Class Cases CH 13: Capital Budgeting Decisions: Year Investment Cash Inflow Unrecovered Investment
Class Cases CH 13: Capital Budgeting Decisions: Year Investment Cash Inflow Unrecovered Investment
Class Cases CH 13: Capital Budgeting Decisions: Year Investment Cash Inflow Unrecovered Investment
Ex.1, 2, 6, 7 and 13
Required:
2. Because the investment is recovered prior to the last year, the amount of the cash inflow
in the last year has no effect on the payback period.
1
EXERCISE 13–2 Net Present Value Method
The management of Kunkel Company is considering the purchase of a $27,000 machine that
would reduce operating costs by $7,000 per year. At the end of the machine’s five-year useful
life, it will have zero scrap value. The company’s required rate of return is 12%.
Required:
2.
Total
Cash Cash
Item Flow Years Flows
Annual cost savings .. $7,000 5 $ 35,000
Initial investment ..... $(27,000) 1 (27,000)
Net cash flow ........... $ 8,000
2
EXERCISE 13–6 Simple Rate of Return Method
Required:
Required: Compute the simple rate of return on the new automated bottling machine.
3
EXERCISE 13–7 Net Present Value Analysis of Two Alternatives
Perit Industries has $100,000 to invest. The company is trying to decide between two alternative
uses of the funds. The alternatives are:
The working capital needed for project B will be released at the end of six years for investment
elsewhere. Perit Industries’ discount rate is 14%.
Required:
Which investment alternative (if either) would you recommend that the company accept? Show
all computations using the net present value format. Prepare separate computations for each
project.
4
Exercise 13-7 (15 minutes)
Project A:
Now 1 2 3 4 5 6
Project B:
Now 1 2 3 4 5 6
Working capital invested ......................... $(100,000)
Annual cash inflows ................................ $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $ 16,000
Working capital released ......................... _______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ 100,000
Total cash flows (a) ................................. $(100,000) $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $116,000
Discount factor (14%) (b) ........................ 1.000 0.877 0.769 0.675 0.592 0.519 0.456
Present value (a)×(b) ............................... $(100,000) $14,032 $12,304 $10,800 $9,472 $8,304 $52,896
Net present value ..................................... $7,808
The $100,000 should be invested in Project B rather than in Project A. Project B has a positive net
present value whereas Project A has a negative net present value.
5
EXERCISE 13–13 Basic Payback Period and Simple Rate of Return Computations
A piece of laborsaving equipment has just come onto the market that Mitsui Electronics, Ltd.,
could use to reduce costs in one of its plants in Japan. Relevant data relating to the equipment
follow:
Required:
1. Compute the payback period for the equipment. If the company requires a payback period
of four years or less, would the equipment be purchased?
2. Compute the simple rate of return on the equipment. Use straight-line depreciation based
on the equipment’s useful life. Would the equipment be purchased if the company’s
required rate of return is 14%?
6
Annual incremental net operating income
Simple rate of return =
Initial investment
$54, 000
= = 12.5%
$432, 000
No, the equipment would not be purchased because its 12.5% rate of
return is less than the company’s 14% required rate of return.