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Summary AQA A-LEVEL Business 3.7 A* Revision notes Analysing strategic options: investment appraisal £12.49
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Summary AQA A-LEVEL Business 3.7 A* Revision notes Analysing strategic options: investment appraisal

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A* revision notes. Analysing strategic options: investment appraisal, 3.7. Notes from a myriad of resources, cgp revision guide, online sources, youtube, bizconsesh, class notes

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  • January 30, 2022
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By: xessin • 7 months ago

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Investment appraisal 3.7
Investment appraisal- process of analysing whether investment projects are worthwhile- helps business decide what
projects to invest in, to get the best, fastest least risky return for their money.

§ Faster money comes in – less risk

Must balance risk and return:

§ Businesses often need to invest to achieve their objectives. Investment is always risky – businesses want risk to be
low and reward high

Payback period- the time it takes for a project to repay its initial investment (Time: days/ years)

Average rate of return- total accounting return for a project to see if it meets the target return (% return)

Discounted cash flow (NPV)- calculates the monetary value now of the projects future cash flows (£)

Average rate of return compares net return with investment

Net return= income of project – costs (including investment)

§ Higher the ARR- more favourable project will appear Disadvantages:
1. Calculate the average annual profit from the investment project
§ Ignores timing of the cash flows
2. Divide average annual profit by initial investment (outlay)
e.g. a company might put more
3. Compare with target % return
value on money that they get
Advantages: sooner rather than later
§ Focuses on profits rather than cash
§ Easy to calculate and simple to understand flows
§ Focuses on the overall profitability of an investment project § Ignores time value of money
§ Easy to compare ARR with other key target rates of return to help decide
§ Uses all the return generated by a project
§ Takes account of all projects cash flow after a certain point

Payback period measures the length of time it takes to get your money back:

§ time it takes for a project to repay its initial investment (Time: days/ years)

Identify net cash flows for each period Disadvantages:

Keep a running total of the cash flows § Ignores cash flow after
payback has been reached
§ Initial investment= an outflow
§ Takes no account of the
§ When does the running total move from negative (outflow) to positive (inflow)
‘time value of money’ (risk)
§ When the total net cash flow becomes positive= end of payback period
§ May encourage s/t thinking
Advantages: § Ignores qualitative aspects
§ Doesn’t actually create a
§ Easy to calculate and understand decision for the investment
§ Focuses on cash flows
§ Emphasises speed of return; good for markets which change rapidly. Straight forward to compare competing proj
§ Very good for high tech projects. Tech tends to become obsolete so businesses need to be sure they’ll get initial
investment back or any project that might not provide long term returns

, Discounting adjusts the value of future cash inflows to their present value

Discounting- method used to reduce the future value of cash flows to reflect the risk that they may not happen

§ Done so investors can compare like with like when they look at cash inflows they’ll receive
§ Can be seen as the opposite of calculating interest. Done by multiplying the amount of money by a discount
factor. Discount rate= always less than 1 - value of money in future is always less than its value now
§ Depend on what the interest rate is predicted to be. High interest rates – future payments have to be
discounted a lot to give correct present value= present value represents the opportunity cost of not investing in
bank – earn a high interest rate
§ Interest rates are low- future cash inflow doesn’t need to be discounted – less OC

The future value of cash inflow depends on risk and opportunity cost

§ Risk and opportunity cost – increase the longer you have to wait for money- it’s worth less
§ This is called the time value of money. Better off getting money now: years time money is worth less – inflation.
There’s an OC

The time value of money:

§ Better to receive cash now than in future
§ Future cash flows worth less
§ Use discount factor
§ Cash flow X discount factor= present value


Net present value is used to calculate return

§ Discounted cash flow is an investment appraisal tool that uses NPV to calculate return of project
§ Net present value – value of project assuming all future returns are discounted to what they would be worth if
you had them now, always less than their face value (inflation). Add together all present values of future cash
flows

Negative NPV- business could get a better return by putting money in savings account. Businesses go ahead with
positive NPV.

Downsides of discounted cash flow- hard to calculate- difficult for businesses to work out what the discount factor
ought to be- because they don’t know what the bank I/R are going to be in future. The longer the project is set to
last, the harder it’s to predict discount factor

Benefits of using NPV:

§ Considers all future cash flows
§ Reflects risk that future cash flows will not be as expected
§ Different levels of risk can be accounted for by adjusting discount rate
§ Creates a straight forward decision positive NPV suggests project should go ahead

Disadvantages:

§ Most complicated method
§ Choosing discount rate is hard, esp for long projects
§ Result can be influenced/ manipulated using the discount rate

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