Making Investment Decisions With The Net Present Value Rule

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The key takeaways from the document are that capital budgeting decisions should be based on an analysis of relevant cash flows rather than accounting earnings. It is important to identify all incremental cash flows, both inflows and outflows, that are directly related to the project under consideration.

When evaluating investment projects, the main factors to consider are identifying all incremental after-tax cash flows, accounting for changes in working capital, excluding sunk costs, including opportunity costs, and only including actual incremental costs rather than allocated overheads.

Some examples of cash flows that should be included in project evaluation are sales increases in other divisions caused by the project, increases in administrative expenses due to the project, and changes in working capital like inventory, receivables, and payables.

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Making Investment Decisions with the Net


Present Value Rule
INTRODUCTION

This chapter discusses the details and nuts and bolts issues of making investment decisions and
applying the NPV rule in practice. Specifically, the chapter focuses on two tasks faced in capital
budgeting. The first problem faced by anyone making investment decisions is to determine
which items should be included in the cash flow analysis. The answer, of course, is to include all
the cash flows relevant or incremental to the project. The chapter describes the items to be
included and also excluded.

The second problem in the application of the NPV rule to investment decision making relates to
the fact that most investment decisions interact with or affect other activities or decisions of the
firm. These project interactions have to be carefully sorted out and included in the project
analysis and decision. This often requires modifying the NPV rule to consider annual costs or
benefits from the project under consideration. A typical example might involve alternative
proposals, with different project lives, for the replacement of existing machinery. The proper
evaluation in this case will be to compare the alternatives in terms of the equivalent annual costs
rather than the total costs for each alternative. This technique finds extensive application in a
number of different situations.

KEY CONCEPTS IN THE CHAPTER

Focus on Cash Flow: Capital budgeting decisions should be based on analysis of cash flows and
not accounting earnings. It is important to understand that accounting earnings can differ from
cash flows because of the set of rules followed by accountants in classifying income and
expenditures. Care has to be taken to ensure that cash flows are counted at the point of time they
are received or paid out. This might require more than simple manipulation of accounting
numbers.

Incremental, After-tax Cash Flow: Project evaluation should be based on after-tax cash flows
caused by or incidental to the project. All the cash flows that are created by the project or are
changed by the acceptance of the project should be considered. The following are some useful
pointers in identifying the relevant cash flows:

Incremental, not average: It is easy to confuse between the average cost and incremental cost.
What is relevant to the project analysis is the portion of the cost (or revenue) that will change
because of the project. Expenses incurred regardless of what happens to the project should not

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be considered, as they are not affected by the project.

All incidental effects: All cash flows flowing out of the decision on the project should be
included in the project analysis. If the project causes a sales increase in another division’s
business or an increase in administrative expenses, these should be included in project
evaluation.

Working capital changes: Changes in working capital (accounts receivable plus inventory minus
accounts payable) needs caused by the project are part of the cash flows that should be included.
It is easy to ignore these and one has to be careful to account for the changes in inventory,
receivables, and accounts payables. The investment in working capital is usually recovered at
the end of the project.

Sunk costs: Sunk costs are costs already incurred or will be incurred anyway regardless of what
happens to the project. These should be ignored as they are not affected by the project decision.

Opportunity costs: Opportunity costs of all resources, including managers and other personnel,
should be included even if there may not be an explicit cash flow relating to that item. When a
project uses a resource already owned by the company, the resource is taken off alternate use.
Thus, the execution of the project precludes alternate use of the resource and the project should
be charged for the use of the resource.

Allocated overheads: Accounting rules followed by companies often included allocated charges
for use of services. These are often based on the company’s historic costs and experiences and
do not bear any direct relationship to the project’s actual usage of services or other resources.
Thus allocated overheads should be ignored and be counted only to the extent they are actual
incremental costs.

Financing charges: Interest payments and other financing charges are normally not included in
project cash flows. Throughout this chapter, we assume that the project is financed through all
equity funds. This enables us to separate investment financing decisions. The effect of
financing mix will be built into project evaluation in later chapters through appropriate
adjustments to the cost of capital.

