1. Foundations. 2. Financial Background: A Review of Accounting, Financial Statements, and Taxes. 3. Cash Flows and Financial Analysis. 4. Financial Planning. 5. The Financial System, Corporate Governance, and Interest. Part II: DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW AND THE VALUE OF SECURITIES. 6. Time Value of Money. 7. The Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds. 8. The Valuation and Characteristics of Stock. 9. Risk and Return. Part III: BUSINESS INVESTMENT DECISIONS--CAPITAL BUDGETING. 10. Capital Budgeting. 11. Cash Flow Estimation. 12. Risk Topics and Real Options in Capital Budgeting. 13. Cost of Capital. Part IV: LONG-TERM FINANCING ISSUES. 14. Capital Structure and Leverage. 15. Dividends. Part V: OPERATIONS ISSUES--WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING. 16. The Management of Working Capital. 17. Corporate Restructuring. 18. International Finance.
Trang 1Chapter 10 - Capital Budgeting
Trang 2Capital Budgeting
A major part of the financial management of the firm
Kinds Of Spending In Business
Short term - to support day to day operations
Long term - to support long lived equipment and projects
Long term money and the things acquired with it are both called capital
Trang 3Capital Budgeting
Capital budgeting involves planning and justifying large expenditures on long-
term projects
– Projects can be classified as:
Replacement – low risk
New venture – high risk
3
Trang 4Characteristics of Business Projects
Project Types and Risk
– Capital projects have increasing risk according to whether they are replacements, expansions or new ventures
Stand-Alone and Mutually Exclusive Projects
– Stand-alone project has no competing alternatives– Mutually exclusive projects involve selecting one project from among two or more alternatives
Trang 5Characteristics of Business Projects
Project Cash Flows
– Reduce projects to a series of cash flows:
– Business projects: early cash outflows and later inflows
– C0 is the Initial Outlay and usually required to get started
5
Trang 6Characteristics of Business Projects
The Cost of Capital
– The average rate a firm pays investors for use of its long term money
Firms raise money from two sources: debt and equity
Trang 7Capital Budgeting Techniques
Payback Period
– How many years to recover initial cost
Net Present Value
– Present value of inflows less outflows
Internal Rate of Return
– Project’s return on investment
Profitability Index
– Ratio of present value of inflows to outflows
7
Trang 8Capital Budgeting Techniques
Payback
Payback period is the time it takes to recover early cash outflows
– Shorter paybacks are better
Payback Decision Rules
– Stand-alone projects
– Mutually Exclusive Projects
Weaknesses of the Payback Method
– Ignores time value of money
– Ignores cash flows after payback period
Trang 9Concept Connection Example 10-1
Payback Period
9
Payback period is easily visualized by the cumulative cash flows
Trang 10Example 10-2: Weakness of the
Payback Technique
Use the payback period technique to choose between mutually
exclusive projects A and B.
Project A’s payback is 3 years as its initial outlay is fully recovered
in that time Project B doesn’t fully recover until sometime in the 4th year Thus, according to the payback method, Project A is
better than B But project B is clearly better because of the large inflows in the last two years
Trang 11NET PRESENT VALUE (NPV)
The present value of future cash flows is what counts
when making decisions based on value
The Net Present Value of all of a project's cash flows is its expected contribution
to the firm's value and shareholder wealth PVs are taken at k, the cost of capital
Calculate NPV using NPV = C0 + C1[PVFk,1] + C2[PVFk,2] + · · · + Cn[PVFk,n]
Outflows are C i with negative values and tend to occur first
NPV: Difference between the present values of positives and negatives
Projects with positive NPVs increase the firm’s value Projects with negative NPVs decrease the firm’s value
n
n 2
2
1
) k 1 (
C
) k 1 (
C )
k 1 (
C
+
+
+ +
+ +
+
0
C
= NPV
Trang 12Net Present Value (NPV)
NPV and Shareholder Wealth
– A project’s NPV is the net effect that it is
expected to have on the firm’s value
– To maximize shareholder wealth, select the capital spending program with the highest NPV
Trang 13Net Present Value (NPV)
Decision Rules
– Stand-alone Projects
NPV > 0 ⇒ accept
NPV < 0 ⇒ reject
– Mutually Exclusive Projects
NPVA > NPVB ⇒ choose Project A over B
13
Trang 14Concept Connection Example 10-3
Net Present Value (NPV)
Project Alpha has the following cash flows
If the firm considering Alpha has a cost of
capital of 12%, should the project be
undertaken?
Trang 15Concept Connection Example 10-3
Net Present Value (NPV)
15
The NPV is found by summing the present value of the cash flows when discounted at the firm’s cost of capital
Since Alpha’s NPV<0, it should
not be undertaken.
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($
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$ 000
,
5
$
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$ 40 594 , 1
$ 90 829
$ 000
,
5
$
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000 , 3
$ ) 7972 (.
000 , 2
$ ) 8929 (.
