Time Value of Money: Cash Flow Diagram
Time Value of Money: Cash Flow Diagram
Time Value of Money: Cash Flow Diagram
1
3/4/2020
Tomorrow
COMMENTS:
• The end of one period is the beginning 100 100
of the next one
50
• Arrows point up for revenues or
benefits, down for costs
• One person’s payment (cash outflow w. 0 1 2 3 4 5
neg. sign) is another person’s receipt
(cash inflow w. pos. sign)
Example 1 a
Purchasing an Equipment
• NC Earthmoving is considering the purchase of a
piece of heavy equipment. What is the cash flow
diagram if the following cash flows are anticipated?
2
3/4/2020
$40.00
0 1 2 3 4 5
$30K +
$120K $35K
Example 1 b
Leasing Equipment
3
3/4/2020
Depositor
0 1 2 3 4 5
• Argument 2: Interest is compensation for uncertainties related to the future value of the
money.
4
3/4/2020
Simple Interest
Simple interest is interest that is computed on the original sum.
Example: You loan your friend $5000 for five years at a simple interest rate of 8% per year.
At the end of each year your friend pays you 0.08 5000 = $400 in interest. (this money is not
paid until the end of the fifth year)
At the end of five years your friend also repays the $5000.
After five years your friend has paid you:
5000 + 5 400 = 5000 + 5 0.08 5000.
Note: The borrower has used the $400 for 4 years without paying interest on it.
Compound Interest
Compounded interest is interest that is charged on the original sum and
un-paid interest.
You put $500 in a bank for 3 years at 6% compound interest per year.
At the end of year 1 you have (1.06) 500 = $530.
At the end of year 2 you have (1.06) 530 = $561.80.
At the end of year 3 you have (1.06) $561.80 = $595.51.
Note:
$595.51 = (1.06) 561.80
= (1.06) (1.06) 530
= (1.06) (1.06) (1.06) 500 = 500 (1.06)3
10
5
3/4/2020
Handy Notation.
(F/P,i,n) = (1+i)n
F = P (1+i)n = P (F/P,i,n).
11
Present Value
Example
If you want to have $800 in savings at the end of four
years, and 5% interest is paid annually, how much do you
need to put into the savings account today?
12
6
3/4/2020
13
0 1 2
6%
$2,000
FV
14
7
3/4/2020
15
0 1 2 3 4 5
8%
$5,000
FV5
16
8
3/4/2020
17
Present Value
PV = FV / (1+i)n.
18
9
3/4/2020
0 5 10
6%
$4,000
PV0
19
Present Value
(Formula)
PV0 = FV / (1+i)2 = $4,000 / (1.06)10 =
$2,233.58
0 5 10
6%
$4,000
PV0
20
10
3/4/2020
0 1 2 3 4 5
4%
$2,500
PV0
21
22
11
3/4/2020
Present Value
23
Example
You borrowed $5,000 from a bank at 8% interest rate and you have to pay it back in 5
years.
Plan A: At end of each year pay $1,000 principal plus interest due.
a b c d e f
Int. Owed Total Owed
Year Amnt. Princip. Total
Owed int*b b+c Payment Payment
1 5,000 400 5,400 1,000 1,400
2 4,000 320 4,320 1,000 1,320
3 3,000 240 3,240 1,000 1,240
4 2,000 160 2,160 1,000 1,160
5 1,000 80 1,080 1,000 1,080
SUM 15,000 1,200 16,200 5,000 6,200
24
12
3/4/2020
Example (cont'd)
You borrowed $5,000 from a bank at 8% interest rate and you have to pay it back in 5 years.
Plan B: Pay interest due at end of each year and principal at end of five
years.
a b c d e f
Int. Owed Total Owed
Year Amnt. Princip. Total
Owed int*b b+c Payment Payment
1 5,000 400 5,400 0 400
2 5,000 400 5,400 0 400
3 5,000 400 5,400 0 400
4 5,000 400 5,400 0 400
5 5,000 400 5,400 5,000 5,400
SUM 25,000 2,000 27,000 5,000 7,000
25
Example (cont'd)
You borrowed $5,000 from a bank at 8% interest rate and you have to pay it back in 5 years.
Plan D: Pay principal and interest in one payment at end of five years.
a b c d e f
Int. Owed Total Owed
Year Amnt. Princip. Total
Owed int*b b+c Payment Payment
1 5,000 400 5,400 0 0
2 5,400 432 5,832 0 0
3 5,832 467 6,299 0 0
4 6,299 504 6,802 0 0
5 6,802 544 7,347 5,000 7,347
SUM 29,333 2,347 31,680 5,000 7,347
?
