Common mistakes that companies make when analyzing capital allocation projects are:
Analysts and corporate managers should understand the logic and practicalities of different capital allocation methods.
If a company can invest in a project that earns more than its opportunity costs of funds, then the investment creates value and will increase shareholder wealth. Conversely, if the project earns less than the company’s opportunity cost of funds, then the investment decreases value and will reduce shareholder wealth. The return on invested capital (ROIC) is a measure that is often used to make these comparisons.
ROIC = After-Tax Operating Profit/Average Book Value of Invested Capital
ROIC reflects how effectively a company’s management is able to convert capital into after-tax operating profits. Note that the numerator excludes interest expense because it represents a source of return to providers of debt capital, and the denominator includes sources of capital from all providers.
If the ROIC measure is higher than the cost of capital (COC), the company is generating a higher return for investors compared with the required return, thereby increasing the firm’s value. We can also say that projects with positive NPV will have a ROIC that is greater than the COC.
Relationship between NPV and Stock Price
Example
A company is undertaking a project with an NPV of $500 million. The company currently has 100 million shares outstanding and each share has a price of $50. What is the likely impact of the project on the stock price?
Solution:
NPV of the project = $500 million. The overall value of company should increase by $500 million because of the project. Since there are 100 million shares outstanding, each share should go up by 500/100 = $5. The share price should increase from $50 to $55.
Effects of Inflation on Capital Allocation process
Capital allocation analysis can be done either in ‘nominal’ terms or ‘real’ terms. Nominal cash flows include the effects of inflation. Whereas, real cash flows are adjusted downward to remove the effect of inflation. Nominal cash flows should be discounted at a nominal discount rate, and real cash flows should be discounted at a real rate. In general, the relationship between real and nominal rates is:
(1 + Nominal rate) = (1 + Real rate) (1 + Inflation rate).
Inflation reduces the value of depreciation tax savings. This is because the depreciation charge is based on the asset’s original purchase price and it is not adjusted to match the current inflated price. Higher-than-expected inflation increases the corporation’s real taxes and shifts wealth from the corporation to the government.
Inflation does not affect all revenues and costs uniformly. The company’s after-tax cash flows will be better or worse than expected depending on how particular sales outputs or cost inputs are affected.
Inflation complicates the capital allocation process.
Real options are options that allow managers to make decisions in the future that change the value of capital investment decisions made today. As with financial options, real options are contingent on future events. The difference is that real options deal with real assets.
Types of real options include:
There are several approaches to evaluating capital allocation projects with real options.
Example: Production-flexibility option
(This is Example 7 from the curriculum.)
Auvergne AquaFarms has estimated the NPV of the expected cash flows from a new processing plant to be –EUR0.40 million. Auvergne is evaluating an incremental investment of EUR0.30 million that would give management the flexibility to switch between coal, natural gas, and oil as an energy source. The original plant relied only on coal. The option to switch to cheaper sources of energy when they are available has an estimated value of EUR1.20 million. What is the value of the new processing plant including this real option to use alternative energy sources?
Solution:
NPV, including the real option = NPV based on DCF alone – Cost of options + Value of options
= -0.40 million – 0.30 million + 1.20 million = 0.50 million.
Without the flexibility offered by the real option, the plant is unprofitable. The real option to adapt to cheaper energy sources adds enough to the value of this investment to give it a positive NPV.