1 / 17

Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 9 th Edition J.Wiley & Sons

Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 9 th Edition J.Wiley & Sons. Power Points by Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D. California State University, Fullerton. Capital Budgeting for the Multinational Corporation. CHAPTER 17. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING. I. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING

gautam
Télécharger la présentation

Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 9 th Edition J.Wiley & Sons

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro9th Edition J.Wiley & Sons Power Points by Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D. California State University, Fullerton

  2. Capital Budgeting for the Multinational Corporation CHAPTER 17

  3. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • I. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • A. Basic Criterion: Net Present Value • B. Net Present Value Technique: • 1. Definition • The present value of future cash flows, discounted at the project’s cost of capital less the initial net cash outlay.

  4. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • 2. NPV Formula: • where I0 = initial cash outlay • xt= net cash flow at t • k = cost of capital • n = investment horizon

  5. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • 3. Most important property of NPV technique: • -focus on cash flows with respect to shareholder wealth • 4. NPV obeys value additive principle: • - the NPV of a set of projects is the sum of the individual project NPV

  6. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • C. International Cash Flows • 1. Important principle when estimating: • Incremental basis

  7. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • 2. Distinguish total from incremental flows to account for • a. cannibalization • b. sales creation • c. opportunity cost • d. transfer pricing • e. fees and royalties

  8. BASICS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING • 3. Getting the base case correct-Rule of thumb: • 4. Intangible Benefits • a. Valuable learning experience • b. Broader knowledge base

  9. ALL-EQUITY COST OF CAPITAL • II. Alternative Capital-Budgeting Frameworks • A. THE ALL-EQUITY COST OF CAPITAL FOR FOREIGN PROJECTS • WACC sometimes awkward • 1. To go from the parent to the project • 2. Solution: Use all equity discount rate • 3. To calculate: • k* = rf + *( rm - rf )

  10. ALL-EQUITY COST OF CAPITAL • 4. *is the all-equity beta associated with • the unlevered cash flows. • 5. Unlevered beta obtained by • where B* = the firm’s stock price beta • D/E = the debt to equity ratio • t = the firm’s marginal tax rate

  11. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • III. TWO ISSUES IN FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • A. Issue #1 • Parent v. Project Cash Flow • -the cash flows from the project may • differ from those remitted to the parent • 1. Relevant cash flows become quite • important

  12. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • 2. Three Stage Approach • -to simplify project evaluation • a. compute subsidiary’s project cash flows • b. evaluate the project to the parent • c. incorporate the indirect effects

  13. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • 3. Estimating Incremental Project Flows • What is the true profitability of the project? • a. Adjust for tax effects of • 1.) transfer pricing • 2.) fees and royalties

  14. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • 4. Tax Factors: • determine the amount and timing of taxes paid on foreign-source income

  15. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS B. Issue #2 How to adjust for increased economic and political risk of project?

  16. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • 1. Three Methods for Economic/Political • Risk Adjustments: • a. Shortening minimum payback period • b. Raising required rate of return • c. Adjusting cash flows

  17. FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS • 2. Accounting for Exchange Rate and Price Changes (inflationary) • Two stage procedure: • a. Convert nominal foreign cash flows into home currency terms • b. Discount home currency flows at domestic required rate of return.

More Related