Depreciation: Depreciation is not a cash flow but has cash flow consequences because it is a
deductible expense for tax purposes. Most corporations keep two sets of books – one for
reporting earnings to stockholders and another for tax returns filed with the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS). Our tax laws permit accelerated depreciation for most assets used in business.
These are based on notional lives assigned to classes of assets. Table 6.4 in the text gives the
depreciation schedules for different classes of assets. The effect of depreciation is to provide a
reduction in taxes or tax shield equal to the dollar amount of depreciation multiplied by the
marginal tax rate of the company.

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NPV in Other Currencies: The general principles of finance you learn in this book have
universal relevance and applicability. Thus, while an American company will compute its cash
flows and NPVs in US dollars, a Japanese firm will do the same using the same principles we
discuss in this and other chapters, but in the Japanese yen. A German company will have its cash
flows in the Euro1, the new common European currency. Some details will differ, though. For
example, nominal interest rates, inflation rates, and the opportunity cost of capital may be
different from country to country. The tax rates and depreciation rules are decided by the local
governments in each country and can be substantially different.

Consistent Treatment of Inflation: Inflation affects both the project cash flows and the
opportunity cost of capital used to discount the cash flow. One has to be careful to treat inflation
effects consistently and correctly. The opportunity cost of capital estimated from current market
costs are nominal costs with inflation effects already built into them. Thus, it is easiest to
discount nominal (money) cash flows at a nominal discount rate. Some companies prefer to
project cash flows in real terms and discount them at a real rate of interest. The relationship
between nominal rates, real rates, and inflation is given by the equation:

1+rnomial = (1+rreal)(1+ inflation rate).

It is important to be consistent in the treatment of inflation. Either discount nominal cash flows
with a nominal rate or discount real cash flows with a real rate; do not mix them.

Project Interactions: Most investment decisions involve more than one choice or affect other
activities of the business. At the least you can always decide to invest or not to invest, invest
now or invest a year from now. Other choices might involve replacing old machinery which still
has some useful life left, or choosing between machines with different project lives. Often when
one investment proposal is accepted, it means that other alternative proposals must be rejected.
These are all choices that are mutually exclusive. While the NPV rule is still useful, it is
essential to take a sufficiently broad view of net present value and to remember that the goal is to
maximize the present value of the whole company.

One useful measure of a project’s effective cost or benefit is the equivalent annual cost (EAC) or
benefit. The EAC is particularly useful for deciding among similar facilities (such as machines)
with different lives and for deciding on when an existing facility should be replaced. Some
typical cases of project interactions and approaches to deal with them are discussed below.

Optimal timing of investment: The fact that a project has a positive NPV does not mean that it is
best undertaken now. It may be even more valuable if undertaken at a later date. The optimal
choice of timing is the one that maximizes the NPV. Imagine you have some 5 year vintage
whiskey for which you can get $1,000 now or $2,000 if you sell it five years from now. If the
present value of $2,000 received 5 years from now is higher than $1,000, it makes sense to wait.

1 The Euro has become the common unit of account for eleven European countries from January 1999. It will be
another three years before you start exchanging actual Euro notes and coins. During this period, each country will
have its currency locked into a fixed exchange rate with the Euro.
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It is quite likely that you will get even more than $2,000 if you sell six years later or seven years
later. The optimal choice will be the one that gives the highest present value.

Projects with different lives: The basic NPV rule will not provide correct decisions in the
evaluation of mutually exclusive projects with different lives. The NPV rule does not take into
account the value of a likely replacement project. We can convert the projects costs or benefits
into annual equivalents and choose the better alternative. Converting the present value (or NPV)
into equivalent annual costs is easy; you simply divide the present value by the appropriate
annuity factor.

The replacement decision: The capital cost of a new machine can be restated in terms of the
equivalent annual cost (EAC). Its optimal life is the one that minimizes its EAC. We can decide
whether to replace an existing machine by comparing its cost for the next year (including the loss
of salvage value over the year) against the EAC of the new machine.

