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FIN 311 Financial Management - Ch. 9 Complete Study Notes

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This document is a clear and concise summary of Chapter 9 from the textbook for FIN 311 (Fundamentals of Corporate Finance). It covers all key concepts, definitions, and takeaways in an easy-to-understand format. It is perfect for quick review, test prep, or reinforcing lecture material. Ideal for students who want to save time while mastering the essentials of the chapter.

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Subido en
17 de junio de 2025
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19 de junio de 2025
Número de páginas
5
Escrito en
2023/2024
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Del vecchio anthony
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Chapter 9: net present value and other investment criteria

9.1 Net present value

The basic idea
●​ We create value by identifying an investment worth more in the marketplace than it costs us to
acquire (worth more than the cost)
●​ Capital budgeting is about trying to determine whether a proposed investment or project will be
worth more, once it is in place, than it costs (worth more than the cost)
●​ Net present value (NPV): the difference between an investment's market value and its cost
○​ Searching for investments with positive net present values
○​ If the different is positive, the investment is worth undertaking bc it would have a
positive estimated net present value

Estimating NPV
●​ Answering this question: would this be a good investment? Does the investment have a positive
NPV?
●​ a negative NPV would decrease the total value of the stock
1.​ Estimate the future cash flows we expect the new business to product
2.​ estimate the present value of those cash flows by using a discounted cash flow procedure
(discounted cash flow (DCF) valuation)
3.​ Estimate NPV as the difference between the present value of the future cash flows and the cost
of the investment
●​ NPV rule:
○​ Accept-reject decision: whether NPV is positive or negative
○​ + NPV = accept; - NPV = reject
○​ Independent project - accept all positive NPV
○​ Mutually exclusive project - select the highest NPV

Ex: Supposed we are asked to decide whether a new consumer product should be launched. Based
on projected sales and costs, we expect that the cash flows over the 5 year life of the project will
be $2,000 in the first 2 years, $4,000 in the next two, and $5,000 in the last year. It will cost about
$10,000 to begin production. We use a 10% discount rate to evaluate new products.

1.​ Total value of the product by discounting the cash flows back to the present:
Present value = $2,000/1.1 + $2,000/1.1^2 + $4,000/1.1^3 + $4,000/1.1^4 +
$5,000/1.1^5
= $12,313
2.​ The present value of the expected cash flows is $12,313 but the cost is $10,000
NPV = 12,313-10,000 = 2,313



1

, 3.​ The NPV is positive, we should take on the project


9.2 The payback rule

●​ Payback: the length of time it takes to recover our initial investment or "get our bait back"

Defining the rule
●​ Answer the question: how many years do we have to wait until the accumulated cash flows from
this investment equal or exceed the cost of the investment?
●​ Based on liquidity
●​ The payback period rule:
○​ an investment is acceptable if its calculated payback period is less than some
prespecified number of years
○​ Independent project - accept both project
○​ Mutually exclusive project (and not given a cut-off period)- select the shortest payback
period project




Ex: This project costs $500. Cash flow year 1: $100, year 2: $200, year 3: $500. What is the payback
period for this investment?

●​ The initial cost is $500. After the first 2 years, the cash flows total $300 ($100+$200).
●​ After the third year, the total cash flow is $800 ($100+$200+$500), so the project pays back
sometime between the end of year 2 and the end of year 3
●​ The accumulated cash flows for the first 2 years are $300, need $200 in the third year to recover
(for the total $500 cost)
○​ Have to wait 200/500=0.4 years to recover the $200
●​ The payback period is 2.4 years (2+0.4 years), or about two years and five months

Analyzing the rule
●​ Calculate the payback period by adding up the future cash flows
●​ There is no discounting involved, so the time value of money is ignored
●​ Fails to consider any risk differences
●​ Biggest problem is coming up with the right cutoff period: we can't have an objective basis for
choosing a particular number


9.3 the discounted payback



2
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