
Capital budgeting is the process of deciding whether to invest money in long-term projects (machinery, expansion, new product, etc.). These decisions matter because they involve large cash outflows now and cash inflows over many years. Therefore, we evaluate projects using cash flows and methods like payback period, NPV, and IRR.
You should be able to:
Capital budgeting is the process of planning and evaluating long-term investments to decide whether they should be accepted or rejected based on expected cash flows and risk (concept).
Importance (write any 5):
Key exam line: Capital budgeting uses cash flows, not accounting profit.
Identify project → Estimate cash outflows/inflows → Choose appraisal method (payback/NPV/IRR) → Apply decision rule → Select project → Implement and review (concept)
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Steps (flow):
Identify project → Estimate cash flows → Choose method (Payback/NPV/IRR) → Apply decision rule → Select project → Implement & review (concept)
Cash flow vs accounting profit:
Thus, project appraisal is based on cash flows.
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Capital budgeting is the process of deciding whether to invest money in long-term projects (machinery, expansion, new product, etc.). These decisions matter because they involve large cash outflows now and cash inflows over many years. Therefore, we evaluate projects using cash flows and methods like payback period, NPV, and IRR.
You should be able to:
Capital budgeting is the process of planning and evaluating long-term investments to decide whether they should be accepted or rejected based on expected cash flows and risk (concept).
Importance (write any 5):
Key exam line: Capital budgeting uses cash flows, not accounting profit.
Identify project → Estimate cash outflows/inflows → Choose appraisal method (payback/NPV/IRR) → Apply decision rule → Select project → Implement and review (concept)
Payback period is the time required to recover the initial investment from the project’s cash inflows.
Decision rule (simple):
Computation:
Initial investment = ₹100,000
Annual inflow = ₹25,000 (each year)
Payback = 100,000 / 25,000 = 4 years.
Interpretation: investment is recovered in 4 years (after that, inflows are surplus).
NPV (Net Present Value) is the difference between present value of cash inflows and present value of cash outflows, discounted at the required rate (cost of capital) (concept).
Decision rule:
Initial outflow = ₹1,000
Inflow after 1 year = ₹1,200
Discount rate = 10%
PV of inflow = 1,200 / 1.10 = ₹1,090.91 (approx.)
NPV = 1,090.91 − 1,000 = ₹90.91 (positive) → accept (concept).
IRR (Internal Rate of Return) is the discount rate at which NPV becomes zero (PV of inflows = PV of outflows) (concept).
Decision rule:
IRR is often found by trial-and-error or financial calculator/spreadsheet (concept).
Payback:
NPV:
IRR:
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Payback period is the time needed to recover the initial investment from cash inflows.
Payback is useful as a quick screening tool, but for value-based decisions firms prefer NPV/IRR (concept).