000 , 1
$ 000
,
5
$
000 ,
+
=
+ +
+
=
+ +
+
Alpha
NPV
Trang 16Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
A project’s IRR is the return it generates on the investment of its cash outflows
– For example, if a project has the following cash flows
The IRR is the interest rate at which the present value of the three inflows just equals the $5,000 outflow
The “price” of receiving
the inflows
Trang 17Defining IRR Through the NPV Equation
At the IRR the PVs of project inflows and
outflows are equal, so NPV = 0
Set NPV=0 and substitute IRR for k
0 = C0 + C1[PVFIRR,1] + C2[PVFIRR,2] + · · + Cn[PVFIRR,n]
IRR is the solution to this equation for a given set of C i
Requires an iterative approach if the Ci are irregular
0 = C 0 +
C IRR
C IRR
C IRR
n n
2
1
) k 1 (
C
) k 1 (
C )
k 1 (
C
+
+
+ +
+ +
+
0
C
= NPV
Trang 18Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
Decision Rules
– Stand-alone Projects
If IRR > cost of capital (k) ⇒ accept
If IRR < cost of capital (k) ⇒ reject
– Mutually Exclusive Projects
IRRA > IRRB ⇒ choose Project A over Project B
Trang 19Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
Calculating IRRs
– Finding IRRs usually requires an iterative, and-error technique
trial-Guess at the project’s IRR
Calculate the project’s NPV using this interest rate
– If NPV = zero, guessed interest rate is the project’s IRR – If NPV > 0, try a higher interest rate
– If NPV < 0, try a lower interest rate
19
Trang 20Concept Connection Example 10-5
IRR – Iterative Procedure
Find the IRR for the following series of cash flows:
If the firm’s cost of capital is 8%, is the project
a good idea? What if the cost of capital is 10%?
Trang 21Example 10-5 IRR – Iterative Procedure
the project’s IRR must be < 12%.
Trang 22Figure 10-1 NPV Profile
A project’s NPV profile is a graph of its NPV vs the cost
of capital It crosses the horizontal axis at the IRR
Trang 23Concept Connection Example 10-5
IRR – Iterative Procedure
23
We’ll try a different, lower interest rate, say 10% At 10%, the project’s NPV is ($184) Since the NPV is still less than zero, we need to try a still lower interest rate, say 9% The following table lists the project’s NPV at different interest rates.
Since NPV becomes positive somewhere between 8% and 9%, the project’s IRR must be between 8% and 9% If the firm’s cost of capital is 8%, the project is marginal If the firm’s cost of capital is 10%, the project is not a good idea.
$130 7
$22 8
($83) 9
($184) 10
($377) 12%
Calculated NPV Interest Rate
Guess
Trang 24Techniques: Internal Rate of Return
(IRR)
Technical Problems with IRR
– Multiple Solutions
Unusual projects can have more than one IRR
The number of positive IRRs to a project depends
on the number of sign reversals to the project’s
cash flows
– The Reinvestment Assumption
IRR method implicitly assumes cash inflows will be reinvested at the project’s IRR
Trang 25Comparing IRR and NPV
NPV and IRR do not always select the same project in mutually exclusive decisions
A conflict can arise if NPV profiles cross in the first
quadrant
In the event of a conflict The selection of the NPV
method is preferred
25
Trang 26Figure 10-2 Projects for Which IRR and
NPV Can Give Different Solutions
At a cost of capital of k1, Project A is better than Project B, while
at k2 the opposite is
true.
Trang 27PROJECTS WITH A SINGLE OUTFLOW
AND REGULAR INFLOWS
Many projects are characterized by an initial outflow and a
series of equal, regular inflows:
PV of annuity formula makes the pattern easy to work with
Trang 28Example 10-6 – Regular Cash Inflows
Find the NPV and IRR for the following project if the cost of capital is 12%.
Trang 29Profitability Index (PI)
Is a variation on the NPV method
A ratio of the present value of a project’s inflows to the present value of a project’s outflows
Projects are acceptable if PI>1
29
Trang 30Profitability Index (PI)
Also known as the benefit/cost ratio
– Positive future cash flows are the benefit – Negative initial outlay is the cost
present value of inflows
Trang 31Profitability Index (PI)
Decision Rules
– Stand-alone Projects
If PI > 1.0 ⇒ accept
If PI < 1.0 ⇒ reject
– Mutually Exclusive Projects
PIA > PIB choose Project A over Project B
Comparison with NPV
– With mutually exclusive projects the two methods may not lead to the same choices
31
Trang 32Comparing Projects with Unequal Lives
If a significant difference exists between mutually exclusive projects’ lives, a direct comparison is meaningless
The problem arises due to the NPV
method
– Longer lived projects almost always have
higher NPVs
Trang 33Comparing Projects with Unequal Lives
Two solutions exist
– Replacement Chain Method
Extends projects until a common time horizon is reached
– Equivalent Annual Annuity (EAA) Method
Replaces each project with an equivalent perpetuity that equates to the project’s original NPV
33
Trang 34Concept Connection Example 10-8
Replacement Chain
Thus, choosing the Long-Lived Project is a better
decision than choosing the Short-Lived Project twice
The IRR method argues for undertaking the Short-Lived
Project while the NPV method argues for the Long-Lived
Project We’ll correct for the unequal life problem by using both the Replacement Chain Method and the EAA Method Both methods will lead to the same decision
Trang 35Concept Connection Example 10-8
Replacement Chain
35
Which of the two following mutually exclusive projects should a firm purchase?
Trang 36Concept Connection Example 10-9
Equivalent Annual Annuity (EAA)
The EAA Method equates each project’s original NPV to an
equivalent annual annuity For the Short-Lived Project the EAA is
$167.95 (the equivalent of receiving $432.82 spread out over 3 years
at 8%); while the Long-Lived Project has an EAA of $187.58 (the
equivalent of receiving $867.16 spread out over 6 years at 8%)
Trang 37Concept Connection Example 10-9 Equivalent Annual Annuity (EAA)
37
Because the Long-Lived Project has the higher EAA,
it should be chosen This is the same decision
reached by the Replacement Chain Method
Trang 38Capital Rationing
Used when capital funds for new projects are limited
Generally rank projects in descending order
of IRR and cut off at the cost of capital
However this doesn’t always make the best use of capital so a complex mathematical process called constrained maximization
can be used
Trang 39Figure 10-6 Capital Rationing
39