Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Capital Investement Policy | KUL |

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
140
Uploaded on
12-06-2026
Written in
2024/2025

(FOLLOWED EVERY LESSON LIVE) Summary of the course Capital Investement Policy given by Mariathasan Mike and Hoffmann Florian. Based on slides (of ) and own lecture notes.

Institution
Course

Content preview

Capital investment policy samenvatting

Lecture 1
What is capital investment policy?
- Any investment policy must embody 2 components:
o One or more criteria by which to measure the relative economic attributes of
investment alternatives
▪ Welke criteria je gebruikt om alternatieve met elkaar te vergelijken
o Decision rules for selecting acceptable investement
▪ Hoe je beste kiest
- Purpose:
o A consistent and adequate investement policy has a double function:
▪ In the short run, it should indicate which investments should be chosen to
achieve the financial objectives of the corporation
▪ In the long run, it should serve as a basis for identifying or developing
investment alternatives that are likely to match the policies selected
o => is een soort communicatie middle
- The corporate finance perspective:
o Any company must answer 2 questions:
▪ What investment should it make?
• What real assets should it buy?
▪ How should it pay for these investments?
• What securities and other assets should it sell?
o Investments policies focus on question 1, but we will see that question 1 and 2 are
generally not independent

The financial goal of the corporation
What is a company?
- Company = group os projects
o Role of management is to choose the best projects
- Project = a series of cash flows
o Cash inflows = revenue
o Cash outflows = initial investments and expenses
- Cash flow = an amount of money paid at a specific time
o Cash inflow = positive amount
o Cash outflow = negative amount

Where do the company objectives come from?
- The goal of a firm is determined by the firm’s owners
o For a company, by its shareholders
- Management hired ta act on behalf of the owners/shareholders
o Day-to-day operations
- 2 problems:
o Definition of goals: what if shareholders disagree among each other?
o Implementation of shareholders’ goals: separation of ownership and control may
lead to agency conflicts



1

,The financial goal of the corporation
- All shareholders – independent of their individual preferences – can agree to assign one
objective to the manager:
o Maximize the current market value of shareholders’ investment in the firm
- With functioning financial markets, wealth can then be put to whatever purpose each
shareholder wants
o If you want money now, you sell your shares
o If you want money later, you keep your shares, and let them grow
- Example:
o Consider 2 investors with entirely different preferences:
▪ Assume both currently have €100 000
▪ A wants to save for the future, G wants to spent now
▪ If the interest rate is 10%, A would have €110 000 to spend in a year
o Financial markets allow A and G to transfer consumption over time
▪ Assume both have €110 000 at their disposal in 1 year
▪ A would be happy, G could borrow and spend €100 000 today




- Example 2:
o Suppose A and G have a friend (F) who starts a company and offers them a certain
payment of €121 000 next year if the invest their €100 000 today:
▪ A is happy: gets €121 000 instead of €110 000 tomorrow
▪ G is happy: can borrow €110 000 instead of €100 000 today
• Als je €121 000 naar vandaag brengt krijg je €110 000
o The success of F’s company is in the interest of A and G despite their different
consumption preferences




2

, - It is key that financial markets are well-functioning and competitive, and that all shareholders
have equal access
- Suppose G could not easily borrow against future returns:
o G would want to consume as much as possible now and thus push for higher
dividends/lower investment/… today
▪ Dan groeit bedrijf minder, maar krijgt ze wel hoger dividend
o A would push in the apposite direction and try to invest as much as possible to
maximize resources available for consumption tomorrow
o If both were shareholders in the same firm, the overall objectives would be
impossible to determine
- Careful: maximizing shareholder value ≠ maximizing profits
o increasing current profits by cutting back on LT investments may impair LT value
o not paying dividends and reinvesting additional cash in a mature company might
increase profits but not shareholder value
- Example: paying dividends VS investing:
o Suppose Tesla considers launching a new electric car and has set aside the necessary
cash
o Options: go ahead with the launch or pay cash to shareholders
o Suppose the launch is about as risky as the US stock market and that the stock
market offers a return of 10%.
o If the new car generates a return of 20% shareholders would be happy for Tesla to
launch; if it generates 5%, they prefer the cash
o Minimum rate of return at which shareholders would be happy with the launch and
not demand their money back: 10%
o This rate is also called hurdle rate or cost of capital; it is an opportunity cost as it
depends on shareholders’ outside options
o To remember: the appropriate opportunity cost depends on the risk of the proposed
investment

