Capital Budgeting Methods

Level: Advanced Module: Performance & Strategic Management 4 min read Lesson 4 of 67

Overview

  • What you’ll learn: The four primary capital budgeting methods (NPV, IRR, payback period, accounting rate of return), the time value of money, how to evaluate long-term investment decisions, and why NPV is the theoretically superior method.
  • Prerequisites: Lesson 3 — Inventory Management & JIT
  • Estimated reading time: 18 minutes

Introduction

The Grand Historian records: The emperor who builds a canal spends a fortune today to reap harvests for a century. The emperor who builds a palace spends a fortune today to house parties for a decade. Both are capital investments; only one generates economic return. Capital budgeting is the discipline of evaluating these long-term commitments — the decisions that shape the enterprise for years or decades, that cannot be easily reversed, and that consume vast resources. Getting them right is essential; getting them wrong is often fatal.

Horngren (Chapter 21) presents four methods for evaluating capital investments. Two use discounted cash flows (DCF) and are theoretically superior; two do not and serve as supplementary tools.

The Time Value of Money

A dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow because today’s dollar can be invested to earn a return. This fundamental principle underlies all DCF methods:

Present Value = Future Cash Flow / (1 + r)^n

Where r = discount rate (required rate of return) and n = number of periods.

Method 1: Net Present Value (NPV)

NPV = Sum of PV of all future cash inflows − Initial investment

Decision rule: Accept if NPV > 0; reject if NPV < 0. A positive NPV means the investment earns more than the required rate of return — it creates value for shareholders.

Example

Year Cash Flow PV Factor (10%) Present Value
0 ($500,000) 1.000 ($500,000)
1 $150,000 0.909 $136,350
2 $180,000 0.826 $148,680
3 $200,000 0.751 $150,200
4 $170,000 0.683 $116,110
NPV = $51,340

NPV is positive — the project earns more than the 10% required return and should be accepted.

Method 2: Internal Rate of Return (IRR)

IRR is the discount rate that makes NPV equal to zero — the project’s “break-even” rate of return.

Decision rule: Accept if IRR > required rate of return (hurdle rate); reject if IRR < hurdle rate.

Limitations of IRR:

  • Multiple IRRs can exist for projects with non-conventional cash flows (alternating inflows and outflows).
  • IRR assumes reinvestment of intermediate cash flows at the IRR itself — which may be unrealistic.
  • IRR can rank projects differently than NPV when comparing mutually exclusive alternatives of different sizes or durations.

太史公曰:When NPV and IRR disagree, trust NPV. It measures absolute wealth creation; IRR measures only the rate. A small project with a high IRR may create less value than a large project with a lower IRR but higher NPV.

Method 3: Payback Period

Payback Period = Time required to recover the initial investment from cash inflows

Strengths: Simple, intuitive, measures liquidity risk. Limitations: Ignores the time value of money, ignores cash flows after payback, and does not measure profitability. The discounted payback period partially addresses the first limitation.

Method 4: Accounting Rate of Return (ARR)

ARR = Average annual accounting income / Average investment

Based on accrual accounting numbers, not cash flows. Easy to compute but theoretically weakest — it ignores the time value of money and uses income (which includes non-cash items like depreciation) rather than cash flows.

Choosing Among Methods

Method Uses DCF? Measures Value Creation? Best Use
NPV Yes Yes (absolute $) Primary decision criterion
IRR Yes Yes (rate %) Communication tool (“this project earns X%”)
Payback No No Liquidity screen, risk indicator
ARR No Partially Performance reporting consistency

Key Takeaways

  • NPV is the theoretically superior method — it measures absolute value creation using discounted cash flows.
  • IRR is the discount rate that makes NPV = 0; useful for communication but can mislead when comparing projects.
  • Payback period measures liquidity but ignores time value and post-payback cash flows.
  • When NPV and IRR conflict, trust NPV.
  • In practice, most companies use multiple methods — NPV for the decision, payback for risk screening, IRR for communication.

What’s Next

In Lesson 5, we tackle advanced capital budgeting topics — inflation, income taxes, real options, and sensitivity analysis for investment decisions.

繁體中文

概述

  • 學習目標:四大資本預算方法(NPV、IRR、回收期、會計報酬率)、貨幣時間價值、長期投資決策之評估,以及 NPV 為何理論上最優。
  • 先決條件:第 3 課
  • 預計閱讀時間:18 分鐘

簡介

太史公曰:開鑿運河之帝王今日斥巨資而百年收穫。建造宮殿之帝王今日斥巨資而十年宴飲。皆為資本投資;唯一者產生經濟回報。資本預算乃評估此等長期承諾之學問——塑造企業數年或數十年之決策。做對者興,做錯者亡。

淨現值(NPV)

NPV = 所有未來現金流入之現值總和 − 初始投資

決策準則:NPV > 0 則接受。正 NPV 意味投資回報超過要求報酬率——為股東創造價值。

內部報酬率(IRR)

使 NPV 等於零之折現率。決策準則:IRR > 門檻利率則接受。

太史公曰:NPV 與 IRR 不一致時,信 NPV。NPV 衡量絕對財富創造;IRR 僅衡量報酬率。

回收期與會計報酬率

回收期簡單直覺但忽略貨幣時間價值。會計報酬率基於應計制而非現金流。

重點摘要

  • NPV 為理論最優——以折現現金流衡量絕對價值創造。
  • NPV 與 IRR 衝突時信 NPV。
  • 實務上多法並用——NPV 為決策、回收期為風險篩選、IRR 為溝通。

下一步

第 5 課探討進階資本預算議題——通膨、所得稅、實質選擇權與敏感度分析。

日本語

概要

  • 学習内容:4つの資本予算法(NPV、IRR、回収期間、会計的利益率)、貨幣の時間的価値、長期投資評価、NPVが理論上最も優れている理由。
  • 前提条件:レッスン3
  • 推定読了時間:18分

はじめに

太史公曰く:運河を掘る皇帝は今日巨額を費やし百年の収穫を得る。宮殿を建てる皇帝は今日巨額を費やし十年の宴会を開く。資本予算とはこれら長期的コミットメントを評価する学問。

正味現在価値(NPV)

NPV = 全将来キャッシュフローのPV合計 − 初期投資

判定基準:NPV > 0なら採用。正のNPVは要求収益率を上回り株主価値を創造することを意味する。

内部収益率(IRR)

NPVをゼロにする割引率。太史公曰く:NPVとIRRが矛盾する時、NPVを信じよ。

回収期間と会計的利益率

回収期間は単純だが貨幣の時間的価値を無視。会計的利益率は発生主義ベースでキャッシュフローではない。

重要ポイント

  • NPVが理論上最良——DCFで絶対的価値創造を測定。
  • NPVとIRRが矛盾する場合、NPVを信頼する。
  • 実務では複数手法を併用——NPVで意思決定、回収期間でリスクスクリーニング、IRRでコミュニケーション。

次のステップ

レッスン5では、上級資本予算トピック——インフレ、法人税、リアルオプション、感度分析を学ぶ。

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