EAC is simple to compute and use in a world of certainty. Inflation can be factored in or do the
analysis in real terms. Other important considerations, such as technological changes or other
uncertainties, could complicate the problem.

The cost of excess capacity: Currently available excess capacity of any resource (plant,
computers, or a warehouse) may not be free as increased utilization of the resource (such as a
computer) may bring forward the date of future replacement of the facility. It is, therefore,
essential to consider the cost (an opportunity cost, really) of the use of this excess capacity and
factor that into the project’s cash flows.

Fluctuating load factors: A large plant may have positive NPV but is justified only if the NPV is
higher than another size plant which might be able to do the job well enough. In other words,
you have to consider different sizes of investment and choose the size which has the highest
(positive) NPV. A new project may affect the value of other investments, sometimes we must
work out detailed scenarios to unravel these effects.

WORKED EXAMPLES

1. Macaroni and Pizza Inc. is considering a new project which requires an investment of $4
million. The project is expected to generate sales revenue of $1 million in the first year, $2
million in the second year and $3 million for years 3, 4, and 5. The cost of goods sold is
expected to be 75 percent of sales revenue. Other costs are expected to be 7 percent of sales in
the first year and 5 percent of sales thereafter. The project will need working capital investment
of $200,000 in the first year and an additional $100,000 in the second year. The investment in
plant ($4 million) will be depreciated using the MACRS schedule for the 5 year class. If the
company’s opportunity cost of capital is 10 percent, calculate the NPV for the project. Assume
that the plant will operate for 6 years, and at the end of 6 years, the plant can be sold for a
salvage value of $300,000. The tax rate for the company is 36 percent.

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SOLUTION
Cash flows ($1000s)
Years 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
1. Investment and salvage -2,000 1921
2. Sales 1,000 2,000 3,000 3,000 3,000 3,000
3. Cost of goods sold 750 1,500 2,250 2,250 2,250 2,250
4. Other costs 70 100 150 150 150 150
5. Depreciation 400 640 384 230 230 116
6. Pre-tax profit [2-3-4-5] -220 -240 216 370 370 484
7. Tax at 36% of 6 -79 -86 78 133 133 174
8. Profit after tax [6-7] -141 -154 138 237 237 310
9. Operating cash flow [8+5] 259 486 522 467 467 426
10. Change in working capital -200 -100 300
11. Total cash flows [1+9+10] -2,000 59 386 522 467 467 918
12. Present value at 10% -2,000 54 319 392 319 290 518
13. Net present value -2,000+54+319+392+319+290+518 = -108
Notes: 1. Salvage value $300,000 less tax of $108,000 = $192,000

2. Sugar & Honey Cakes is considering replacing their oven with a new one. They have
received two offers. Oven A has an initial cost of $34,000, annual operating costs of $6,000, and
an operating life of 4 years. Oven B has an initial cost of $24,000, annual operating costs of
$8,000, and operating life of 3 years. Which oven is the better choice? Assume an opportunity
cost of capital of 12 percent.

SOLUTION

Present value of costs for oven A = $34,000 + $6,000 x 3.037 = $52,222


Equivalent annual cost = $52,222/3.037 = $17,195
Present value of costs for oven B = $24,000 + $8,000 x 2.402 = $43,216
Equivalent annual cost = $43,216/2.402 = $17,992
A is the better choice as it has lower EAC.
(3.037 and 2.402 are the annuity factors for 4 years and 3 years for discount rate of 12 percent.)

3. Joe Vino inherited a cellar of wines from his aunt. The local wine dealer offered Joe
$70,000 for all the entire collection. A sommelier (wine expert) friend of Joe suggested that if he
kept the wines for another five years he could sell them for $150,000. If Joe’s opportunity cost is
14 percent, what is the best course of action for Joe?

SOLUTION

Present value of $150,000 received 5 years from now = $150,000/1.145 = $77,905


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Joe will be better off waiting 5 years.

