash flows as well.
9-56
• Subtract the initial investment after
computing the NPV
Chapter Outline
• Capital Budgeting Process
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Profitability Index
9-57
Profitability Index
Definition: The PI measures the benefit per unit
cost of a project, based on the time value of money.
It is very useful in situations where you have
multiple projects of hugely different costs and/or
limited capital (capital rationing).
Computation: PI = PV of Inflows
PV of Outflows
9-58
Profitability Index Example
PI = PV of Inflows
PV of Outflows
$177,627 = 1.0765
$165,000
9-60
Profitability Index
Advantages
• Closely related to NPV, generally leading to
identical decisions
9-61
Profitability Index
Disadvantages
9-62
Chapter Outline
(continued)
• The Average Accounting Return
9-63
Average Accounting Return
Definition: The AAR is a measure of the average
accounting profit compared to some measure of
average accounting value of a project. The AAR is
then compared to a required return by the
company.
9-64
Project Example
Information
You are reviewing a new project and have estimated
the following cash flows:
Year 0: CF = -165,000
Year 1: CF = 63,120; NI = 13,620
Year 2: CF = 70,800; NI = 3,300
Year 3: CF = 91,080; NI = 29,100
Average Book Value = 72,000
Your required return for assets of this risk level is
12%.
9-65
Average Accounting Return
Using the figures of our previous example:
1. ($13,620 + 3,300 + 29,100) / 3
2. 46,020/ 3 = $15,340
3. AAR = 15,340 /72,000 = .2131 or 21%
4. If we compare this to our firm’s
requirement of 25%, then we would Reject
this project as the AAR < 25%
9-66
Capital Budgeting Decision
Criteria Comparison
Technique Units Accept if:
Payback Time Payback < Mgt’s #
9-67
Decision Criteria Test - AAR
1. Does the AAR rule account for the time
value of money?
9-68
Average Accounting Return
Advantages
• Easy to calculate
• Needed
information will
usually be
available
9-69
Average Accounting Return
Disadvantages
• Not a true rate of
return; time value of
money is ignored
• Uses an arbitrary
benchmark cutoff rate
• Based on accounting net
income and book values,
not cash flows and
9-70
market values
Chapter Outline
(continued)
• The Average Accounting Return
9-71
Internal Rate of Return
• This is the most important alternative
to NPV
• It is often used in practice and is
intuitively appealing
• It is based entirely on the estimated
cash flows and is independent of
interest rates found elsewhere
9-72
Internal Rate of Return
Definition: It is the discount rate (or required
return) that will bring all of the cash flows into
present value time and total the exact value of the
cost of the project.
9-73
Computing IRR for the
Project
• If you do not have a financial calculator, then this
becomes a trial and error process
• Calculator:
• Enter the cash flows as you did with NPV
9-76
Capital Budgeting Decision Criteria
Comparison
Technique Unit Accept
s if:
Payback Time Payback <
Mgt’s #
Discounted Time Payback <
Payback Mgt’s #
9-80
Mutually Exclusive Projects
Mutually exclusive projects:
If you choose one, you can’t choose the other
Example: You can choose to attend graduate school
at either Harvard or Stanford, but not both
9-81
Mutually Exclusive Projects
Period Project Project B
A
0 -500 -400
1 325 325
9-83
NPV vs. IRR
• NPV and IRR will generally give us the same
decision
• Exceptions:
IRR = 10.11%
and 42.66%
9-85
Conflicts Between NPV and
IRR
• NPV directly measures
the increase in value to
the firm.
• Whenever there is a
conflict between NPV and
another decision rule, you
should
always use NPV!
9-86
Chapter Outline
(continued)
• The Average Accounting Return
9-87
Modified Internal Rate of
Return (MIRR)
Definition: MIRR differentiates itself from IRR in
that the reinvestment rate for the cash flows is
determined by the evaluator. It is the interest rate
that compares the future value of the cash flows
with the cost of the project.
9-88
Modified Internal Rate of
Return (MIRR)
Computation:
Step 1: Take the Cash flows to the end of the
project and add them up; this is labeled the
“terminal value”.
9-89
MIRR Computation Step 1
R = 12%
1 2 3
$ -165,000 TV = $249,554
MIRR: PV = -165,000; FV =
249,554; N = 3; Solve for I
MIRR = 14.79% which is greater than
9-91
12%, therefore ACCEPT the project
Capital Budgeting Decision Criteria
Comparison
Technique Units Accept if:
Payback Time Payback < Mgt’s #
9-93
Capital Budgeting In
Practice
• We should consider several investment criteria
when making decisions
9-95
Ethics Issues II
9-96
Terminology
• Capital budgeting
• Decision criteria
• Project’s cash flows
• Payback
• Discounted Payback
• Net Present Value (NPV)
• Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
• Modified IRR (MIRR)
9-99
Formulas
9-100
Summary – Payback Criteria
Payback period
Length of time until initial investment is recovered
Take the project if it pays back within some specified
period
Doesn’t account for time value of money, and there is an
arbitrary cutoff period
Discounted payback period
Length of time until initial investment is recovered on a
discounted basis
Take the project if it pays back in some specified period
There is an arbitrary cutoff period
9-101
Summary – Discounted Cash
Flow Criteria
Net present value
Difference between market value and cost
Take the project if the NPV is positive
Has no serious problems
Preferred decision criterion
Internal rate of return
Discount rate that makes NPV = 0
Take the project if the IRR is greater than the required return
Same decision as NPV with conventional cash flows
IRR is unreliable with nonconventional cash flows or mutually
exclusive projects
Profitability Index
Benefit-cost ratio
Take investment if PI > 1
Cannot be used to rank mutually exclusive projects
May be used to rank projects in the presence of capital rationing
9-102
Key Concepts and Skills
9-104
What are the most
important topics of this
chapter?
9-107