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Cash Flow and Capital Budgeting (Chapter 9 Textbook)

Cash Flow and Capital Budgeting (Chapter 9 Textbook). To evaluate a capital investment, we must know:. Incremental cash outflows of the investment (marginal cost of investment), and. Incremental cash inflows of the investment (marginal benefit of investment).

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Cash Flow and Capital Budgeting (Chapter 9 Textbook)

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  1. Cash FlowandCapital Budgeting(Chapter 9 Textbook) Fußzeile

  2. To evaluate a capital investment, we must know: • Incremental cash outflows of the investment (marginal cost of investment), and • Incremental cash inflows of the investment (marginal benefit of investment). Cash Flow VersusAccounting Profit Capital budgeting concerned with cash flow, not accounting profit. • The timing and magnitude of cash flows and accounting profits can differ dramatically. Fußzeile

  3. What To Discount Points to “Watch Out For” • Only incremental cash flows are relevant • Include all incidental effects • Do not forget working capital requirements • Forget sunk costs • Include opportunity costs • Beware of allocated overhead costs

  4. Financing Costs Financing costs should be excluded when evaluating a project’s cash flows. • Both interest expense from debt financing and dividend payments to equity investors should be excluded. • Financing costs are captured in the discounting future cash flows to present. Fußzeile

  5. Cash Flow and Non-Tax Expenses • Accountants charge depreciation to spread a fixed asset’s costs over time to match its benefits. • Capital budgeting analysis focuses on cash inflows and outflows when they occur. • Non-cash expenses affect cash flow through their impact on taxes: • Compute after-tax net income and add depreciation back, or • Ignore depreciation expense but add back its tax savings. Fußzeile

  6. Depreciation Many countries allow one depreciation method for tax purposes and another for reporting purposes. • Accelerated depreciation methods (such as MACRS = Modi-fied Accelerated Cost Recovery System) increase the present value of an investment’s tax benefits. • Relative to MACRS, straight-line depreciation results in higher reported earnings early in an investment’s life. For capital budgeting analysis, the depreciation method for tax purposes matters most. Fußzeile

  7. New equipment costs $10 million, $0.5 million to install An example.... Tax rate = 40% Old equipment fully depreciated, sold for $1 million The Initial Investment • Initial cash flows: • Cash outflow to acquire/install fixed assets • Cash inflow from selling old equipment • Cash inflow (outflow) if selling old equipment below (above) tax basis generates tax savings (liability) • Initial investment: outflow of $10.5 million, and after-tax inflow of $0.60 million from selling the old equipment Fußzeile

  8. Working Capital Expenditures • Many capital investments require additions to working capital. • Net working capital (NWC) = current assets – current liabilities. • Increase in NWC is a cash outflow; decrease a cash inflow. • An example… • Operate from November, 1 to January, 31 • Order $15,000 calendars on credit, delivery by Nov 1 • Must pay suppliers $5,000/month, beginning Dec 1 • Expect to sell 30% of inventory (for cash) in Nov; 60% in Dec; 10% in Jan • Always want to have $500 cash on hand Fußzeile

  9. Oct 1 Nov 1 Dec 1 Jan 1 Feb 1 Cash $0 $500 $500 $500 $0 Inventory 0 15,000 10,500 1,500 0 Accts payable 0 15,000 10,000 5,000 Net WC 0 500 1,000 (3,000) /m in WC NA +500 +500 (4,000) Payments and inventory Oct 1 to Nov 1 Nov 1 to Dec 1 Dec 1 to Jan 1 Jan 1 to Feb 1 Reduction in inventory $0 $4,500 [30%] $9,000 [60%] $1,500 [10%] Payments $0 ($5,000) ($5,000) ($5,000) ($500) +$4,000 ($3,000) Net cash flow ($500) Working Capital Expenditures 0 0 +3,000

  10. Terminal Value Terminal value is used when evaluating an investment with indefinite life-span: Construct cash-flow forecasts for 5 to 10 years Forecasts more than 5 to 10 years have high margin of error; use terminal value instead. • Terminal value is intended to reflect the value of project at a given future point in time. • Large value relative to all the other cash flows of the project. Fußzeile

  11. Different ways to calculate terminal values: Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 $0.5 Billion $1.0 Billion $1.75 Billion $2.5 Billion $3.25 Billion • Use final year cash flow projections and assume that all future cash flow grow at a constant rate; • Multiply final cash flow estimate by a market multiple, or • Use investment’s book value or liquidation value. Terminal Value JDS Uniphase cash flow projections for acquisition of SDL Inc. Fußzeile

  12. Terminal Value of SDL Acquisition • Assume that cash flow continues to grow at 5% per year (g = 5%, r = 10%, cash flow for year 6 is $3.41 billion): • Terminal value is $68.2 billion; value of entire project is: • $42.4 billion of total $48.7 billion from terminal value • Using price-to-cash-flow ratio of 20 for companies in the same industry as SDL to compute terminal value • Terminal Value = $3.25 x 20 = $65 billion • Warning ! : market multiples fluctuate over time Fußzeile

  13. An example… • Norman Paul’s current salary is $60,000 per year and he expects it to increase at 5% each year. • Norm pays taxes at flat rate of 35%. • Sunk costs: $1,000 for GMAT course and $2,000 for visiting various programs • Room and board expenses are not incremental to the decision to go back to school Incremental Cash Flow Incremental cash flows versus sunk costs: • Capital budgeting analysis should include only incremental costs. Fußzeile

  14. Incremental Cash Flow • At end of two years assume that Norm receives a salary offer of $90,000, which increases at 8% per year • Expected tuition, fees and textbook expenses for next two years while studying in MBA: $35,000 • If Norm worked at his current job for two years, his salary would have increased to $66,150: • Yr 2 net cash inflow: $90,000 - $66,150 = $23,850 • After-tax inflow: $23,850 x (1-0.35) = $15,503 • Yr 3 cash inflow: • MBA has substantial positive NPV value if 30 yr analysis period What about Norm’s opportunity cost? Fußzeile

  15. Opportunity Costs Cash flows from alternative investment opportunities, forgone when one investment is undertaken. If Norm did not attend MBA program, he would haveearned: Second Year: $63,000 ($40,950 after taxes) First year: $60,000 ($39,000 after taxes) NPV of a project could fall substantially if opportunity costs are recognized! Fußzeile

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