Capital Budgeting Decision Rules
NPV Analysis The recommended approach to any
significant capital budgeting decision is NPV analysis. NPV = PV of the incremental benefits – PV of
the incremental costs. When evaluating independent projects, take
a project if and only if it has a positive NPV. When evaluating interdependent projects,
take the feasible combination with the highest total NPV.
The NPV rule appropriately accounts for the opportunity cost of capital and so ensures the project is more valuable than comparable alternatives available in the financial market.
Internal Rate of Return Definition: The discount rate that sets the NPV
of a project to zero is the project’s IRR. Conceptually, IRR asks: “What is the
project’s rate of return?” Standard Rule: Accept a project if its IRR is
greater than the appropriate market based discount rate, reject if it is less. Why does this make sense?
For independent projects with “normal cash flow patterns” IRR and NPV give the same conclusions.
IRR is completely internal to the project. To use the rule effectively we compare the IRR to a market rate.
IRR – “Normal” Cash Flow Pattern
Consider the following stream of cash flows:
Calculate the NPV at different discount rates until you find the discount rate where the NPV of this set of cash flows equals zero.
That’s all you do to find IRR.
0 1 2 3
-$1,000 $400 $400 $400
IRR – NPV Profile Diagram Evaluate the NPV at various discount rates:
Rate NPV 0 $20010 -$5.320 -$157.4
At r = 9.7%, NPV = 0
-200-150-100-50
050
100150200250
0 10 20
Discount Rate
NPV
The Merit to the IRR Approach The IRR is an approximation for the
return generated over the life of a project on the initial investment.
As with NPV, the IRR is based on incremental cash flows, does not ignore any cash flows, and (by comparison to the appropriate discount rate, r) take proper account of the time value of money and risk.
In short, it can be useful.
Pitfalls of the IRR Approach Multiple IRRs
There can be as many solutions to the IRR definition as there are changes of sign in the time ordered cash flow series.
Consider:
This can (and does) have two IRRs.
0 1 2
-$100 $230 -$132
Pitfalls of IRR cont…
Disc.Rate 0.00% 10.00% 15.00% 20.00% 40.00% NPV -$2.00 $0.00 $0.19 $0.00 -$3.06 IRR1 IRR2
-3
-2.5
-2
-1.5
-1
-0.5
0
0.5
0 10 15 20 40
Discount Rate
NP
V
Pitfalls of IRR cont…
-0.5
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
0 10 15 20 40
Discount Rate
NP
V
Pitfalls of IRR cont… Mutually exclusive projects:
IRR can lead to incorrect conclusions about the relative worth of projects.
Ralph owns a warehouse he wants to fix up and use for one of two purposes:
A. Store toxic waste.B. Store fresh produce.
Let’s look at the cash flows, IRRs and NPVs.
Mutually Exclusive Projects and IRR
Project Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3A -10,000 10,000 1,000 1,000B -10,000 1,000 1,000 12,000
Project NPV @0%
NPV @10%
NPV@15%
IRR
A $2000 $669 $109 16.04%B $4000 $751 -$484 12.94%
• At low discount rates, B is better. At high discount rates, A is better.
• But A always has the higher IRR. A common mistake to make is choose A regardless of the discount rate.
• Simply choosing the project with the larger IRR would be justified only if the project cash flows could be reinvested at the IRR instead of the actual market rate, r, for the life of the project.
-1000
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
0% 10% 15%
Discount Rate
NP
V
AB
Project Scale and the IRR Because the IRR puts things in
terms of a “rate” it may not tell you what interests you; which investment will create the most “wealth”.
Example:Project
Investment
Time 1 IRR NPV at 10%
A -$1,000 +$1,500 50% $363.64
B -$10,000 +$13,000 30% $1,1818.18
Summary of IRR vs. NPV IRR analysis can be misleading if you don’t
fully understand its limitations. For individual projects with normal cash flows NPV
and IRR provide the same conclusion. For projects with inflows followed by outlays, the
decision rule for IRR must be reversed. For Multi-period projects with changes in sign of the
cash flows, multiple IRRs exist. Must compute the NPVs to see what decision rule is appropriate.
IRR can give conflicting signals relative to NPV when ranking projects.
I recommend NPV analysis, using others as backup.
Payback Period Rule Frequently used as a check on NPV
analysis or by small firms or for small decisions. Payback period is defined as the number of
years before the cumulative cash inflows equal the initial outlay.
Provides a rough idea of how long invested capital is at risk.
Example: A project has the following cash flows
Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4-$10,000 $5,000 $3,000 $2,000 $1,000
The payback period is 3 years. Is that good or bad?
Payback Period Rule An adjustment to the payback period rule that
is sometimes made is to discount the cash flows and calculate the discounted payback period.
This “new” rule continues to suffer from the problem of ignoring cash flows received after an arbitrary cutoff date.
If this is true, why mess up the simplicity of the rule? Simplicity is its one virtue.
At times the discounted payback period may be valuable information but it is not often that this information alone makes for good decision-making.
Economic Profit or EVA EVA and Economic Profit
Economic Profit The difference between revenue and the
opportunity cost of all resources consumed in producing that revenue, including the opportunity cost of capital
Economic Value Added (EVA) The cash flows of a project minus a charge
for the opportunity cost of capital
Economic Profit or EVA EVA When Invested Capital is
Constant EVA in Period n (when capital lasts
forever)
where I is the project’s capital, Cn is the project’s cash flow at time n, and r is the cost of capital. (r × I ) is known as the capital charge
n nEVA C rI
Economic Profit or EVA EVA When Invested Capital is
Constant EVA Investment Rule
Accept any investment for which the present value (at the project’s cost of capital) of all future EVAs is positive.
When invested capital is constant, the EVA rule and the NPV rule will coincide.
Example Problem
Ralph has an investment opportunity which requires an upfront investment of $150 million.
The annual end-of-year cash flows of $14 million dollars are expected to last forever.
The firm’s cost of capital is 8%.
Compute the annual EVA and the present value of the project.
Example Solution
EVA each year is:
The present value of the EVA perpetuity is:
n nEVA C rI
$14 million 8% $150 million $2 million nEVA
$2 million$25 million
8% PV
Economic Profit or EVA EVA When Invested Capital
Changes EVA in Period n (when capital
depreciates)
Where Cn is a project’s cash flow in time period n, In – 1 is the project’s capital at time n – 1, and r is the cost of capital
When invested capital changes, the EVA rule and the NPV rule continue to coincide.
1 (Depreciation in Period ) n n nEVA C rI n
Example Ralph is considering an investment
in a machine to manufacture rubber chickens.
It will generate revenues of $20,000 each year for 4 years and cost $60,000. The machine is expected to depreciate evenly over the 4 years.
The current interest rate is 5% Should he invest in the machine?
Example Using the NPV rule we have a cost
of $60,000 and benefits that look like a 4 year annuity. The NPV is
Indicating that this is a valuable endeavor.
01.919,10$)05.1(
11
05.0
000,20$000,60$
4
NPV
Example For EVA we calculate
The present value of EVA is then:
Year 0 1 2 3 4
Capital $60,000 $45,000 $30,000 $15,000 $0
Cash Flow $20,000 $20,000 $20,000 $20,000
Capital Charge
($3,000) ($2,250) ($1,500) ($750)
Depreciation ($15,000)
($15,000)
($15,000)
($15,000)
EVAn $2,000 $2,750 $3,500 $4,250
01.919,10$05.1
250,4$
05.1
500,3$
05.1
750,2$
05.1
000,2$)(
432EVAPV