Project classification scheme capital budgeting process


Question 1. How is a project classification scheme (for example, replacement, expansion into new markets, and so forth) used in the capital budgeting process?

Question 2. Explain why the NPV of a relatively long-term project, defined as one for which a high percentage of its cash flows are expected in the distant future, is more sensitive to changes in the cost of capital than is the NPV of a short-term project.

Question 3. Explain why, if tow mutually exclusive projects are being compared, the short-term project might have the higher ranking under the NPV criterion if the cost of capital is high, but the long-term project might be deemed better if the cost of capital is low. Would changes in the cost of capital ever cause a change in the IRR ranking of two such projects?

Question 4. In what sense is a reinvestment rate assumption embodied in the NPV, IRR, and MIRR methods? What is the assumed reinvestment rate of each method?

Question 5. Your company is considering two mutually exclusive projects, X and Y, whose costs and cash flows are shown below:

Year    X    Y
0    ($1,000)    ($1,000)
1    100    1,000
2    300    100
3 400    50
4    700    50

The projects are equally risky, and their cost of capital is 12 percent. You must make a recommendation, and you must base it on the modified IRR (MIRR). What is the MIRR of the better project?

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Finance Basics: Project classification scheme capital budgeting process
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