Investment decision and evaluation techniques (PP, DPP, ARR, NPV, PI, IRR)
본문 바로가기

경영 이야기

Investment decision and evaluation techniques (PP, DPP, ARR, NPV, PI, IRR)

728x90
반응형

Definition of Investment decision

  • The investment decision is concerned with the selection of assets in which funds will be invested by a firm.

Evaluation techniques

Non-discounting (Not consider time value of money)

  • Payback period (PP)
  • Accounting rate of return (ARR)

 

Discounted (consider time value of money)

  • Discounted payback period(DPP)
  • Net present value (NPV)
  • Profitability Index (PI)
  • Internal rate of return (IRR)

1. Payback period

  • How soon can we get back our initial investment?

 

Formula 

IF cash flows are even,

  • Initial investment / annual cash inflow

Example

Investments costs $600,000 and annual cash inflows are 200,000, then payback period is 3 years

 

 

IF cash flows are uneven,

  • Years before fully recovery + unrecovered cost at start of the year / cash flow during the year

Example

Investment costs $200,000 and cash inflows are $70,000, $60,000, $55,000, $50,000, $30,000.

 

 

Payback period table

Years Cash flows Cumulative cash flow
0 (200,000) (200,000)
1 70,000 (130,000)
2 60,000 (70,000)
3 55,000 (15,000)
4 50,000 35,000
5 30,000 65,000
Payback Period: 3 years + 15,000 / 50,000 = 3.3 years

 

 


 

2. Discounted payback period (DPP)

Example

Investment costs $800,000, cash inflows are $250,000, $400,000, $300,000, $450,000

 

Discounted payback period table

Years Cash flows DF @ 10% PV C.NPV
0 (800,000) 1 (800,000) (800,000)
1 250,000 0.909 227,250 (572,750)
2 400,000 0.826 330,400 (242,350)
3 300,000 0.751 225,300 (17,050)
4 450,000 0.683 307,350 290,300
DF: discount factor
PV: present value
C.NPV: cumulative net preset value
DPP: 3 + 17,050 / 307,350 = 3.055 years.

 

 


 

 

3. Accouning (average) rate of return (ARR)

  • This evaluation takes into account the earnings from the investment over its whole life.

 

Formula

  • ARR = average profit / average investment
  • Profit = cash inflows - depreciation - tax
  • Depreciation = initial investment - scrap value
  • Average profit = profit / number of years
  • Average investment = (initial investment + scrap value) / 2 + additional working capital

Example

Initial investment costs $200,000, no scrap value, no working capital given. Cash inflows are $54,000, $48,000, $30,000, $64,000, $80,000. Tax rate is 40% and depreciation is straight line basis
Cash inflows: 54,000 + 48,000 + 30,000 + 64,000 + 80,000 =276,000
Profit: 276,000 – 200,000 – 30,400 = 45,600
Average profit = 45,600 / 5 = 9,120
Average investment = 200,000 / 2 = 100,000
ARR = 9,120 / 100,000 = 9.12%

 


 

4. Net present value (NPV)

  • The NPV technique is a discounted cash flow method that considers time value of money in evaluating capital investments.
  • Decision rule: ACCEPT IF NPV > 0, REJECT, IF NPV < 0, choose the highest one if all projects are all > 0.

 

Example

 

Information for A and B

  Project A Project B
Initial investment 40,000 60,000
Estimated life 5 years 5 years
Scrap value 2,000 4,000

Cash inflows for A and B

Year 1 2 3 4 5
Project A 10,000 20,000 20,000 6,000 4,000
Project B 40,000 20,000 10,000 6,000 4,000

 

Discount factor (DF) @ 10%

Year 1 2 3 4 5
DF@10% 0.909 0.826 0.751 0.683 0.621

 

Project A

Year Cash flows DF @ 10% PV
0 (40,000) 1 (40,000)
1 10,000 0.909 9,090
2 20,000 0.826 16,520
3 20,000 0.751 15,020
4 6,000 0.683 4,098
5 4,000 0.621 2,484
5 (Scrap) 2,000 0.621 1,242
    NPV 8,454

Project B

Year Cash flows DF @ 10% PV
0 (60,000) 1 (60,000)
1 40,000 0.909 36,360
2 20,000 0.826 16,520
3 10,000 0.751 7,510
4 6,000 0.683 4,098
5 4,000 0.621 2,484
5 (Scrap) 4,000 0.621 2,484
    NPV 9,456

 


 

5. Internal rate of return (IRR)

  • IRR represents the discount rate that makes NPV is zero (0). It is a discounted cash flow technique which takes into account the time value of money.
  • IRR Decision Rule: ACCEPT if IRR > K, REJECT if IRR < K
  • K = cost of capital
  • NPV = 0 = PV of the expected cash inflows = initial cash outflow

 

Formula
IRR = L + [NL / NL - NH * (H - L)]

where,
L: lower rate
H: higher rate
NL: NPV at lower rate
NH: NPV at higher rate

 

 

Example

Calculate the internal rate of return of an investment of $134,000 which yields the following cash inflows.

Year Cash flows
1 30,000
2 40,000
3 60,000
4 30,000
5 20,000

 

Year Cash flows DF @ 10% PV DF @ 12% PV
0 (134,000) 1 (134,000) 1 (134,000)
1 30,000 0.909 27,270 0.893 26,790
2 40,000 0.826 33,040 0.797 31,880
3 60,000 0.751 45,060 0.712 42,720
4 30,000 0.683 20,490 0.636 19,080
5 20,000 0.621 12,420 0.567 11,340
    NPV 4,280 NPV -2,190

 

IRR

= 10 + [4,280 / (4,280 +2,190) * (12-10)]

= 10 + [4,280 / 6,470 * 2]

= 10 + 1.3

= 11.3%

 

 

 


 

 

 

6. Profitability Index (PI)

  • The PI measures the ratio between the PV of future cash inflows and the PV of cash outflows.
  • Acceptance Rule: IF PI > 1 Accept the project, IF PI < 1 Reject the project.
  • The index is a useful tool for ranking investment projects and showing the value created per unit of investment.

Formula

  • PI = PV of cash inflows / PV of cash outflows

 

Example

Suppose we have three projects involving discounted cash outflow of $530,000, $70,000 and $10,050,000. And suppose further that the sum of discounted cash inflows for these projects are $650,000, $85,000, and $10,060,00 respectiely. Calculate PI for the three projects 

 

Project A: 650,000 / 530,000 = 1.23

Project B: 85,000 / 70,000 = 1.21

Project C: 10,060,000 / 10,050,000 = 1.001

 

 

 

투자평가

 

728x90
반응형