COMPOUND INTEREST 26
13
3/4/2020
Cost Concepts
Fixed Costs:
are constant and unchanging regardless of the level of the activity over a
feasible range of operations for the capacity or capability available.
Variable costs:
operating costs that vary in total with the quantity of output or other
measures of activity level.
Direct Costs:
cost that can be reasonably measured and allocated to a specific output or
work activity.
Indirect/Overhead Cost:
cost that it is difficult to attribute or allocate to a specific output or work
activity.
28
14
3/4/2020
Engineering Costs
29
CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS
Fixed and Variable Cost
Fixed Cost.
• It is ordinarily defined as that group of costs involved in an ongoing activity,
whose total will remain relatively constant throughout the range of operational
activity.
• Fixed costs arise from making preparation for the future e.g. buying a machine
to reduce labour costs in future, materials are purchased and stored to avoid
idleness of production in future, research is carried out to pay back in the long
run.
• Fixed costs are made of such cost items, as depreciation, maintenance, taxes,
insurance, lease rentals, interests, sales programs, certain administrative
expenses, and research.
• It will be observed that these arise from the decisions of the past and in general
are not subject to rapid changes.
• These costs are only relatively fixed and their total may be expected to rise
somewhat with increased activity.
15
3/4/2020
CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS
Fixed and Variable Cost
Variable Cost
• It is defined as that group of costs which vary to the level
of operational activity e.g. material required to produce
more items will be more.
• In general, all costs such as direct labour, direct power,
direct material are considered to constitute the variable
costs.
CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS
Incremental and Marginal Costs
The terms incremental cost and marginal cost refer essentially to the same
concept.
Reference is made to an increase of cost in relation to some other factor, thus
resulting into such terms as increment cost per ton, increment cost per
gallon, etc.
The term marginal cost refers specifically to an increment of output whose cost
is barely covered by the return derived from it.
The graph, shown in figure, illustrates the nature of fixed and variable costs as a
function of output in units.
The incremental cost of producing 10 units between outputs of 40 and 50 units
per year is illustrated to be Rs: 8.00. Thus the average incremental cost of
these 10 units may be computed as Cost/output = 8/10 =0.8 per unit.
Note: For more description, see (Basis of Engg. Economics by Blank and Tarquin,
2008)
16
3/4/2020
CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS
Sunk Cost
17
3/4/2020
• Rs. 50 million already spent on HP project is a sunk cost., hence is irrelevant. Since the cost of
atomic plant is less than the remaining cost of the HP project, therefore atomic plant should be
selected. Continuing the initial project is not in economic interest of the public or not economical.
Opportunity cost
It is the cost (amount) that is foregone (given up) by not investing in some other alternative.
• For example, assume that a person has invested Rs. 50,000/ in shares. Let the annual revenue
from the share be Rs. 10,000/. If the same amount is invested in real state, it will have benefits of
Rs. 15000/ annually. This return is greater by an amount of Rs. 5000/ than the return from the
shares. The foregone excess return of Rs. 5000/ by way of not investing in the real state is the
Opportunity Cost of investing in shares.
18
3/4/2020
38
19
3/4/2020
• Which of the above are fixed and which are variable costs?
• How do we compute Albert’s total cost if he takes n people to Jackonville?
39
Total cost
40
20
3/4/2020
41
Book costs
are cost effects from past decisions that are recorded in the
books (accounting books) of a firm
• Do not represent cash flows
• Not included in engineering economic analysis
• One exception is for asset depreciation (used for tax
purposes).
42
21
3/4/2020
Life-Cycle Costs
Life-cycle costs are the summation of all costs, both recurring
and nonrecurring, related to a product, structure, system,
or service during its life span
43
44
22
3/4/2020
Life-Cycle Costs
Comments:
• The later design changes are made in the life-cycle, the higher the costs.
• Decisions made early in the life-cycle tend to “lock in” costs incurred later in
the life cycle:
Nearly 70 to 90% of all costs are set during the design phases, while
only 10 to 30% of the cumulative life-cycle costs have been spent.
• Question. When is the best time to consider all life-cycle effects, and make
design changes?
• Bottom Line. Engineers should consider all life-cycle costs when designing
products and the systems that produce them.
45
23