IIMC CorpFin Primer
IIMC CorpFin Primer
Primer
July 2024
Corporate Finance Primer
FOREWORD
Greetings!
The Finance and Investment Club of IIM Calcutta is excited to present the third
edition (Finclub 2024-25) of Corporate Finance Primer.
The motive of this primer is to explain important concepts asked in corporate
finance interviews. Other relevant corporate finance topics like CFRA and
Valuation concepts can be referred to from the Investment Banking Primer.
Along with the primers, we would advise looking at the Finance Interview
Question Bank and other materials shared by the club for preparation. Lastly,
reach out to as many corporate finance interns as you can to understand their
interview and internship experiences.
We hope that this primer helps in bringing you one step closer to landing your
dream internship. Feel free to reach out to us for any queries/suggestions.
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Corporate Finance Primer
CONTENTS
FINANCIAL RATIOS ..............................................................................................................................4
What are Financial Ratios? .............................................................................................................4
Liquidity Ratios.................................................................................................................................4
Solvency Ratios ...............................................................................................................................5
Turnover Ratios................................................................................................................................5
Profitability Ratios.............................................................................................................................7
Market value ratios ..........................................................................................................................8
WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT ..................................................................................................9
What is Working Capital?...............................................................................................................9
Why Working Capital Management is Important? .........................................................................9
Managing Liquidity..........................................................................................................................9
Managing Accounts Receivables....................................................................................................9
Managing Inventory ......................................................................................................................10
Managing Short-Term Debt ..........................................................................................................10
Managing Accounts Payable ........................................................................................................10
Is a negative working capital always a bad sign? ........................................................................10
LEVERAGE..........................................................................................................................................11
CAPITAL STRUCTURE .......................................................................................................................13
Optimal capital structure ................................................................................................................14
BUDGETING.........................................................................................................................................15
What is a budget? ...........................................................................................................................15
Top-down approach ........................................................................................................................15
Bottom-up approach........................................................................................................................15
Types of budgeting..........................................................................................................................15
CAPITAL BUDGETING ........................................................................................................................17
Important Capital Budgeting Concepts........................................................................................17
Sunk Costs.................................................................................................................................17
Incremental Cash Flows ..............................................................................................................18
Independent versus mutually exclusive projects..........................................................................18
Unlimited Funds vs. Capital Rationing .........................................................................................18
Net Present Value ........................................................................................................................18
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)........................................................................................................19
Payback Period.............................................................................................................................20
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FINANCIAL RATIOS
What are Financial Ratios?
Financial ratios are mathematical comparisons of financial statement accounts or categories. These relationships
between the financial statement accounts help investors, creditors, and internal company management
understand how well a business is performing and of areas needing improvement.
Ratios are just a raw computation of financial position and performance. In a sense, financial ratios don’t take into
consideration the size of a company or the industry.
Liquidity Ratios
Liquidity of a company depends on its ability to convert assets into cash or to generate cash through operations to
meet short term obligations.
1. Current Ratio: The current ratio measures a company’s ability to pay off its short-term liabilities with
current assets. Higher the current ratio, greater is the assurance that current liabilities will be met. A
thumb rule of 2 is widely used as an optimal ratio.
Current ratio = Current assets / Current liabilities
2. Quick Ratio/Acid test Ratio: It measures a company’s ability to pay off short-term liabilities with
quick assets. It is a more stringent test of liquidity. It includes only those current assets which can be
readily converted into cash. Inventories are excluded because they are least liquid and prepaid
expenses are excluded because they will not get converted into cash.
Acid-test ratio = (Current assets – Inventories – Prepaid Expenses) / Current liabilities
3. Cash Ratio: The cash ratio measures a company’s ability to pay off short-term liabilities with cash and
cash equivalents. It is more stringent in comparison to the quick ratio. It emphasises that ultimately cash
is required to settle current liabilities.
Cash ratio = Cash and Cash equivalents + Marketable Securities/ Current Liabilities
Note: A higher current ratio is more favourable than a lower current ratio because it shows the company can more
easily make current debt payments. But high current ratio also shows underutilization of resources which could
have been used to increase profitability of the company by investing them elsewhere.
