Chapter 9 Finance
Capital structure question
How a firm chooses to finance its operations
Postitive
Should the Net Present Value be positive or negative to make it worth it?
Payback period
The amount of time required for an investment to generate cash flows sufficient to recover its initial cost
Net Present Value
The difference between an investment's market value and its costs. A measure of how much value is created or added today by undertaking in an investment.
Internal Rate of Return
The discount rate that makes the NPV of an investment equal to zero
Discounted payback period
The length of time required for an investment's discounted cash flows to equal its initial cost
Required Return
The minimum expected return you would need in order to purchase an asset, that is, to make the investment
Payback
the length of time it takes to recover our initial investment
Discounted cash flow valuation
the prices of valuing an investment by discounting its future cash flows
Capital Budgeting
trying to determine whether a proposed investment or project will be worth more, once it is in place, than it costs.
Goal of financial management
create value for stockholders
Working capital question
how a firm manages its short-term operating activities
Net Present Value Profit
A graphical representation of the relationship between an investment's NPV's and various discount rates
Mutually Exclusive Investment Decisions
A situation in which taking one investment prevents the taking of another
The IRR is greater than the required return
According to the IRR rule, an investment is acceptable if:
its aar exceeds a target aar
According to the average accounting return rule, a project is acceptable if:
Average Accounting Return (AAR)
An investment's average net income divided by its average book value
Yes
Do IRR and NPV rules always lead to the same decisions?
negatives of payback period rule
No discounting involved time value of money is completely ignored fails to consider risk differences no rule with coming up with the right cutoff period
Disadvantages of AAR
Not a true rate of return Time value of money is ignored uses an arbitrary benchmark cutoff rate Based on accounting values, not cash flow and market values
Multiple Rates of Return
The possibility that more than one discount rate will make the NPV of an investment zero
Profitability Index
The present value of an investment's future cash flows divided by its initial cost
True
True or False: If a project ever pays back on a discounted basis, then it must have a positive NPV?