Practice Problems 2
Practice Problems 2
Practice Problems 2
Question (2)
(A)
Consider the following cash flows and compute the equivalent annual worth at i = 12%
An
Investment
-10,000
n
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Revenue
2000
2000
3000
3000
1000
500
+2000
(B)
Consider the cash flow diagram. Compute the equivalent annual worth at i = 12%
20,000
1
0
5,000
8,000
Year
11,000
14,000
17,000
Question (3)
(A)
PW analysis with unequal lives
When alternatives under consideration have unequal lives, one approach is to use an
analysis period that is the least common multiple of the alternative lives. For
example, if X has a 3-year life, Y has a 4-year life, and Z has a 6-year life, then a 12year analysis period is used. In such cases, we assume that each alternative can be
identically replaced at the end of its service life.
A company with an MARR of 10% plans to install one of three production
machines (X, Y or Z) that provide equivalent service (same benefits). Doing nothing
is not an option. The machines have zero salvage values at the end of their lives. The
machines are expected to have the same annual operating and maintenance (O&M)
costs, although their initial costs and service lives differ, as follows:
Machine:
X
Initial cost ($)
25,000
Service life (years) 3
Y
30,000
4
Z
50,000
6
Question (4)
(A)
Consider the following project balances for a typical investment project with a
service life of 4 years:
n
0
1
2
3
4
An
-1000
( )
( )
460
( )
Project Balance
-1000
-1100
-800
-500
0
Question (5)
(A)
Consider the following two mutually exclusive investment alternatives:
End of year
0
1
2
3
Machine B
-2000
2500
800+200
Suppose that your firm needs either machine for only 2 years. The net proceeds
from the sale of machine B is estimated to be $200. What should be the required net
proceeds from the sale of machine A so that both machines could be considered
economically indifferent at an interest rate of 10%?
(B)
Consider the following two mutually exclusive investment projects. Assume
that the MARR=12%.
n
0
1
2
3
B
-2500
1210
1720
1500
Question (7)
Consider the following two mutually exclusive investment projects, which have
unequal service lives.
Project Cash Flow
n
A1
A2
0
-900
-1800
1
-400
-300
2
-400
-300
3
-400+200
-300
4
-300
5
-300
6
-300
7
-300
8
-300+500
Question (8)
Annual Cash Flow Analysis (Capital investment cost)
The capital cost of an asset is the cost to purchase and install it, and then disposes of
it at the end of its life. A positive salvage value at the end of the asset's life is treated
as a negative cost. Note that capital costs explicitly exclude operating and
maintenance cost (O&M costs). When we write any equation for cost, a negative
cash flow becomes a positive cost. This is because it is the custom is not to say, for
example, that a new car costs - $30,000. We say the car costs $30,000.
EAC for asset capital cost = annualized cost to purchase, install and later dispose of
an asset. Therefore, EAC for asset capital cost = P (A/P,i%,N) - S (A/F,i%,N)
Using the identity (A/F,i%,N) = (A/P,i%,N) i we obtain: EAC for
asset capital cost = (P - S) (A/P,i%,N) + Si
Notation:
EAC = equivalent uniform annual cost. O&M cost = operating and
maintenance cost P = asset initial cost. S = asset salvage value end of life
An asset with an initial cost of $12,000, including installation, has an estimated salvage
value of $2,000 at the end of its estimated 5-year life. Using an MARR of 15%, what is
the equivalent uniform annual cost of owning this asset, not including O&M costs?
P = $12,000, S = $2,000, N = 5 years
Hint: If the MARR were zero, then the annualized capital cost would be [ (P - S) / N
] or $2,000 per year. With an MARR greater than zero, however, the annualized
cost will be greater than $2,000 because the money tied up in this asset for five years
could presumably be earning interest at the MARR rate.