Chapter 09
Chapter 09
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Outline
• Identifying Cash Flows
• Calculating Cash Flow
• An Example: Blooper Industries
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Identifying Cash Flows (9.1)
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Identifying Cash Flows (continued)
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Example
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Identifying Cash Flows (continued)
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Incremental Cash Flows
• A project’s present value depends on the extra
cash flows that it produces.
▫ First, we need to forecast the firm’s cash flows if
we go ahead with the project.
▫ Second, forecast the cash flows if we don’t accept
the project.
▫ The difference is the incremental cash flows.
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Include All Indirect Effects
• New products often damage sales of existing
product.
▫ Take iPhone as a good example.
• A new project may help the firm’s existing
business.
▫ New air route from a small town itself may have
negative NPV but add customers in existing traffic.
• We must include all indirect effects in the
analysis.
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Forget Sunk Costs
• Recall that sunk cost is a retrospective cost that
has already been incurred and cannot be
recovered.
▫ Sunk costs remain the same whether or not we
accept the project.
▫ Thus, they do not affect project NPV.
▫ Example: Lockheed’s Tristar airplane.
• We always ignore sunk costs when calculating
incremental cash flows.
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Include Opportunity Costs
• Opportunity cost: benefit or cash flow foregone
as a result of an action.
▫ A new manufacturing operation uses a land that
could otherwise be sold for $100,000.
▫ This $100,000 should be included as the cost of
new project.
▫ The original cost of purchasing the land is
irrelevant – that cost is sunk.
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Investment in Working Capital
• The net working capital is the difference between
a company’s short-term assets and its liabilities.
▫ Current assets: cash, accounts receivable,
inventories...etc.
▫ Current liabilities: accounts payable, notes
payable, accruals...etc.
• Most projects entail an additional investment in
working capital.
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Investment in Working Capital
• For example, a new production may require
more inventories of raw materials, and the
customers may be slow to pay.
▫ This increases current assets.
▫ Thus, investments in working capital, just like
investments in plant and equipment, result in
increase in cash outflows.
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Investment in Working Capital
• Common ways working capital is overlooked:
▫ Forgetting about working capital entirely.
▫ Forgetting that working capital may change
during the life of the project.
▫ Forgetting that working capital is recovered at the
end of the project.
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Terminal Cash Flows
• The end of project almost always brings
additional cash flows.
▫ We might be able to sell some of the plant,
equipment, or real estate that was dedicated to the
project.
▫ We may also recover some of working capital
when collect the outstanding receivable.
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Allocated Overhead Costs
• Accountants must assign costs of a firm to its
projects.
• Some overhead costs such as rent or electricity
may or may not belong to a project.
• We should be cautious about accountants’
allocation of overhead cost.
• Include only the extra expenses of the project.
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Inflation and Discounting Cash Flows
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Inflation Example: Nominal Rates
You own a lease that will earn you $8,000 next year, increasing at 3%
a year for 3 additional years (4 years total). If discount rates are 10%
what is the present value of the lease?
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Investment and Financing Decisions
• Suppose we finance a project partly with debt.
▫ Should we subtract the debt proceeds from the
required investment?
▫ Should we recognize the interest and principal
payments on the debt as cash outflows?
▫ No, these are decisions on financial actions.
• We should view the project as if it were all
equity-financed.
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Final Thoughts
• Ask the following question:
▫ Would the cash flow still exist if the project does
not exist?
• If yes, do not include it in your analysis. If no,
include it.
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Calculating Cash Flow (9.2)
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Capital Investment
• To get a project started, a company typically
needs to make up-front investments in plant,
equipment, research, marketing, and so on.
▫ For example, development of a new car model
typically involves expenditure of $500 million or
more.
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Operating Cash Flow
• In the new car model example, operating cash
flow consists of revenues from sale of the new
product less the cost of production and any taxes.
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Operating Cash Flow
• When firm calculates its taxable income, it
makes a deduction for depreciation.
▫ The depreciation charge is not a cash expense but
affects the tax that the firm pays.
• There are three ways to deal with depreciation:
• Model 1: Dollars in Minus Dollars Out
▫ Take only the items from the income statement
that represent actual cash flows.
Operating Cash Flow = Revenue - Cash Expenses - Taxes
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Operating Cash Flow
• Model 2: Adjusted Accounting Profits
▫ Start with after-tax accounting profits and add
back any depreciation deduction.
Operating Cash Flow (OCF) = After-tax Profit + Depreciation
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Changes in Working Capital
• Investment in working capital such as in
inventories of raw materials or in accounts
receivable represents negative cash flows.
• Later in the life of a project, when the
inventories are sold and receivable are collected,
positive cash flows occur.
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Example: Blooper Industries (9.3)
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Example: Blooper Industries (continued)
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Example: Blooper Industries (continued)
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Example: Blooper Industries (continued)
• Note on depreciation.
▫ Here the firm depreciates the investment in
mining equipment by $2 million a year.
This produces an annual tax shield of $0.7 million
for 5 years.
These tax shields increase cash flows and present
values.
If they can be obtained sooner, they would be worth
more.
▫ The modified accelerated cost recovery system
(MACRS) is permitted by tax law.
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How does MACRS depreciation affect the
value of depreciation tax shield?
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Example: Blooper Industries (continued)
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