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Solvency Ratios
Solvency refers to the long-term viability of the company. Ratios related to capital structure and earnings
coverage are used to measure solvency. It measures how leveraged the company is and how well is it placed
with respect to its debt repayments capacity.
● Debt to Total Assets Ratio: It measures the relative amount of a company’s assets that are provided
from debt. Total liabilities include both current and non-current liabilities.
Debt ratio = Total liabilities / Total assets
● Debt to Equity Ratio: It calculates the weight of total debt and financial liabilities against shareholders’
equity.
Debt to equity ratio = Total liabilities / Shareholders’ equity
● Interest Coverage Ratio: It shows how easily a company can pay its interest expenses on the
assumed debt. Higher interest coverage ratios imply the greater ability of the firm to pay off its interests. If
Interest coverage is less than 1, then EBIT is not sufficient to pay off interest, which implies finding other
ways to arrange funds.
Interest coverage ratio = EBIT/ Interest expenses
● Debt Service Coverage Ratio: It reveals how easily a company can pay its debt obligations. Total
debt service includes Principal payment, Interest payment and Lease payment.
Debt service coverage ratio = Operating income / Total debt service
Turnover Ratios
The turnover ratio is also known as activity ratio. This type of ratio indicates the efficiency with which an
enterprise’s resources are utilized.
● Inventory Turnover Ratio: It measures how many times a company’s inventory is sold and replaced
over a given period. It is a measure of how efficiently a company can control its merchandise, so it is
important to have a high turnover ratio.
Inventory turnover ratio = Cost of goods sold / Average inventory
● Days sales in inventory: Also known as Days of Inventory on Hand, it measures the average number
of days it takes for a company to sell its entire inventory during a specific period. It indicates how
efficiently a company manages its inventory. A lower DSI indicates that the company is selling its
inventory more quickly, which is generally a positive sign.
Days sales in inventory = 365 days / Inventory turnover ratio
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● Accounts Receivables turnover ratio: It measures a business’ ability to efficiently collect its
receivables. Higher ratios mean that companies are collecting their receivables more frequently
throughout the year. The reason net credit sales are used is because only credit sales establish a
receivable.
Receivables turnover ratio = Net credit sales / Average accounts receivable Days Accounts
● Days Accounts Receivables: Also known as Days Sales Outstanding (DSO), measures the average
number of days it takes for a company to collect payment after a sale has been made. It reflects the
efficiency of a company's credit and collection policies.
● Accounts Payables turnover ratio: It measures a business’ ability to efficiently pay its receivables.
Lower ratios mean that companies have more time to pay their payables throughout the year.
● Days Accounts Payable: Also known as Days Payable Outstanding (DPO), measures the average
number of days a company takes to pay its suppliers after receiving goods or services. It indicates how
long a company takes to settle its payables.
● Asset Turnover Ratio: It measures a company’s ability to generate sales from its assets. The total
asset turnover ratio calculates net sales as a percentage of assets to show how many sales are generated
from each dollar of company assets.
● Operating cycle: It is the average time it takes a business to buy inventory, sell it, and then receive
payment from customers. It essentially tracks the movement of cash through the business, from the
moment cash is used to purchase inventory to the moment cash is received from customers.
● Cash Conversion Cycle: It attempts to measure the time it takes a company to convert its investment
in inventory and other resource inputs into cash. In other words, the cash conversion cycle calculation
measures how long cash is tied up in inventory before the inventory is sold and cash is collected from
customers.
Cash Conversion cycle = Days sales in inventory + Days Accounts Receivables - Days
Accounts Payables
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Profitability Ratios
Profitability ratios measure a company’s ability to generate income relative to revenue, balance sheet assets,
operating costs, and equity.
● Gross Margin Ratio: It compares the gross profit of a company to its net sales to show how much profit
a company makes after paying its cost of goods sold. It basically shows % amount of money from product
sales left over after all of the direct costs associated with manufacturing the product has been paid.
Gross margin ratio = Gross profit / Net sales
● Operating Margin Ratio: It compares the operating income of a company to its net sales to determine
operating efficiency. Many times, operating income is classified as earnings before interest and taxes. If
companies can make enough money from their operations to support the business, the company is
usually considered more stable.
