L5 - Farm Investment Analysis
L5 - Farm Investment Analysis
L5 - Farm Investment Analysis
Lecture 5 and 6
NMKC Premarathne
Senior Lecturer in Agricultural Economics
ILOs
After completion of this section, you should be able to,
P Compounding
F
r u
e t
s u
e Discounting
r
n e
Present Value
6
Present Rupee into the Future
• Define
– R=initial investment amount
– r=rate of return on investment
– T=years of investment
• The future value (FV) of the investment is:
FV R1r T
Future Rupee into the Present
8
Future Rupee into the Present
• The present value of a future amount of
money is the maximum amount you would
be willing to pay today for the right to receive
the money in the future.
• Discounting procedure is used to compute
the present value of the future money.
9
Future Rupee into the Present
• Define
– R = amount to be received in future
– r = rate of return on investment
– T = years of investment
R
PV
1
r T
10
Future Rupee into the Present
R1 R2 RT
PV R0 ...
1 1 1
r r 2 r T
11
Investment
• Investment means use of money to
earn money in the future as return to
investment.
• Investment analysis is applied when
the returns will be beyond one year.
Y =(E – D)
Where:
Y = Average annual net income
E = Total expected annual net cash receipts
D= Total annual depreciation
Return As A Percent of Initial Capital Outlay
SRR = Y/I
Where:
SRR = Simple rate of return
Y =Average annual net income
(depreciation taken into account)
I = Initial investment outlay
What is NPV?
• Net present value (NPV) is the sum of
discounted value of the future net returns
minus initial investment.
• It converts money flows in the future into a
single current value.
• It is used to evaluate alternative investments.
Net Present Value- Decision rule
A farmer is considering investing in a new irrigation system for their cornfield. The system will
cost $5,000 to install, but it is expected to increase the corn yield by 20%. The farmer expects to
sell the corn for $2 per bushel. The farmer's current yield is 100 bushels per acre, and they
2. Calculate the expected additional yield: Multiply the expected increase in yield by the
current yield to determine the additional yield per acre. In this case, the additional yield is
20% * 100 bushels/acre = 20 bushels/acre.
3. Calculate the total additional revenue: Multiply the additional yield by the expected selling
price per bushel to determine the total additional revenue per acre. In this case, the
additional revenue is 20 bushels/acre * $2/bushel = $40/acre.
4. Calculate the total additional cash flow: Multiply the additional revenue per acre by the
number of acres to be planted to determine the total additional cash flow. In this case, the
additional cash flow is $40/acre * 10 acres = $400/year.
Steps
NPV Calculation:
5. Create a table of cash flows: List the cash flows for each year of the project's life. In this case, the table
will have four rows, one for each year of the project. The first row will have a cash flow of -$5,000 for
the initial investment. The remaining rows will each have a cash flow of $400 for the additional
revenue.
6. Discount the future cash flows: Multiply each future cash flow by the discount factor for the
corresponding year. The discount factor is calculated by dividing 1 by (1 + discount rate)^year. In this
case, the discount rate is 10%, so the discount factors are 0.909 for year 1, 0.826 for year 2, 0.751 for
year 3, and 0.683 for year 4.
7. Calculate the present value of each discounted cash flow: Multiply each discounted cash flow by the
corresponding discount factor. In this case, the present values are $2,180 for year 1, $1,981 for year 2,
$1,802 for year 3, and $1,635 for year 4.
8. Sum the present values of the discounted cash flows: Add the present values of the discounted cash
flows to find the net present value (NPV) of the project. In this case, the NPV is $2,598.
Solution
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
• The IRR is the compound interest rate that
equates the present value of the future net
cash flows with the initial outlay. In other
words the discount rate that gives a NPV =
zero.
• Both the NPV and IRR take into account the
time value of money.
• The purpose of these investment analysis
techniques is to evaluate the acceptability of
investments relative to an acceptable rate of
return.
Comparing NPV And IRR
Example
Step 01
Step 02
Step 03
18%
18
Why worry?
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ay=1&rel=0&showinfo=0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMbpBVciS-o
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ncial%20Analysis%20with%20Microsoft%20Excel%20(%
20PDFDrive%20).pdf
Reinvestment Assumption
• The IRR method implicitly assumes that
cash
net from an investment
reinvested to earn
inflows are the same
internal rate of return.rate as the
• The NPV method assumes that net cash
inflows can be reinvested at the discount rate
used.
• Which reinvestment rate is more realistic?
• The discount rate used to calculate the NPV
has the advantage of being consistently
applied to all investments being evaluated.
Benefit-cost ratio (BCR)
වට්ටම් කිරීම සහ මූලික ආයෝජනය සමඟ සංසන්දනය කිරීම මගින් BCR සකස් කර ඇත. මෙය රුපියල / ඩොලරය මත ප්රතිලාභ ලබා
දෙනු ඇත
YEAR A B C
0 -20,000 - 20,000 - 20,000
1 2,000 5,800 10,000
2 4,000 5,800 8,000
3 6,000 5,800 6,000
4 8,000 5,800 3,000
5 10,000 5,800 1,000
AVG 6,000 5,800 5,600
Payback Period
• A 4 years
• C 20000/5600 = 3 years
Simple Rate of Return
• A (30000-20000)/5 = 2000
• 2000/20000 = 0.10
10%
• B (29000-20000)/5 =
1800
• 1800/20000 = 0.09 9%
• C (28000-20000)/5 =
1600
• 1600/20000 =
0.08 8%
* Assume that the investment is fully
Net Present Value
• C: NPV = 2730
BCR
• Discounted net returns (DNR) = 2000/(1.08)
+ 4000/(1.08)2 + 6000/(1.08)3
+ 8000/(1.08)4 + 10000/(1.08)5
+ 0/(1.08)5
DNR = 22730
BCR = DNR/I = 22730/20000 = 1.14