Making Choices: The Method, Marr, and Multiple Attributes: Engineering Economy Lecture No. 8 Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Making Choices: The Method, Marr, and Multiple Attributes: Engineering Economy Lecture No. 8 Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Making Choices: The Method, Marr, and Multiple Attributes: Engineering Economy Lecture No. 8 Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Incremental ROR.
If you have unequal lives and intend to
perform an incremental ROR analysis;
Must use the LCM of the two alternatives.
OR,
Impose a study period on both options
adjusting the cash flows as needed.
Series to Evaluate
For:
PW, AW, FW, B/C ratio, or ROR:
Use the estimated future cash flows, or
The incremental cash flow.
For PW, AW, FW, the discount rate must be
specified up front and applied directly as part of
calculating the equivalence relationship.
For ROR
One finds the i* or i* rates for the problem initially.
(Multiple roots cause problems!)
Then, the i* rate is compared to the MARR rate for a
decision.
The MARR is applied after the i* rate is determined!
Decision Guidelines
Pure Cost Problem:
Lowest PW, AW, FW valued alternative.
Cost/Revenue:
Highest PW, AW, FW valued alternative.
Incremental Methods:
ROR and B/C:
Rank appropriately first and compute the CF.
i* must equal or exceed the MARR value.
Notes Regarding the MARR
For engineering economy studies, the
appropriate discount rate is one of the most
important parameters.
The firm must set the MARR relative to the
firms financial condition and external factors.
Firms have to raise money for investment
purposes.
Money (investment funds) is not a free
commodity it has a cost.
Financing the Firm Cost of Capital
Firms raise capital in the following ways:
Sell stock equity capital.
Issue bonds or assume loans debt capital
Use retained earnings a form of equity capital.
Equity Capital:
Belongs to the owners of the firm.
The firm owns nothing the owners own.
Debt Capital:
Provided by outside agencies (Banks, etc.)
Cost: Interest paid on the borrowed funds.
Debt and Equity Capital
Every firm has a capital structure:
Debt component;
Equity component.
Each component:
Has a cost associated with it.
The cost is normally expressed as a percent
Similar to an interest rate expression.
Take each source of capital:
Compute its cost as a percent.
Compute a weighted average cost.
Debt and Equity Capital
Compute the cost of:
Debt component, and
Equity component.
Each component then has a cost (%) so
computed.
Compute a weighted average % cost.
Termed The Weighted Average Cost of
Capital WACC.
The WACC is expressed as a %.
Debt and Equity Capital
The WACC (once computed) forms the basis for
the establishment of the estimated MARR that
the firm requires.
The WACC is an estimate of all of the
components of the firms capital structure.
For sound investing, the returns to the firm must
cover at least the costs of capital involved with
investing
PLUS an additional % amount for:
Required return over cost, and
Perceived risk elements.
Retained Earnings
Retained earnings are funds previously
retained in the corporation for capital
investment.
The amount of equity is indicated in the
net worth section of the corporate balance
sheet.
Retained earnings come from after-tax
profits retained in the firm and not
distributed as dividends to the
shareholders belongs to the owners.
Debt Example
A firm needs a $5,000,000 computer
system.
The firm sells bonds paying 8% to raise the
entire amount.
The cost of the $5,000,000 is then 8%.
If this is the only activity for the time period
and a MARR is to be established, then:
The basis for the MARR is 8%!
MARR will be greater than 8%, but not lower!
Fundamental Relationship - MARR
The 8% floor is
then modified
upward by adding
additional %
increments until a
11% MARR rate is
reached.
Note the
additional
increments added
in!
Setting the MARR
First it is not an exact process!
MARRs will vary over time.
Within a firm, different MARRs may exist.
New equipment investment might be set at 10%;
Expansion projects or new products might be set at,
say, 20%.
MARRs may vary from project to project, due to
1. Project Risk;
2. Investment Opportunity;
3. Current Tax Structure;
4. Limited Capital;
5. Market rates at other corporations
Before-Tax MARR
Assume a tax rate, Te applies
The before-Tax MARR is defined as:
MARRafter tax
MARRBeforeTax
1 - Tax Rate
Some firms establish the MARR (after-tax) and then compute the
before-tax MARR to apply to economic studies where tax implications
are ignored.
WACC = 10.88%
Debt Financing
Debt means borrowing.
Sources:
Loans from financial institutions, and
Issuing (floating) bonds (IOUs).
Each of these instruments has a cost:
That cost to the firm is the interest paid on
the loans or owed on the bonds to the bond
holders.
Interest payments are tax deductible from
the firms perspective.
D-E Reviewed
Fundamental Rule:
The more debt capital a firm relies on, the
levels of risk are increased for all projects the
firm may elect to undertake.
Too much debt in the capital structure is bad!
Too much equity can be equally bad, too!
A healthy firm strives to achieve a reasonable
balance of debt to equity.
This is why financial managers make big
salaries!
Highly Leveraged Firms
Firms that engage in large debt-to-equity
positions hurt themselves.
Too much debt:
Harder to get loans already over-extended!
If new loans are granted, then the loan
interest rates are increased by the lenders.
The firm ends up owning less of itself, and
banks and lending institutions control the
destiny until the debt is retired or reduced.
Example
Large Debt Percentages
A firm that continues to borrow to fund
projects:
Increases the risk taken by the lenders and
stockholders;
Long-term confidence is eroded over time.
The firm is headed for trouble even if the
current stock price is high.
The healthy firm maintains a reasonable
balance between debt and equity over
time! {30% - 40%}or so.
Attributes of a Problem
Up to now:
We have considered only one attribute:
Economic
PW, FW, AW, ROR, B/C,