Operating margin ratio = Operating income / Net sales
● Return on Assets Ratio: The return on assets ratio measures how effectively a company can earn a
return on its investment in assets. In other words, ROA shows how efficiently a company can convert the
money used to purchase assets into net income or profits.
● Return on Equity Ratio: It measures how efficiently a company is using its equity to generate profit. In
other words, the return on equity ratio shows how much profit each dollar of common stockholders’ equity
generates.
Return on equity ratio = Net income / Shareholders’ equity
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Market value ratios are used to evaluate the share price of a company’s stock. Common market value ratios
include the following:
● Book Value per share Ratio: It calculates the per-share value of a company based on equity available
to common shareholders divided by the number of outstanding shares. This figure represents the minimum
value of a company's equity and measures the book value of a firm on a per-share basis.
Book value per share ratio = (Shareholders’ equity – Preferred equity) / Total common shares
outstanding
● Dividend Yield Ratio: It measures the amount of cash dividends distributed to common shareholders
relative to the market value per share. The dividend yield is used by investors to show how their investment
in stock is generating cash flows in the form of dividends.
● Earnings per share Ratio: It measures the amount of net income earned per share of stock
outstanding. In other words, this is the amount of money each share of stock would receive if profits were
distributed to the outstanding shares at the end of the year.
Earnings per share ratio = Net income- Preferred Dividends / Total shares outstanding
● Price-Earnings Ratio: It calculates the market value of a stock relative to its earnings by comparing the
market price per share by the earnings per share. In other words, the price earnings ratio shows what the
market is willing to pay for a stock based on its current earnings.
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Working capital is the difference between a company’s current assets and its current liabilities.
● Ensuring that the company possesses appropriate resources for its daily activities means protecting the
company’s existence and ensuring it can keep operating as a going concern.
● Scarce availability of cash, uncontrolled commercial credit policies, or limited access to short-term
financing can lead to the need for restructuring, asset sales, and even liquidation of the company.
Managing Liquidity
● Properly managing liquidity ensures that the company possesses enough cash resources for its
ordinary business needs and unexpected needs of a reasonable amount. It’s also important because it
affects a company’s creditworthiness, which can contribute to determining a business’s success or
failure.
● The lower a company’s liquidity, the more likely it is going to face financial distress, other conditions
being equal. However, too much cash parked in low- or non-earning assets may reflect a poor allocation
of resources.
● Proper liquidity management is manifested at an appropriate level of cash and/or in the ability of an
organization to quickly and efficiently generate cash resources to finance its business needs.
● A company should grant its customers the proper flexibility or level of commercial credit while making
sure that the right amounts of cash flow in via operations.
● A company will determine the credit terms to offer based on the financial strength of the customer, the
industry’s policies, and the competitors’ actual policies.
● Credit terms can be ordinary, which means the customer generally is given a set number of days to pay
the invoice (generally between 30 and 90). The company’s policies and manager’s discretion can
determine whether different terms are necessary, such as cash before delivery, cash on delivery, bill-to-
bill, or periodic billing.
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Managing Inventory
● Inventory management aims to make sure that the company keeps an adequate level of inventory to
deal with ordinary operations and fluctuations in demand without investing too much capital in the asset.
● An excessive level of inventory means that an excessive amount of capital is tied to it. It also increases
the risk of unsold inventory and potential obsolescence eroding the value of inventory.
● A shortage of inventory should also be avoided, as it would determine lost sales for the company.
● Like liquidity management, managing short-term financing should also focus on making sure that the
company possesses enough liquidity to finance short-term operations without taking on excessive risk.
● The proper management of short-term financing involves the selection of the right financing instruments
and the sizing of the funds accessed via each instrument.
● Popular sources of financing include regular credit lines, uncommitted lines, revolving credit agreements,
collateralized loans, discounted receivables, and factoring.
● A company should ensure there will be enough access to liquidity to deal with peak cash needs. For
example, a company can set up a revolving credit agreement well above ordinary needs to deal with
unexpected cash needs.
● Accounts payable arises from trade credit granted by a company’s suppliers, mostly as part of the
normal operations. The right balance between early payments and commercial debt should be achieved.
