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SRT510 Business Case Studies Evaluating Financial Investment in IT “Back of the Envelope” methods Payback period Return on Investment % When to use? Limitations? Strategic Planning Investment/Performance planning process for an organization What do we need to invest in, in the next quarter/year, and what benefits can we expecting in return? Involves “capital budgeting” – the financial evaluation of investment proposals Discounted Cash Flow Relevant when A company contemplates an action entailing costs/benefits that extend beyond the current year Includes Analyzing equipment acquisitions or sales Choosing among competing technologies Financial Evaluation Estimate the relevant cash flows Calculate a “figure of merit” A for this investment Compare A to an acceptance criterion Challenges? Estimating relevant cash flows E.g. depreciation, financing costs, shared resources, etc. Many important costs/benefits cannot be measured in $ so must be evaluated qualitatively (evaluating $ is simpler!) TABLE 7-1 Cash Flows for Container-Loading Pier ($ millions) Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Cash flow ($40) 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 17 7.5 17 1 40 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Eg: Container Loading Pier First, “back of the envelope”: Payback? year 6 (accum ben – accum costs is > 0) (7.5M*6 – 40M) = 45M – 40M = 5M In Time value of Money: Compounding Compounding Example 10% interest rate, invest $1 End of year 1: $1 + (10% of $1) = $1 + .10 = $1.10 End of year 2: $1.10 + (10% of $1.10) = $1.20 +11 = $1.21 Time Value of Money: Discounting (present value) Discounting Finding the present value of a future sum Example 10% return; Promised $1 in one year—what would you have to invest today? .909 i.e. $1 = $.909 + (10% of $.909) Calculating Present Value Use present value tables (appendix A of text), calculators, spreadsheet. Present Value Table Shows the present value of $1 to be received at the end of any number of periods from 1 to 50, at interest rates ranging from 1% to 50% In present value “interest rate” often called “discount rate” What is the “discount rate”? If a company already has cash “in hand”: The rate of return available on similar risk investments The company’s “opportunity cost of capital” If a company must raise cash (by selling securities): Rate of return expected by buyers of the securities The buyers’ “opportunity cost of capital” Discount Rate & Risk Discount rate is often adjusted to reflect risk in an investment’s cash flow If an investment is higher risk, a “risk premium” is often added to the discount rate to compensate for the risk (e.g. that the investment will not meet projected cash flows). This means that the discount rate for a higher risk investment will typically be higher. Example: Baseball Catcher New, young catcher signed to a contract promising $2M a year for 4 years. What is the contract worth today assuming the catcher has a similar risk investment opportunity yielding 15% per year? P? P = present value of the contract 0 1 2 3 4 Using Appendix A: • Must find P at 15% of each individual payment P = (.870 x $2M) + (.756 x $2M) + (.658 x $2M) + (.572 x $2m) P = $5,710,000 Example: Baseball Catcher cont’d Much simpler approach: This amount happens to be an annuity (same $ every year) so we can use the present value annuity table (appendix B). P = 2.855 x $2M = $5,710,000 P = $5,710,000 means that: $5,710,000 today is equivalent to the future cash flows of $2M per year for 4 years at 15% $5,710,000 Today is Equivalent to $2 million a Year for 4 Years When the Interest Rate is 15 % BeginningEnd-of of-Period Interest at -Period Year Principal 15% Principal 1 $5,710,000 $856,500 $6,566,500 2 4,566,500 684,975 5,251,475 3 3,251,475 487,721 3,739,196 4 1,739,196 260,879 2,000,075 Withdrawal $2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 Note: The $75 remaining in the account after the last withdrawal is due to round-off error in the present value tables. Back To the Pier Example Calculate P, over 10yrs using 10% for 9 yrs – an annuity $7.5M + $9.5M = $17M for the 10th year P = (5.759 x $7.5M) + (.386 x $17M) P = $43.1925M + $6.562M P = $49.75M $7.5M $7.5M P = $49.75M at 10% $17M 1 2 Investment of $40M 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Net Present Value (NPV) NPV = Present Value of Cash Inflows Present Value of Cash Outflows NPV for Pier = $49.75M - $40M = $9.75M NPV Rule of Thumb NPV > 0 Accept NPV < 0 Reject the investment! the investment! NPV = 0 Investment is marginal (does not create or destroy wealth) Benefit:Cost Ratio (BCR) BCR = (present value of cash inflows) / (present value of cash outflows) BCR for Pier = $49.75M / $40M = 1.24 BCR Rule of Thumb BCR > 1, attractive investment BCR < 1, unattractive investment BCR = 1, marginal Internal Rate of Return (IRR) IRR is the discount rate at which an investment’s NPV is zero Often tricky with the tables; calculator or computer are easier The IRR is equivalent to the interest rate on a bank account that would yield the same $ as the investment being considered TABLE 7-2 NPV of Container Pier at Different Discount Rates Discount Rate NPV ($ millions) 10% 12% $9.75 5.44 IRR = 15% 18% -4.48 FIGURE 7-2 NPV of Container Pier at Different Discount Rates NPV ($ millions) 50 40 30 20 IRR 10 0 -10 -20 0 4 8 12 16 Discount rate (%) 20 24 IRR of Pier Container If the $40M was invested at 15% with appropriate cash flows withdrawn at the end of each year ($7.5M for the first 9 years, then $17M for the 10th), the amount in the account at the end of the 10th year would be approx. $14.8M See page 252 of the text IRR Rule of Thumb If K% is the “opportunity cost of capital) IRR > K, accept the investment IRR < K, reject the investment IRR = K, the investment is marginal Other Considerations Depreciation Shared resources Excess capacity Sunk costs Selecting a Figure of Merit When investments are independent and the decision is simply to accept/reject: NPV, When investments are mutually exclusive Use BCR, IRR are equally satisfactory NPV Independent, Under Capital Rationing interested in payoff per $ invested Use BCR TABLE 7A-2 Four Independent Investment Opportunities under Capital Rationing (Capital budget =$200,000) Investment A Initial Cost NPV at BCR at 12% 12% $200,000 $10,000 IRR 1.05 14.4% B 120,000 8,000 1.07 15.1 C 50,000 6,000 1.12 17.6 D 80,000 6,000 1.08 15.5 Investment budget = $200K; take bundle giving highest NPV: Rank by BCR (gives “benefit per dollar”) and work down the list until the 200K is used up FIGURE 7A-2 Capital Budgeting Decision Tree Use NPV, IRR, or BCR Rank by NPV Mutually exclusive Rank by NPV over common investment horizon No fractional projects Accept bundle of investments with highest NPV Accept bundle of investments with highest NPV over common horizon Accept bundle of investments with highest NPV Rank by BCR