Chapter 3 - Project Selection
Chapter 3 - Project Selection
Chapter 3 - Project Selection
ENGINEERING
MANAGEMENT
TECHNIQUES
Lecture 3:
Project Selection
LEARNING OUTCOMES
Willingness-to-pay test
To determine how much the clients are willing to pay for the product
(Micro-economics - supply, demand & prices)
PROJECT SELECTION
PROJECT SELECTION
Numerical
Models
Scoring Financial
Models Models
original investment.
months.
EXAMPLE 1
A company wishes to buy a new machine for a four year project. The manager
has to choose between machine A or machine B, so it is a mutually exclusive
situation. Although both machines have the same initial cost ($35,000) their
cash-flows perform differently over the four year period as shown in Table 1.
Conclusion?
Machine A will recover its outlay one year sooner than machine B. Where project's are
0 -£80,000 -£80,000
1 £10,000 £35,000
2 £20,000 £25,000
3 £20,000 £20,000
4 £30,000 £15,000
cc 5 £40,000 £10,000
Cash flow: Cash flow: Project
Year
Project A B
Original investment 0 -£80,000 -£80,000
1 £10,000 £35,000
2 £20,000 £25,000
Gains per year 3 £20,000 £20,000
4 £30,000 £15,000
5 £40,000 £10,000
Payback Period ? ?
Conclusion:
• Project A takes 4 years to gain the initial investment.
• Project B takes 3 years to gain the initial investment.
The payback period quantifies the selection criteria in terms the decision-
makers are familiar with.
DISADVANTAGES OF PAYBACK
PERIOD METHOD
It does not consider the time value of money.
The payback period is indifferent to the timing of the cash-flow.
The project with a high, early income (cash-inflow) would be ranked equally with a
project which had late income if their payback periods were the same (see figure 1).
Figure 2
• “E” has the shorter payback period and higher initial cashflow.
• F” has the longer payback period and lower initial cash flow even though overall returns
are higher.
• A project that built up slowly to give excellent returns (project F) would be rejected in
favor of project E with lower early returns if the payback period was shorter.
It is not a suitable technique to evaluate long term projects where the
effects of differential inflation and interest rates could significantly change
the results.
All other financial data are ignored.
Although payback period would reduce the duration of risk, it does not
quantify the risk exposure.
2. RETURN ON INVESTMENT (ROI)
𝐴𝑛𝑛𝑢𝑎𝑙 𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑓𝑖𝑡
𝑅𝑂𝐼= ×100%
𝑂𝑟𝑖𝑔𝑖𝑛𝑎𝑙 𝐼𝑛𝑣𝑒𝑠𝑡𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡
EXAMPLE 3
Using the same example 2 but calculate using ROI.
DISADVANTAGES:
Averages profit over successive years.
Projects with high initial costs ranked equally with those
with high profits later (early profits should be given
priority).
3. NET PRESENT VALUE (NPV)
Takes into consideration the time value of money.
Eg: A $100 today will not have the same worth or buying power as
a $100 this time next year.
Requires accurate forecast of the cash-flows and prediction of the
interest rates.
The NPV is a measure of the value or worth added to the company
by carrying out the project.
A positive NPV means the company would gain profit by carrying
out the project.
A negative NPV indicates the company would lose money by
carrying out this project.
NPV Calculations
Cash flow (at any future time, t) = Income – Expenditure
NPV = Cash Flow x Discount Factor
Discount Factors for given discount (inflation) rates over a 6-year project
Years 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% 10%
1 0.9901 0.9804 0.9709 0.9615 0.9524 0.9434 0.9346 0.9259 0.9174 0.9091
2 0.9803 0.9612 0.9426 0.9246 0.9070 0.8900 0.8734 0.8573 0.8417 0.8264
3 0.9706 0.9423 0.9151 0.8890 0.8638 0.8396 0.8163 0.7938 0.7722 0.7513
4 0.9610 0.9238 0.8885 0.8548 0.8227 0.7921 0.7629 0.7350 0.7084 0.6830
5 0.9515 0.9057 0.8626 0.8219 0.7835 0.7473 0.7130 0.6806 0.6499 0.6209
6 0.9420 0.8880 0.8375 0.7903 0.7462 0.7050 0.6663 0.6302 0.5963 0.5645
Further Discount Factors
General Procedure:
Insert the cash-flow
0 -£80,000 -£80,000
1 £10,000 £35,000
2 £20,000 £25,000
3 £20,000 £20,000
4 £30,000 £15,000
5 £40,000 £10,000
Project A: Inflation (Discount) Rate = 5%
NPV =
Net Present Value (NPV)
Years 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% 10%
1 0.9901 0.9804 0.9709 0.9615 0.9524 0.9434 0.9346 0.9259 0.9174 0.9091
2 0.9803 0.9612 0.9426 0.9246 0.9070 0.8900 0.8734 0.8573 0.8417 0.8264
3 0.9706 0.9423 0.9151 0.8890 0.8638 0.8396 0.8163 0.7938 0.7722 0.7513
4 0.9610 0.9238 0.8885 0.8548 0.8227 0.7921 0.7629 0.7350 0.7084 0.6830
5 0.9515 0.9057 0.8626 0.8219 0.7835 0.7473 0.7130 0.6806 0.6499 0.6209
6 0.9420 0.8880 0.8375 0.7903 0.7462 0.7050 0.6663 0.6302 0.5963 0.5645
Project A: Inflation (Discount) Rate = 5%
0 -£80,000 1 -£80,000
1 £10,000 0.9524
2 £20,000 0.9070
3 £20,000 0.8638
4 £30,000 0.8227
5 £40,000 0.7835
NPV =
Project Cash
Years Discount Factor Present Value
Flow
0 -£80,000 1 -£80,000
1 £10,000 0.9524 £9,524
2 £20,000 0.9070 £18,140
3 £20,000 0.8638 £17,276
4 £30,000 0.8227 £24,681
5 £40,000 0.7835 £31,340
NPV = £20,961
Project Cash
Years Discount Factor Present Value
Flow
0 -£80,000 1 -£80,000
1 £35,000 0.9524 £33,334
2 £25,000 0.9070 £22,675
3 £20,000 0.8638 £17,276
4 £15,000 0.8227 £12,341
5 £10,000 0.7835 £7,835
NPV =
Project B: Inflation (Discount) Rate = 5%
Project Cash
Years Discount Factor Present Value
Flow
0 -£80,000 1 -£80,000
1 £35,000 0.9524 £33,334
2 £25,000 0.9070 £22,675
3 £20,000 0.8638 £17,276
4 £15,000 0.8227 £12,341
5 £10,000 0.7835 £7,835
NPV = £13,461