Capital Budgeting
Techniques and
Practice
Capital Budgeting: the process of
planning for purchases of longterm assets.
example:
Suppose our firm must decide whether to
purchase a new plastic molding machine
for $125,000. How do we decide?
 Will the machine be profitable?
 Will our firm earn a high rate of return
on the investment?
Decision-making Criteria in
Capital Budgeting
 The Ideal Evaluation Method should:
a) include all cash flows that occur
during the life of the project,
b) consider the time value of money,
c) incorporate the required rate of
return on the project.
Payback Period
 How long will it take for the project
to generate enough cash to pay for
itself?
(500) 150 150 150 150 150 150 150
Payback period = 3.33 years.
150
Payback Period
Is a 3.33 year payback period good?
 Is it acceptable?
 Firms that use this method will compare
the payback calculation to some
standard set by the firm.
 If our senior management had set a cutoff of 5 years for projects like ours, what
would be our decision?
 Accept the project.
Other Methods
1) Net Present Value (NPV)
2) Profitability Index (PI)
3) Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
Each of these decision-making criteria:
 Examines all net cash flows,
 Considers the time value of money, and
 Considers the required rate of return.
Net Present Value
 NPV = the total PV of the annual net
cash flows - the initial outlay.
n
NPV =
t=1
ACFt
(1 + k) t
- IO
Net Present Value
Decision Rule:
If NPV is positive, accept.
 If NPV is negative, reject.
NPV Example
 Suppose we are considering a capital
investment that costs $250,000 and
provides annual net cash flows of
$100,000 for five years. The firms
required rate of return is 15%.
250,000 100,000 100,000 100,000 100,000 100,000
Net Present Value (NPV)
NPV is just the PV of the annual cash
flows minus the initial outflow.
Using TVM:
P/Y = 1 N = 5
PMT = 100,000
I = 15
PV of cash flows = $335,216
- Initial outflow: ($250,000)
= Net PV
$85,216
Profitability Index
n
NPV =
t=1
n
PI
t=1
ACFt
t
(1 + k)
- IO
ACFt
(1 + k) t
IO
Profitability Index
 Decision Rule:
 If PI is greater than or equal
to 1, accept.
 If PI is less than 1, reject.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
 IRR:
the return on the firms
invested capital. IRR is simply the
rate of return that the firm earns on
its capital budgeting projects.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
n
NPV =
t=1
IRR:
t=1
ACFt
(1 + k) t
ACFt
t
(1 + IRR)
- IO
= IO
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
n
IRR:
ACFt
t
(1 + IRR)
= IO
t=1
IRR is the rate of return that makes the PV
of the cash flows equal to the initial outlay.
 This looks very similar to our Yield to
Maturity formula for bonds. In fact, YTM
is the IRR of a bond.
Calculating IRR
 Looking again at our problem:
 The IRR is the discount rate that
makes the PV of the projected cash
flows equal to the initial outlay.
250,000 100,000 100,000 100,000 100,000 100,000
IRR
Decision Rule:
If IRR is greater than or equal to
the required rate of return,
accept.
If IRR is less than the required
rate of return, reject.