SUMMARY

This chapter describes the application of the NPV rule to actual project evaluation. The focus is
on two key problems faced by anyone engaged in capital budgeting decisions: i) what to discount
and ii) how to deal with project interactions. Project evaluation should use incremental after-tax
cash flows. Specifically, the evaluator should consider all cash flows incidental to and caused by
the project. Care has to be taken to ensure that items like working capital increases are
considered and sunk costs are ignored.

Treatment of inflation in project evaluation should be consistent and avoid confusion between
real and nominal cash flows. If nominal cash flows are used, they should be discounted with a
nominal cost of capital. By the same token, real cash flows should be discounted by a real cost
of capital.

Project interactions can be of several different types. Some typical cases include: optimal timing
of investment, project with unequal lives, replacement decision for old machinery with useful
life, cost of excess capacity, and fluctuating load factors. For optimal timing, one has to look at
the choice which will maximize the NPV. Some of the other problems can be evaluated using
the technique of EAC. It is also necessary, in the case of excess capacity, to explicitly recognize
the opportunity cost of using the capacity, the cost being early replacement of the resource being
used. Evaluation of projects with fluctuating load factors should include explicit consideration
of alternatives with different capacities and choosing the one with the highest NPV. The
essential point to note in the evaluation of all mutually exclusive projects is the definition of
alternative projects available and possible. Also, remember that most projects have interactions
that will result in mutually exclusive choices.

LIST OF TERMS

Accelerated depreciation Recovery period class


Equivalent annual cost Straight-line depreciation
Net working capital Sunk costs
Nominal interest rate Tax depreciation
Opportunity costs Tax shield
Real interest rate

EXERCISES

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Fill-in Questions

1. Costs that occurred in the past and are irrecoverable are called ____________.

2. The cost of a resource for its best alternate use is its ______________.

3. Current assets minus current liabilities equal ______________.

4. An interest rate adjusted for inflation, so that it represents an increase in purchasing


power, is called the __________ rate.

5. The stated interest rates in most transactions have no adjustment for inflation and is the
____________ rate.

6. Under_____________, the amount of depreciation is the same each year.

7. ___________ is the general term for any depreciation method that provides larger
deductions in the early years of the asset's life.

8. To work out the after-tax cash flows from an investment, we need to know
what_____________ is allowed, rather than how it is depreciated for accounting purposes.

9. The tax depreciation allowed for a particular asset depends on which_____it belongs to.

10. The tax depreciation amount multiplied by the tax rate is called the depreciation
____________.

11. The __________of equipment is the constant annual charge which, over the life of the
equipment, has the same present-value cost as the equipment.

Problems

1. Gates Hardware Inc. (GHI) is considering an investment of $5 million in plant and


machinery. This is expected to produce sales of $2 million in year 1, $4 million in year 2, and $6
million in year 3. Subsequent sales will increase at the expected inflation rate of 10 percent. The
plant is expected to be scrapped after 6 years with a salvage value of $1 million. It is depreciated
for tax purposes on a straight-line basis of $1 million per year. Operating costs are expected to
be 70 percent of the sales. Working capital requirements are negligible. GHI pays tax at 35
percent. Calculate the expected cash flows in each year and the NPV of the investment when the
required rate of return is 16 percent.

2. Repeat the calculation of problem 1, doing the analysis in real instead of nominal terms.
Discount at the approximate real rate of 5.45 percent.

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3. How does your analysis of problem 1 change if the new plant qualifies for tax
depreciation under the 5-year recovery period class?

4. Garfield Corp. is evaluating an investment project which will cost $40 million and
generate taxable revenues of $11 million per year for 7 years. There will be no salvage value at
the end of this period. Garfield is currently unsure whether the investment will belong to the 3-
year, 5-year, or 7-year recovery period class. Calculate the NPV of the project for each of these
three possibilities. Garfield’s tax rate is 35 percent and its required return is 15 percent.

5. An investment of $200,000 in a computer is expected to reduce costs by $40,000 a year


in perpetuity. However, the prices of computers are predicted to fall at 10 percent a year for the
next 5 years. When should the computer be purchased if the cost of capital is 13 percent?