● Early payments may unnecessarily reduce the liquidity available, which can be put to use in more
productive ways.
● Late payments may erode the company’s reputation and commercial relationships, while a high level of
commercial debt could reduce its creditworthiness.
● Most of the time, this is not considered as a good sign, but there are cases where negative working
capital is good for the organization.
● Sometimes it means that the company can generate the cash so quickly that it gets time in between to
pay off its suppliers and creditors. So basically, the company is using the suppliers’ money to run its day-
to-day operations. Generally, firms who are dealing with cash-only business enjoy high turnover with
negative working capital. Such firms don’t supply goods on credit and constantly increase their sales.
Online retailers, discount retailers, grocery stores, restaurants and telecom companies are expected to
have negative working capital
● Though this means a good idea, having the negative working capital to its advantage is not everyone’s
cup of tea. The companies which deal with cash only businesses or where the receivables time is too
short often have negative working capital.
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LEVERAGE
Leverage, in the sense we use it here, refers to the amount of fixed costs a firm has. These fixed costs may be
fixed operating expenses, such as building or equipment leases, or fixed financing costs, such as interest
payments on debt. Greater leverage leads to greater variability of the firm's after-tax operating earnings and net
income. A given change in sales will lead to a greater change in operating earnings when the firm employs
operating leverage; a given change in operating earnings will lead to a greater change in net income when the
firm employs financial leverage.
● Business risk refers to the uncertainty about operating earnings (EBIT) and results from variability in
sales and expenses. Business risk is magnified by operating leverage.
● Financial risk refers to the additional variability of EPS compared to EBIT. Financial risk increases with
greater use of fixed cost financing (debt) in a company's capital structure.
The degree of operating leverage (DOL) is defined as the percentage change in operating income (EBIT)
that results from a given percentage change in sales:
The degree of financial leverage (DFL) is interpreted as the ratio of the percentage change in net income
(or EPS) to the percentage change in EBIT:
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The degree of total leverage (DTL) combines the degree of operating leverage and financial leverage. DTL
measures the sensitivity of EPS to change in sales.
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CAPITAL STRUCTURE
Both debt and equity can be found on the balance sheet. Company assets, also listed on the balance sheet, are
purchased with this debt and equity. Capital structure can be a mixture of a company's long- term debt, short-
term debt, common stock, and preferred stock. A company's proportion of short- term debt versus long-term debt
is considered when analysing its capital structure.
When analysts refer to capital structure, they are most likely referring to a firm's debt-to-equity (D/E) ratio, which
provides insight into how risky a company's borrowing practices are. Usually, a company that is heavily financed
by debt has a more aggressive capital structure and therefore poses a greater risk to investors. This risk,
however, may be the primary source of the firm's growth.
● Debt is one of the two main ways a company can raise money in the capital markets. Companies benefit
from debt because of its tax advantages; interest payments made as a result of borrowing funds may be
tax-deductible. Debt also allows a company or business to retain ownership, unlike equity. Additionally, in
times of low interest rates, debt is abundant and easy to access.
● Equity allows outside investors to take partial ownership in the company. Equity is more expensive than
debt, especially when interest rates are low. However, unlike debt, equity does not need to be paid back.
This is a benefit to the company in the case of declining earnings. On the other hand, equity represents a
claim by the owner on the future earnings of the company.
Capital structure refers to the proportion of equity vs. debt financing that a firm utilizes to carry out its
operations and grow.
Managers need to weigh the costs and benefits of raising each type of capital along with their ability to raise
either. Equity capital involves diluting some of the company ownership and voting rights, but comes with fewer
obligations to investors in terms of repayment. Debt tends to be cheaper capital (plus it has tax advantages), but
comes with serious responsibilities in terms of repaying interest and principal, which can lead to default or
bankruptcy if not carried through. Firms in different industries will use capital structures better-suited to their type
of business. Capital- intensive industries like auto manufacturing may utilize more debt, while labour-intensive or
service- oriented firms like software companies may prioritize equity.
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The optimal capital structure of a firm is often defined as the proportion of debt and equity that results in the
lowest weighted average cost of capital (WACC) for the firm.
