Capital budgeting model | Business & Finance homework help

11-18)

Build a Model: Issues in Capital Budgeting

Start with the partial model in the file Ch11 P18 Build a Model.xls on the textbook’s Web site. Webmasters.com has developed a powerful new server that would be used for corporations’ Internet activities. It would cost $10 million at Year 0 to buy the equipment necessary to manufacture the server. The project would require net working capital at the beginning of a year in an amount equal to 10% of the year’s projected sales:

NOWC0 = 10%(Sales1). The servers would sell for $24,000 per unit, and Webmasters believes that variable costs would amount to $17,500 per unit. After Year 1, the sales price and variable costs will increase at the inflation rate of 3%. The company’s nonvariable costs would be $1 million at Year 1 and would increase with inflation. The server project would have a life of 4 years. If the project is undertaken, it must be continued for the entire 4 years. Also, the project’s returns are expected to be highly correlated with returns on the firm’s other assets. The firm believes it could sell 1,000 units per year.

The equipment would be depreciated over a 5-year period, using MACRS rates. The estimated market value of the equipment at the end of the project’s 4-year life is $500,000. Webmasters’ federal-plus-state tax rate is 40%. Its cost of capital is 10% for average-risk projects, defined as projects with an NPV coefficient of variation between 0.8 and 1.2.

Low-risk projects are evaluated with aWACC of 8% and high-risk projects at 13%.

a. Develop a spreadsheet model, and use it to find the project’s NPV, IRR, andpayback.

b. Now conduct a sensitivity analysis to determine the sensitivity of NPV to changes inthe sales price, variable costs per unit, and number of units sold. Set these variables’values at 10% and 20% above and below their base-case values. Include a graph inyour analysis.

c. Now conduct a scenario analysis. Assume that there is a 25% probability that best-caseconditions, with each of the variables discussed in part b being 20% better than itsbase-case value, will occur. There is a 25% probability of worst-case conditions, withthe variables 20% worse than base, and a 50% probability of base-case conditions.

d. If the project appears to be more or less risky than an average project, find its riskadjustedNPV, IRR, and payback.

e. On the basis of information in the problem, would you recommend that the project be

 

accepted?