Implementing shareholder goals
- In perfect markets, maximizing shareholder value is an objective that all shareholders can
agree on. This makes it possible to delegate the management of the company to a hired
manager
- But: Managers’ private interests might not be aligned with the shareholders’ objective (job
security, bonuses, …); such diverging objectives cause agency problems
- Agency costs arise when managers do not maximize firm value or when shareholders incur
costs to monitor & constrain managers
- Suppose the return on A and G’s investment in F’s company would depend on F’s
commitment
- Once the company is funded, F might realize that networking with business partners may
lead to a well-paying and less stressful job
- For F it could be worthwhile to spend time networking even if this reduces her commitment
to (& thus the value of) her company
- A and G’s investment would lose value but enforcing F’s commitment may be costly




3

, Summary
- Shareholders with heterogeneous preferences can agree on maximizing company value as an
objective for the firm they own
- ⇒ The goal of the corporation is to maximize shareholder value
- A capital investment policy is a strategy for value creation
- Agency costs may arise because the implementation of the policy is delegated to a manager,
who may have diverging objectives

Investment decisions & present value
Investment decisions
- We are interested in corporate investment decisions because they are a way of creating value
for shareholders
- The goal is to choose “the most valuable” projects
- How do we decide whether projects add value for shareholders?
o And how do we know how much value they add?
- Example:
o You can pay €3.5M today to construct a building in 1 year
▪ The interest rate r to borrow around €3.5 M for 1 year is 10%
▪ The building will be worth €4.0 M next year
▪ Question: Is it profitable to build this structure?
o Need to make cash flows comparable:
▪ Present value (PV) of future cash flow: C1 / (1+r) = 4..1 = €3.64
▪ Future Value (FV) of current cash flow: C0 x (1 + r) = 3.5 x 1.1 = €3.85
▪ We call r the discount rate and 1/(1+r) the discount factor

Investments decision rules
- 3 rules:
o Present Value rule: Invest if PV = 𝑐1 /(1+r) > cost of investment = 𝑐0
▪ In our example, PV = €3.64, cost = e3.5, so invest
o Net Present Value rule: Invest if NPV = 𝑐𝑜 + 𝑐1 /(1+r) > 0
▪ In our example, NPV = €0.14 > 0, so invest
o Rate of Return rule: Invest if Rate of Return = Profit / Investment > r
▪ In our example, return = (4.0 – 3.5) / 3.5 = 14.3% > 10%, so invest
- Common principle: a project adds value if its return is higher than the return of comparable
alternative investments (hurdle rate, cost of capital)

PV with multiple cash flows
- The present value (PV) of a cash flow C1 one year from today is:
𝑐1
o PV = 1+𝑟
- The PV of a cash flow 𝑐𝑡 in year t is:
𝑐𝑡
o (1+𝑟) 𝑡

- The PV of a stream of cash flows 𝑐1 , 𝑐2 , …, is:
𝑐1 𝑐2 𝑐𝑡
o PV = 1+𝑟 + (1+𝑟) 2 + …. + (1+𝑟)𝑡




4

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
June 12, 2026
Number of pages
140
Written in
2024/2025
Type
SUMMARY

Subjects

$7.64
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
J0119
3.0
(2)

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
J0119 Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
4
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
18
Last sold
2 weeks ago

3.0

2 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
1
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions