Devonia Nixon
September 25, 2016
Financial Management
Dr. Sullivan
Chapter 10, Problems 10-1, 10-7
Chapter 11, Problems 11-1, 11-2, 11-2
Chapter 10
- A project has an initial cost of $40,000, expected net cash inflows of $9,000 per year for 7 years, and a cost of capital of 11%. What is the project’s NVP? (Hint begin by constructing a time line.)
- Your division is considering two investment projects, each of which requires an up-front expenditure of $15 million. You estimate that the investments will produce the following net cash flows:
YearProject AProject B
1$ 5,000,000$20,000,000
2$10,000,000$10,000,000
3$20,000,000$6,000,000
Chapter 11
- Talbot Industries is considering launching a new product. The new manufacturing equipment will cost $17 million, and production and sales will require an initial &5 million investment in net operating working capital. The company’s tax rate is 40%.
- What is the initial investment outlay?
- The company spent and expensed $150,000 on research related to the new product last year. Would this change your answer? Explain.
- Rather than build a new manufacturing facility, the company plans to install the equipment in a building it owns but is not now using. The building could be sold for $1.5 million after taxes and real estate commissions. How would this affect your answer?
- The financial staff of Cairn Communications has identified the following information for the first year of the roll-out of its new proposed service:
Projected sales$18 million
Operating Costs (not including depreciation)$ 9 million
Depreciation$ 4 million
Interest expense$ 3 million
The company faces a 40% tax rate. What is the project’s operating cash flow for the first year (t=1)?
- Allen Air Lines must liquidate some equipment that is being replaced. The equipment originally cost $12 million, of which 75% has been depreciated. The used equipment can be sold today for $4 million, and its tax rate is 40%. What is the equipment’s after-tax net salvage value?
References:
Brigham, E. F., & Ehrhardt, M. C. (2017). Financial management: Theory & practice (15th ed.). Boston, MA: Cenage Learning.