6. The Bluebird Company must choose between machines A and B, which


perform exactly the same operations but have different lives of 2 and 3 years, respectively.
Machine A costs $30,000 initially and has annual costs of $5,000. Machine B has an initial cost
of $40,000 and annual costs of $7,000. If Bluebird’s cost of capital is 10 percent, which machine
should it choose.

7. A machine costs $100,000. At the end of the first year, $5,000 must be spent on
maintenance. Each year, the cost of maintenance rises by 15 percent. How long should the
machine be kept before it is scrapped if the opportunity cost of capital is 10 percent? (Assume
the machine has a zero salvage value.)

8. XYZ Company is considering whether to replace an existing machine or to spend money


on overhauling it. The replacement machine would cost $18,000 and would require maintenance
of $1,500 at the end of every year. At the end of l0 years, it would have a scrap value of $2,000
and would not be maintained. The existing machine requires increasing amounts of maintenance
each year, and its salvage value is falling as shown below:

Year Maintenance Salvage Value


Cost
0 $2,000 $2,500
1 $3,000 $2,000
2 $4,000 $1,500
3 $5,000 $1,000
4 $5,000 0

If XYZ faces an opportunity cost of capital of 15 percent, when should it replace the machine?

9. The acceptance of a particular capital budgeting proposal will mean that a new computer
costing $200,000 will be purchased in 1 year's time instead of in 3 years' time. This also implies
that an extra computer programmer costing $30,000 a year must be hired in year 1 instead of
year 3. Work out the present-value cost of these two items when the opportunity cost of capital

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is 14 percent.

10. Bayerhouser Timber has vast tracts of timber land. One tract in the northwest region has
timber ready for harvest and at current market prices will fetch a net revenue of $12 million. If
the company waited for 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, and 4 years, the values would be $15 million,
$17 million, $18 million, and $19 million respectively. What is the optimal harvesting point for
the company if the cost of capital is 15 percent?

11. How will your answer change if you are told that the above estimates for the timber
values are real dollars and not nominal dollars and the cost of capital is nominal value with an
inflation component of 5 percent?

12. Redo problem 3 in the worked examples by assuming a cost of capital of 16 percent.

Essay Questions

1. Project evaluation should consider only incremental after-tax cash flows. What are
incremental, after-tax cash flows?

2. Depreciation is not a cash flow and therefore should not be considered in project
evaluation. Discuss.

3. "We always allocate a proportion of company overhead to a new project in relation to its
payroll requirements. After all, in the long run, there's no difference between average and
marginal cost." Discuss.

4. Describe how to work out the economic life of a piece of machinery and how to decide
when to replace an existing machine which performs the same function.

ANSWERS TO EXERCISES

Fill-in Questions

1. Sunk costs 7. Accelerated depreciation


2. Opportunity cost 8. Tax depreciation
3. Net working capital 9. Recovery period class
4. Real interest 10. Tax shield
5. Nominal interest 11. Equivalent annual cost
6. Straight line depreciation

Problems

1. The cash flows and the present values are given in the table below.
Cash flows ($1000s)

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Years 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
1. Investment and salvage -5,000 6501
2. Sales 2,000 4,000 6,000 6,600 7,260 7,986
3. Cost of goods sold 1,400 2,800 4,200 4,620 5,082 5,590
4. Depreciation 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 0
5. Pre-tax profit [2-3-4] -400 200 800 980 1,178 2,396
6. Tax at 35% of 5 -140 70 280 343 412 839
7. Profit after tax [5-6] -260 130 520 637 766 1,557
8. Operating cash flow [7+4] 740 1,130 1,520 1,637 1,766 1,557
9. Total cash flows [1+8] -5,000 740 1,130 1,520 1,637 1,766 2,207
10. Present value at 16% -5,000 638 840 974 904 841 906
11. Net present value -5,000+638+840+974+841+906 = 103
Notes: 1. Salvage value $1,000,000 less tax of $35,000 = $650,000