In order to optimize the structure, a firm can issue either more debt or equity. The new capital that’s acquired
may be used to invest in new assets or may be used to repurchase debt/equity that’s currently outstanding, as a
form of recapitalization.
● Debt investors take less risk because they have the first claim on the assets of the business in the
event of bankruptcy. For this reason, they accept a lower rate of return and, thus, the firm has a lower
cost of capital when it issues debt compared to equity.
● Equity investors take more risk, as they only receive the residual value after debt investors have been
repaid. In exchange for this risk, investors expect a higher rate of return and, therefore, the implied
cost of equity is greater than that of debt.
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BUDGETING
What is a budget?
A budget is an estimation of revenue and expenses over a specified future period of time and is usually compiled
and re-evaluated on a periodic basis. Budgets can be made for a person, a group of people, a business, a
government, or just about anything else that makes and spends money.
It explains the company’s objectives and the course of action it will choose to achieve its goals in detail. Also, it
mentions the controls to be put in place for achieving its successful implementation.
The budgeting process is the process of putting a budget in place. This process involves planning and forecasting,
implementing, monitoring and controlling, and finally evaluating the performance of the budget.
Top-down approach
● This budgeting process involves preparing the budget by the company’s senior management based on the
company’s objectives. The departmental managers are assigned the responsibility for its successful
implementation. Every department can opt to create its own budget based on the company’s broader budget
allocation and goals.
● This approach’s advantage is that the lower management saves a lot of time and gets a readymade budget
to be followed. They hardly participate in the preparation of the central budget. The senior managers’
experience, coupled with past-performance figures, comes in handy in such budgeting processes.
Bottom-up approach
● This budgeting process starts at the departmental level and moves up to higher levels. Every department
within the company is required to prepare plans for its proposed activities for the next budget period and
estimate the costs it will incur. These individual budgets are combined to create a bigger all-inclusive
budget.
● The budgeting process with this approach can be lengthy and time-consuming. However, employees and
managers are more motivated to achieve the budget goals since they have prepared it. They have the
complete knowledge of what the budget actually expects them to do and how to achieve that. Such budgets
tend to be more accurate and closer to the actual situation on the ground.
Types of budgeting
1. Incremental budgeting
Incremental budgeting takes last year’s actual figures and adds or subtracts a percentage to obtain the current
year’s budget. It is the most common method of budgeting because it is simple and easy to understand.
Incremental budgeting is appropriate to use if the primary cost drivers do not change from year to year.
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2. Activity-based budgeting
Activity-based budgeting is a top-down budgeting approach that determines the amount of inputs required to
support the targets or outputs set by the company. For example, a company sets an output target of $100 million in
revenues. The company will need to first determine the activities that need to be undertaken to meet the sales
target, and then find out the costs of carrying out these activities.
Value proposition budgeting is really a mindset about making sure that everything that is included in the budget
delivers value for the business. Value proposition budgeting aims to avoid unnecessary expenditures – although it
is not as precisely aimed at that goal as our final budgeting option, zero- based budgeting.
4. Zero-based budgeting
As one of the most commonly used budgeting methods, zero-based budgeting starts with the assumption that all
department budgets are zero and must be rebuilt from scratch. Managers must be able to justify every single
expense. No expenditures are automatically “okayed”. Zero-based budgeting is very tight, aiming to avoid any and
all expenditures that are not considered absolutely essential to the company’s successful (profitable) operation.
The zero-based approach is good to use when there is an urgent need for cost containment, for example, in a
situation where a company is going through a financial restructuring or a major economic or market downturn that
requires it to reduce the budget dramatically.
There are two kinds of the budget in cost accounting that differ in scope, nature, and usefulness.
● Fixed budget is a kind of budget where the income and the expenditure are pre-determined. Irrespective
of any fluctuation or change, this budget is static. Companies that are static, execute the same sort of
transactions can significantly benefit from a fixed budget. But wherever there are fluctuations, a fixed
budget doesn’t turn out to be the most suited one.
