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9: Capital Budgeting

  • Page ID
    150119
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    Concept map illustrating the capital budgeting process. Capital budgeting appears at the center, connected to foundational concepts of time value of money and risk, estimation of incremental cash flows, application of decision criteria including net present value, internal rate of return, payback period, and profitability index, evaluation of uncertainty through sensitivity and scenario analysis, and project selection under capital rationing, all supporting value-maximizing investment decisions.
    Figure 9.0 — Chapter Concept Map. This figure provides a visual overview of the capital budgeting framework developed in Chapter 9. The map shows how firms identify investment opportunities, estimate incremental cash flows, and discount those cash flows using a required rate of return that reflects both the time value of money and risk. It highlights the application of capital budgeting decision criteria—Net Present Value (NPV), Internal Rate of Return (IRR), Payback Period, and Profitability Index (PI)—with NPV emphasized as the primary value-maximizing rule. The figure also illustrates how uncertainty is evaluated through sensitivity and scenario analysis and how capital rationing requires managers to prioritize projects that maximize firm value.

    Capital budgeting is the process of identifying, analyzing, and selecting long-term investments that are expected to create value for the firm. These investments may include purchasing new equipment, building new facilities, launching new product lines, entering new markets, or adopting new technologies. Unlike short-term decisions related to working capital or operating efficiency, capital budgeting decisions shape the firm’s strategic direction and long-term financial performance.

    Because capital investments typically require large initial cash outlays and generate benefits over many years, they are among the most consequential decisions managers make. Once capital is committed, it is often difficult or costly to reverse course. As a result, capital budgeting decisions influence not only profitability, but also risk exposure, operational flexibility, and competitive positioning.

    At its core, capital budgeting seeks to answer a single fundamental question:

    Will this investment increase the value of the firm?


    What You Will Learn

    By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:

    1. Explain the logic behind major capital budgeting techniques—including Net Present Value (NPV), Internal Rate of Return (IRR), Payback Period, and Profitability Index (PI)—and understand what each method reveals about a project’s financial performance.
    2. Interpret capital budgeting results in a managerial context, recognizing that no single metric tells the entire story.
    3. Evaluate project risk and uncertainty using tools such as sensitivity analysis and scenario analysis.
    4. Recommend value-maximizing investment decisions that align with shareholder wealth maximization, particularly when projects compete for limited capital.

    Why Capital Budgeting Matters

    Capital budgeting provides a disciplined framework for comparing long-term investment opportunities whose costs and benefits occur at different points in time.

    As you learned in Chapter 5, a dollar received in the future is worth less than a dollar received today.

    Capital budgeting is also where risk becomes operational in financial decision-making.


    Suggested OER Learning Aids


    Insight

    Capital budgeting is not just a math exercise—it is a management story told through numbers. Every cash flow in a discounted cash flow model reflects decisions about pricing, marketing, labor, operations, and strategy. Mastering capital budgeting gives you the ability to translate business ideas into measurable value.


    This page titled 9: Capital Budgeting is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Andrew Carr.

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