• Title/Summary/Keyword: Discounted Cash Flows Method

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A Case Study on the Application of Shipyard Capital Investment Appraisal and Management Procedure (조선 설비투자분석 및 관리절차의 적용에 관한 사례연구)

  • Park, Ju-Chull;Yun, Sung-Tae
    • IE interfaces
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.285-293
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    • 1999
  • This paper analyzes the facility investment appraisal process of a real world shipyard and proposes several improving points. For this purpose the investment appraisal sheets are investigated in terms of the theory of the discounted cash flow (DCF) method. Through this investigation, the differences between the theory and its application are clarified and it is tried to resolve the gab by applying the DCF method appropriately including explicit use of actual cash flows in revenue and expense expressions. It is also proposed that some portion of the capital loss caused by defending facility sales may not be the sunk cost and that the portion can conceptually be calculated by the difference between economic value and sales price.

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Understanding of a Rate of Return Analysis using an IRR (내부수익률을 이용한 수익률분석법에 대한 이해)

  • 김진욱;이현주;차동수
    • Journal of Korean Society of Industrial and Systems Engineering
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    • v.25 no.5
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    • pp.9-14
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    • 2002
  • A capital investment problem is essentially one of determining whether the anticipated cash inflows from a proposed project are sufficiently attractive to invest funds in the project. The net present value(NPV) criterion and internal rate of return(IRR) criterion are widely used as means of making investment decisions. A positive NPV means the equivalent worth of the inflows is greater than the equivalent worth of outflows, so, the project makes profit. Business people are familiar with rates of return because they all borrow money to finance ventures, even if the money they borrow is their own. Thus they are apt to use the IRR in preference to the NPV. The IRR can be defined as the discount rate that causes the net present value of a cash flow to equal zero. Why the project are accepted if the project's IRR is greater than the investor's minimum attractive rate of return\ulcorner Against the NPV, the definition cannot distinctly explain the concept of the IRR as decision criterion. We present a new definition of the IRR as the ratio of profit on the invested capital.

A study on the construction of a financial feasibility evaluation model for private investment projects in the port sector using system dynamics (시스템다이내믹스를 활용한 항만분야 민간투자사업 재무적타당성 평가 모형 구축 연구)

  • Cheon, Minsoo;Jeon, Junwoo
    • Journal of Korea Port Economic Association
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.1-17
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    • 2021
  • Private investment projects have the characteristic of generating profits for a long period of 30 to 40 years, and fluctuations in profits and costs occur over time, so the interaction of variables over time rather than statistical models or discounted cash flows If the system dynamics technique, which enables simulation of the system, is used, it is considered that meaningful simulation results can be derived for internal and external variables. In other words, by establishing a financial feasibility comparison/verification model based on system dynamics for private investment projects in the port sector that have not been attempted before, we compare the differences with the existing cash flow discount method, macroeconomic factors, operating period, social discount rate We will conduct a differentiated study that has not been tried before by simulating how the interrelationships of such variables affect the change in financial performance.

Economic Evaluation Method Based on Rate of Return for Multiple Investment Alternatives (다수의 투자대안들에 대한 수익률 기준의 경제성 평가방법)

  • Kim, Jin Wook
    • Journal of Korean Society of Industrial and Systems Engineering
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.137-142
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    • 2019
  • There are two methods for evaluating two or more mutually exclusive projects. One is a total investment approach and the other is an incremental investment approach. The former can rank projects by the criterion of the net present value, but the latter can't do it. An incremental investment approach is only possible when all pairwise alternatives are compared. Thus an incremental investment approach is superior in ranking them over an incremental investment approach. To do so, a principle of comparison must be established. Comparisons of profitability are reasonable when operating the same amount of investment over the same period of time. One principle is that all projects are invested in the largest of the projects. Another principle is that all projects are invested during the longest project life of the projects. In this paper, even if the principle is followed, it will be shown that the external rate of return fails to rank them. However, the productive rate of return criterion would prove to be able to rank them like the net present value standard, provided that the principle of comparison is kept. In addition, rate of returns can be assessed so that all mutually exclusive projects can be compared at once, such as on the criterion of the net present value. That is, it can be also compared with many other returns, such as the profit rates on financial investments or real investments.