● Flexible budget, on the other hand, is a budget that is flexible as per the needs of the hour. For example,
if the company sees that it can sell off more of its products by expending more in advertisement costs, a
flexible budget would help execute that. That’s why a flexible budget is very effective for companies who
go through a lot of changes during a particular period. It is much more complicated than the fixed budget
too.
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CAPITAL BUDGETING
Capital budgeting refers to the decision-making process that companies follow with regard to which capital-
intensive projects they should pursue. Such capital-intensive projects could be anything from opening a new factory
to a significant workforce expansion, entering a new market, or the research and development of new products.
Capital budgeting decisions are based on incremental after-tax cash flows discounted at the opportunity cost of
capital. Assumptions of capital budgeting are:
● Capital budgeting decisions must be made on cash flows, not accounting income. Accounting profits only
measures the return on the invested capital. Accounting income calculations reflect non-cash items and
ignore the time value of money. They are important for some purposes, but for capital budgeting, cash flows
are what are relevant.
● Cash flow timing is critical because money is worth more the sooner you get it. Also, firms must have
adequate cash flow to meet maturing obligations.
● The opportunity cost should be charged against a project. Remember that just because something is on
hand does not mean it's free. See below for the definition of opportunity cost.
● Expected future cash flows must be measured on an after-tax basis. The firm's wealth depends on its
usable after-tax funds.
Sunk Costs
A sunk cost is a cost that has already occurred and cannot be recovered by any means. Sunk costs are
independent of any event and should not be considered when making investment or project decisions. Only
relevant costs (costs that relate to a specific decision and will change depending on that decision) should be
considered when making such decisions.
A few examples -
● A company spends $5 million on building an airplane. Prior to completion, the managers realize that there is
no demand for the airplane. The aviation industry has evolved and airlines demand a different type of plane.
The company has a choice: finish the plane for another $1 million or build the new in-demand airplane for
$4 million. In this scenario, the $5 million already spent on the old plane is a sunk cost. It should not affect
the decision and the only relevant cost is the $4 million.
● A company spends $10,000 training its employees to use a new ERP system. The software turns out to be
heavily confusing and unreliable. The senior management team wants to discontinue the use of the new
ERP system. The $10,000 spent to train employees is a sunk cost and should not be considered in the
decision of discontinuing the new ERP system.
● A company spends $10 million to conduct a marketing study to determine the profitability of a new product
they will launch in the marketplace. The study concludes that the product will be heavily unsuccessful and
unprofitable. Therefore, the $10 million is a sunk cost. The company should not continue with the product
launch and the initial marketing study investment should not be considered when making decisions.
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● Cash outflows are treated as negative cash flows since they represent expenditure that the company has to
incur to fund the project.
● Cash inflows are treated as positive cash flows since they represent money being brought into the company.
The NPV represents the amount of present-value cash flows that a project can generate after repaying the
invested capital (project cost) and the required rate of return on that capital. An NPV of zero signifies that the
project's cash flows are just sufficient to repay the invested capital and to provide the required rate of return on
that capital. If a firm takes on a project with a positive NPV, the position of the stockholders is improved.
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Decision rules
● The higher the NPV, the better.
● Reject if NPV is less than or equal to 0
Assuming the cost of capital for the firm is 10%, calculate each cash flow by dividing the cash flow by (1 + k)^t
where k is the cost of capital and t is the year number. Calculate the NPV for Project A and B above.
NPV = CF0 + CF1 + CF2 + CF3 + CF4
Note this formula is simply the NPV formula solved for the particular discount rate that forces the NPV to equal zero.
The IRR on a project is its expected rate of return. The NPV and IRR methods will usually lead to the same accept
or reject decisions.
Decision rules
● The higher the IRR, the better.
● Define the hurdle rate, which typically is the cost of capital.
● Reject if IRR is less than or equal to the hurdle rate.
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Since it is difficult to determine the IRR by hand, the use of a financial calculator is needed to solve for IRR.
The IRR for Project A is 14% and for Project B is 12%
Payback Period
It is the expected number of years required to recover the original investment. Payback occurs when the
cumulative net cash flow equals 0.
We see that in case of project A, the cumulative cashflows reach 0 between time 1 and 2. Thus, by simple
interpolation,
Solving the equation, payback period (PP) for Project A = 1.71 years
Similarly, payback period for project B is 3.27 years
Decision rules
● The shorter the payback period, the better.
