Chapter 9 Connect (Exam 2)
Total number of inputs that change while doing sensitivity analysis?
1
Possibility that errors in projected cash flows will lead to incorrect decisions is known as:
estimation risk & forecasting risk
We underestimate NPV because of the options to
abandon and expand
A positive NPV exists when the market value of a project exceeds its cost. Unfortunately, most of the time the market value of a project:
cannot be observed
Firms VC per unit estimate used in its base case analysis is $50 per unit and they anticipate the upper lower bounds to be +/- 10%, what is the "worst case" for VC per unit?
$55
In the context of capital budgeting, what does sensitivity analysis do?
It examines how sensitive a particular NPV calculation us to changes in underlying assumptions
Drawbacks of sensitivity analysis
May increase the false sense of security among managers if all pessimistic estimates of NPV are positive and it does not consider interaction among variables
Benefits of sensitivity analysis
Reduces a false sense of security by giving a range of values for NPV instead of a single value AND it identifies the variable that has the most effect on NPV
Scenario analysis vs sensitivity analysis
Scenario considers a combo of factors for each scenario while sensitivity focuses on only one variable at a time
Managerial options
The option to: abandon, wait, expand
True relative to capital rationing
hard rationing implies the firm is unable to raise funds for projects AND soft rationing is typically internal in that the firm allocates funds to divisions for capital projects
Reasons why NPV is considered a superior capital budgeting technique:
it properly chooses among mutually exclusive projects, considers time value of $, considers all cash flows, considers the riskiness of the project
The primary risk in estimation errors is the potential to
make incorrect capital budgeting decisions
When we estimate the bestcase, worst-case cash flows and calculate the corresponding NPVs, we are engaging in:
scenario analysis and asking what-if questions
A manager has estimated a positive NPV for a project. What could drive the result:
the cash flow estimates are inaccurate, project is a good estimate, overly optimistic management
Capital rationing exists when a company has identified positive NPV projects but can't (or won't) find:
the necessary financing
In a competitive market, positive NPV projects are:
uncommon
The basic approach to evaluating cash flow and NPV estimates involves asking
what-if questions