2. The real cash flows and the present values are given in the table below.
Cash flows ($1000s)
Years 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
1.Nomianl cash flows -5,000 740 1,130 1,520 1,637 1,766 2,207
(same as in problem 1)
2. Real cash flows1 -5,000 673 934 1,142 1,118 1,097 1,246
3. Present value at 5.45% -5,000 638 840 974 904 841 906
4. Net present value -5,000+638+840+974+841+906 = 103
Notes: 1. The real cash flows are calculated by the following formula = Ct/1.1t

3. See the table below.


Cash flows ($1000s)
Years 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
1. Investment and salvage -5,000 6501
2. Sales 2,000 4,000 6,000 6,600 7,260 7,986
3. Cost of goods sold 1,400 2,800 4,200 4,620 5,082 5,590
4. Depreciation 1,000 1,600 960 576 576 288
5. Pre-tax profit [2-3-4] -400 -400 840 1,404 1,602 2,108
6. Tax at 35% of 5 -140 -140 294 491 561 738
7. Profit after tax [5-6] -260 -260 546 913 1,041 1,370
8. Operating cash flow [7+4] 740 1,340 1,506 1,489 1,617 1,658
9. Total cash flows [1+8] -5,000 740 1,340 1,506 1,489 1,617 2,308
10. Present value at 16% -5,000 638 996 965 822 770 947
11. Net present value -5,000+638+996+965+822+770+947 = 138

4. The tables below give the cash flows and the NPV for the 3 different scenarios.

Cash flows ($1000s)


3- Year 5 year 7 year

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class class class
Investment -40,000 -40,000 -40,000
PV of depreciation tax shield 10,719 9,662 8,778
Net revenues 29,747 29,747 29,747
Net present value 466 -591 -1,475

5. The NPV of purchasing the computer after t years is (-200,000 x 0.90t +


40,000/0.13)/1.132. This expression takes its maximum value of $114,098 (over integer t) for t =
2 years.

6. Present value of costs for A = $38,678, EAC = $22,286


Present value of costs for B = $57,408, EAC = $23,085
A is cheaper.

7. The maintenance cost at the end of year 1 is $5,000, year 2 is $5,000 x 1.15 = $5,750, and
so on. You can calculate the PV of the maintenance costs and the initial investment of $100,000
and convert them into EACs for 5 years, 10 years, and so on. The lowest EAC is for 12 years as
shown in the table below.

Years kept PV of cost Annuity factor EAC


(PV/Ann. Factor)
5 119,459 3.791 $31,512
10 149,192 6.145 $24,279
11 155,974 6.495 $24,014
12 163,063 6.814 $23,931
13 170,475 7.103 $24,000

8. The present value of total costs of the new machine is $24,663. This converts to an EAC
of $4914.20. The costs of each year's operation of the old machine (adjusted to the end of each
year) are given below.

Years Cost of operation How calculated


1 $3,175 (2000+2500)x1.15-2000
2 $4,250 (3000+2000)x1.15-1500
3 $5,325 (4000+1500)x1.15-1000
4 $6,900 (5000+1000)x1.15

The old machine should be replaced after 2 years.

9. Present-value cost of change in computer timing = $40,444. Present-value cost of extra


programmer = $49,400.

10. The table below gives the present values of harvesting at different years.

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Dollars in 1000s
Years 0 1 2 3 4
Net revenue 12,000 15,000 17,000 18,000 19,000
Present value 12,000 13,040 12,854 11,835 10,863
at 15 %

The optimal timing will be to harvest at the end of year 1.

11. The real values will have to be discounted at the real rate of (1.15/1.05) - 1 = 9.5%. The
table below gives the present values of harvesting at the end of different years.
Dollars in 1000s
Years 0 1 2 3 4
Net revenue 12,000 15,000 17,000 18,000 19,000
Present value 12,000 13,699 14,178 13,710 13,216
at 9.5%

The optimal harvesting will be at the end of 2 years.

12. Present value of $150,000 received 5 years from now = $150,000/1.165 = $71,417
Joe will be better off waiting 5 years.

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