Essentials Of Investments
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781260013924
Author: Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education,
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Mountain Frost is considering a new project with an initial cost of $180,000. The equipment will be
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- Drake Corporation is reviewing an investment proposal. The initial cost is $105,700. Estimates of the book value of the investment at the end of each year, the net cash flows for each year, and the net income for each year are presented in the schedule below. All cash flows are assumed to take place at the end of the year. The salvage value of the investment at the end of each year is assumed to equal its book value. There would be no salvage value at the end of the investment's life. Year 1 2 3 4 Investment Proposal Book Value $70,500 42,400 20,600 6,800 Annual Annual Cash Flows Net Income $9,700 11.100, $44,900 39.200 36,000 29,100 25,205 14,200 15,300 18,405 Drake Corporation uses an 11% target rate of return for new investment proposals. Click here to view the factor table. SUarrow_forwardA 7-year project is expected to provide annual sales of $221,000 with costs of $97,500. The equipment necessary for the project will cost $360,000 and will be depreciated on a straight-line method over the life of the project. You feel that both sales and costs are accurate to +/-15 percent. The tax rate is 35 percent. What is the annual operating cash flow for the worst-case scenario?arrow_forwardGateway Communications is considering a project with an initial fixed assets cost of $1.58 million that will be depreciated straight-line to a zero book value over the 9-year life of the project. At the end of the project the equipment will be sold for an estimated $237,000. The project will not change sales but will reduce operating costs by $393,000 per year. The tax rate is 34 percent and the required return is 11.2 percent. The project will require $50,500 in net working capital, which will be recouped when the project ends. What is the project's NPV? Multiple Choice $242,544 $202,140 $250,629 $233,215 $193,351arrow_forward
- Gateway Communications is considering a project with an initial fixed assets cost of $1.47 million that will be depreciated straight-line to a zero book value over the 9-year life of the project. At the end of the project the equipment will be sold for an estimated $248,000. The project will not change sales but will reduce operating costs by $415,000 per year. The tax rate is 21 percent and the required return is 12.3 percent. The project will require $56,000 in net working capital, which will be recouped when the project ends. What is the project's NPV? Multiple Choice O $256,094 $584,027 $193,231 $238,300 $247,833arrow_forwardHoffman company is considering a project that would have a five-year life and require a $3,200,000 investment in equipment. At the end of the five years, the project would terminate and the equipment would have no salvage value. The project would provide the following expected forecasts: Sales $ 5,000,000 Variable expenses $3,000,000 Fixed expenses (including depreciation) $1,600,000 The company’s tax rate is 20% and the WACC is 12% REQUIRED Compute the project’s NPV, IRR, payback period, discounted payback period, and profitability indexarrow_forwardFitzgerald Computers is considering a new project whose data are shown below. The required equipment has a 3-year tax life, after which it will have zero book value, and it will be depreciated by the straight-line method over 3 years. Revenues and other operating costs are expected to be constant over the project's 4-year life. What is the project's Year 4 cash flow? $65,000 Equipment cost (depreciable basis) Straight-line depreciation rate Sales revenues, each year Operating costs (excl. deprec.) Tax rate a. $27,500 b. $28,438 c. $22,750 d. $21,000 e. $30,333 33.33% $60,000 $25,000 35.0%arrow_forward
- Tempura, Inc., is considering two projects. Project A requires an investment of $48,000. Estimated annual receipts for 20 years are $19.000; estimated annual costs are $12,500. An alternative project, B, requires an investment of $77,000, has annual receipts for 20 years of $23,000, and has annual costs of $18,000. Assume both projects have a zero salvage value and that MARR is 11.0 %/year. Click here to access the TVM Factor Table Calculator Part a What is the present worth of each project? Project A. $ Project B: $arrow_forwardA new project has an initial cost of $250,000. The equipment will be depreciated on a straight-line basis to a zero book value over the five-year life of the project. The projected net income each year is $13,250, $18,000, $20,240, $15,150, and $11,900, respectively. What is the average accounting return? Multiple Choice 11.52% 8.95% 13.46% 12.57% 5.33%arrow_forwardSheridan Company is considering a long-term investment project called ZIP. ZIP will require an investment of $123,200. It will have a useful life of 4 years and no salvage value. Annual revenues would increase by $79.240, and annual expenses (excluding depreciation) would increase by $39,200. Sheridan uses the straight-line method to compute depreciation expense. The company's required rate of return is 12%. Compute the annual rate of return. Annual rate of return Determine whether the project is acceptable? the project. eTextbook and Media Save for Later Attempts: 0 of 3 used Submit Answerarrow_forward
- The Whilst Co. is analyzing a project that has projected sales of $189,400 and costs of $102,300. The project requires an investment in inventory of $15,000 plus another $28,000 in accounts receivable. Fixed assets of $80,000 are needed and will be depreciated straight-line over 5 years. Accounts payable will increase by $36,000. An interest expense of $11,000 will be incurred annually. The project has a life of 3 years. At the end of the three years, the equipment has an estimated market value of $26,000. The company requires a 14% rate of return and is in the 34% marginal tax bracket. What is the net present value of this project? $65,887 $68,023 $88,671 $91,425 None of the above.arrow_forwardConsider a project with a 3-year life and no salvage value. The initial cost to set up the project is $100,000. This amount is to be linearly depreciated to zero over the life of the project. The price per unit is $90, variable costs are $72 per unit and fixed costs are $10,000 per year. The project has a required return of 12%. Ignore taxes. 1. How many units must be sold for the project to achieve accounting break-even? 2. How many units must be sold for the project to achieve cash break-even? 3. How many units must be sold for the project to achieve financial break-even? 4. What is the degree of operating leverage at the financial break-even?arrow_forwardWendy and Wayne are evaluating a project that requires an initial investment of $792,000 in fixed assets. The project will last for fourteen years, and the assets have no salvage value. Assume that depreciation is straight-line to zero over the life of the project. Sales are projected at 143,000 units per year. Price per unit is $43, variable cost per unit is $24, and fixed costs are $800,712 per year. The tax rate is 36 percent, and the required annual return on this project is 12 percent. The projections given for price, quantity, variable costs, and fixed costs are all accurate to within +/- 15 percent. Required: (a)Calculate the best-case NPV. (Do not round your intermediate calculations.) (Click to select) (b)Calculate the worst-case NPV. (Do not round your intermediate calculations.) (Click to select) Warrow_forward
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