● A firm should establish a benchmark payback period. Reject if payback is greater than benchmark
Drawbacks
● It ignores cash flows beyond the payback period. Payback period is a type of "break even" analysis: it cares
about how quickly you can make your money to recover the initial investment, not how much money you
can make during the life of the project.
● It does not consider the time value of money. Therefore, the cost of capital is not reflected in the cash flows
or calculations.
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We see that in case of project A, the discounted cumulative cashflows reach 0 between time 2 and 3. Thus, by
simple interpolation,
Solving the equation, discounted payback period (DPP) for Project A = 2.26 years
Similarly, payback period for project B is 3.71 years
Drawbacks
● It does not take into account the time value of money - the value of cash flows does not diminish with time as
is the case with NPV and IRR.
● ARR is based on numbers that include non-cash items
Profitability Index
This is an index used to evaluate proposals for which net present values have been determined. The profitability
index is determined by dividing the present value of each proposal by its initial investment.
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The PI indicates the value you are receiving in exchange for one unit of currency invested.
● An index value greater than 1.0 is acceptable and the higher the number, the more financially attractive the
proposal.
● A ratio of 1.0 is logically the lowest acceptable measure on the index. Any value lower than 1.0 would
indicate that the project's PV is less than the initial investment.
NPV vs IRR
The Relative Advantages and Disadvantages of the NPV and IRR Methods
● A key advantage of NPV is that it is a direct measure of the expected increase in the value of the firm. NPV
is theoretically the best method. Its main weakness is that it does not include any consideration of the size
of the project. For example, an NPV of $100 is great for a project costing $100 but not so great for a project
costing $1 million.
● A key advantage of IRR is that it measures profitability as a percentage, showing the return on each dollar
invested. The IRR provides information on the margin of safety that the NPV does not. From the IRR, we
can tell how much below the IRR (estimated return) the actual project return could fall, in percentage terms,
before the project becomes uneconomic (has a negative NPV).
● The disadvantages of the IRR method are (1) the possibility of producing rankings of mutually exclusive
projects different from those from NPV analysis and (2) the possibility that a project has multiple IRRs or no
IRR. (3) There is an implicit assumption that the cashflows will be reinvested at the IRR.
● In the case of mutually exclusive projects that are competing such that acceptance of either blocks
acceptance of the remaining one, NPV and IRR often give contradicting results. NPV may lead the project
manager or the engineer to accept one project proposal while the internal rate of return may show the other
as the most favourable. Such a kind of conflict arises due to a number of problems.
● For one, conflicting results arise because of substantial differences in the amount of capital outlay of the
project proposals under evaluation. Sometimes, the conflict arises due to issues of differences in cash
flow timing and patterns of the project proposals or differences in the expected service period of the
proposed projects.
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When faced by difficult situations and a choice must be made between two competing projects, it is best to choose a
project with a larger positive net value by using cut-off rate or a fitting cost of capital.
The reason the two above mentioned options work is because a company’s objective is maximizing its shareholders’
wealth, and the best way to do that is choosing a project that comes with the highest net present value. Such a
project exerts a positive effect on the price of shares and the wealth of shareholders.
So, NPV is much more reliable when compared to IRR and is the best approach when ranking projects that are
mutually exclusive. Actually, NPV is considered the best criterion when ranking investments.
Also, it can be demonstrated that the better assumption is the cost of capital for the reinvestment rate Multiple IRRs
is the situation where a project has two or more IRRs. This problem is caused by non-conventional cash flows of a
project.
● Conventional cash flows means that the initial cash outflows are followed by a series of cash inflows.
● Non-conventional cash flows means that a project calls for a larger cash outflow either sometime during or
at the end of its life. Thus, the signs of the net cash flows flip-flop during the project's life.
In fact, non-conventional cash flows can cause other problems such as negative IRR or an IRR, which leads to an
incorrect accept or reject decision. However, a project can have only one NPV regardless of its cash flow patterns so
the NPV method is preferable when evaluating projects with non-normal cash flows.
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Corporate Finance Primer
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