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Chapter 09

This document discusses using discounted cash flow analysis to make investment decisions. It covers identifying and calculating cash flows, including capital investments, operating cash flows, and cash flows from changes in working capital. An example is provided to illustrate calculating cash flows from a project versus accounting income.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views43 pages

Chapter 09

This document discusses using discounted cash flow analysis to make investment decisions. It covers identifying and calculating cash flows, including capital investments, operating cash flows, and cash flows from changes in working capital. An example is provided to illustrate calculating cash flows from a project versus accounting income.

Uploaded by

蔡彤旻
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 43

Chapter 9

Using Discounted Cash-Flow Analysis


to Make Investment Decision

Financial Management (MGCM10018)


Preview
• Chapter 8 introduced valuation techniques
based on discounted cash flows.
• This chapter develops criteria for properly
identifying and calculating cash flows.

2
Outline
• Identifying Cash Flows
• Calculating Cash Flow
• An Example: Blooper Industries

3
Identifying Cash Flows (9.1)

• Cash flows vs. accounting income


▫ Discount actual cash flows, not necessarily net
income.
▫ Using accounting income, rather than cash flow,
could lead to erroneous decisions.
• Recall from chapter 3, income statements are
intended to show how well the firm has
performed, not to track cash flows.

4
Identifying Cash Flows (continued)

• If the firm lays out a large amount of money on a


big capital project.
▫ We should not say that the firm performed poorly
that year, even though a lot of cash is going out.
▫ Thus, the accountant does not deduct capital
expenditure when calculating income.
▫ Instead, we depreciate it over several years.
• This is fine for computing annual profits, but it
could get you into trouble when finding NPV.
5
Example
A project costs $2,000 and is expected to last 2 years, producing cash
income of $1,500 and $500, respectively. The cost of the project can
be depreciated at $1,000 per year. Given a 10% required return,
compare the NPV using cash flows to the NPV using accounting
income.
Year 1 Year 2
Cash Inflow $1,500 $ 500
Depreciation -$1,000 -$1,000
Accounting Income +$ 500 - $ 500

6
Example

The NPV using cash flows:


Today Year 1 Year 2
Cash Inflow $1,500 $ 500
Project Cost -$2,000
Free Cash Flow -$2,000 +$1,500 + $500

7
Identifying Cash Flows (continued)

• There is no doubt that we should use the cash


NPV in the previous example.
• When calculating NPV, recognize investment
expenditures when they occur, not later when
they show up as depreciation.
• The focus of capital budgeting must be on cash
flow, not profits.

8
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.

Incremental Cash Flow Cash Flow


Cash Flow = with Project - without Project
9
Incremental Cash Flows
• We need to trace all the incremental cash flows
from a proposed project in capital budgeting.
• There are some things to look out for:
▫ Include All Indirect Effects
▫ Forget Sunk Costs
▫ Include Opportunity Costs
▫ Recognize the Investment in Working Capital
▫ Beware of Allocated Overhead Costs
▫ Remember Shutdown Cash Flows

10
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.
11
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.
12
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.

13
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.

14
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.

15
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.

16
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.

17
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.

18
Inflation and Discounting Cash Flows

• Discounting rule: real cash flows must be


discounted at a real discount rate, nominal cash
flows at a nominal rate.

1+nominal interest rate


1 + real interest rate = 1+inflation rate

19
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?

Year Cash Flow PV @ 10%


0 $ 8,000 $8, 000
1
1 $ 8,000 x 1.03 = $ 8,240 8240
1.101
= $ 7, 491
2 $ 8,000 x 1.032 = $ 8, 487 8487
1.102
= $ 7,014
3 $ 8,000 x 1.033 = $ 8,742 8742
1.103
= $ 6,568
$29,073
20
Inflation Example: Real Rates

Year Cash Flow PV @ 6.80%


0 $ 8,000 $ 8, 000
8,000
1 $ 8,000 1.0681
= $ 7, 491
8,000
2 $ 8,000 1.0682
= $ 7,014
8,000
3 $ 8,000 1.0683
= $ 6,568
$29,073

21
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.

22
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.

23
Calculating Cash Flow (9.2)

• Cash flows are made up of three separate parts:

Total cash flow =


cash flows from capital investments
+ operating cash flows
+ cash flows from changes in working capital

24
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.

25
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.

Operating cash flow = Revenue – Costs – Taxes

26
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
27
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

• Model 3: Add Back Depreciation Tax Shield


▫ Depreciation tax shield: reduction in taxes
attributed to depreciation.
OCF = (Revenue − Cash Expenses) × (1 − Tax Rate)+(Tax Rate × Depreciation)

28
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.

29
Example: Blooper Industries (9.3)

• Suppose we are the financial managers of


Blooper Industries to analyze a proposal for
mining and selling a small deposit of high-grade
magnoosium ore.
• We are given the forecasts shown in the
following table.

30
31
32
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Panel A summarizes the assumptions.


• Panel B details investments and disinvestments in
fixed assets.
▫ The project requires an initial investment of $10
million.
▫ After 5 years, the mining equipment may be sold for
$2 million.
 We assume that the firm depreciates the equipment to
final value of zero.
 Thus, the $2 million sale would be treated as taxable gain,
and with 35% tax, the net cash flow become $1.3 million.
33
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Panel C shows changes in operating cash flow.


▫ The firm expects to sell 750,000 pounds of
magnoosium a year at $20 per pound.
 This leads to $15 million revenue.
 Row 19 shows revenues rising each year in line with
inflation of 5%.
 Annual expense is $10 million, this also need to
consider impact of inflation (row 20).
 Using straight-line depreciation to deduct the 1/5 of
initial $10 million from profits.
34
35
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Panel C shows changes in operating cash flow.


▫ Row 22 shows pretax profit as (revenues – expenses -
depreciation).
▫ Row 23 shows taxes as 35% of pretax profit.
▫ Row 24 shows profit after tax.
▫ Row 25 shows cash flows as sum of after-tax profits
and depreciation.
• Panel D shows changes in working capital.
▫ Row 28 shows the level, and row 29 shows changes.
▫ Row 30 shows cash flows as negative of changes.
36
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Panel E presents the project valuation.


▫ Row 33 shows total project cash flows as sum of 3
sources (rows 16, 25, and 30).
▫ Discount each year’s cash flows to row 35 with
12% opportunity cost.
▫ Row 36 shows the NPV of $4.2 million as sum of
row 35.

37
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Forecasting working capital.


▫ Consider the revenue of $15,000 in year 1.
 Suppose that the customers pay with 2-month lag in
average, the account receivable would be 2/12 of
each year’s sales.
 That would be (2/12)*15,000 = $2,500 for year 1.
▫ Consider the expense of $10,000 in year 1.
 Assume 15% of expense represent an investment in
inventory that took place in previous year.
 So the inventory of year 0 would be 0.15*10,000 =
$1,500. 38
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• Forecasting working capital.

▫ This is the level of working capital reported in row


28 in the spreadsheet.

39
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.
40
41
How does MACRS depreciation affect the
value of depreciation tax shield?

42
Example: Blooper Industries (continued)

• All large corporations in the U.S. keep two sets


of books, one for stockholders and one for the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
▫ It is common to use straight-line depreciation on
the shareholder books and MACRS depreciation
on the tax books.
• Only the tax books are relevant in capital
budgeting.

43

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