Some business owners make major decisions by relying on gut
instinct. But investments made on a “hunch” often fall short of management’s
expectations.
In the broadest sense, you’re really trying to answer a simple
question: If my company buys a given asset, will the asset’s benefits be
greater than its cost? The good news is that there are ways — using financial
metrics — to obtain an answer.
Accounting payback
Perhaps the most common and basic way to evaluate investment
decisions is with a calculation called “accounting payback.” For example, a
piece of equipment that costs $100,000 and generates an additional gross margin
of $25,000 per year has an accounting payback period of four years ($100,000
divided by $25,000).
But this oversimplified metric ignores a key ingredient in the
decision-making process: the time value of money. And accounting payback can be
harder to calculate when cash flows vary over time.
Better metrics
Discounted cash flow metrics solve these shortcomings. These are
often applied by business appraisers. But they can help you evaluate investment
decisions as well. Examples include:
Net present value (NPV). This
measures how much value a capital investment adds to the business. To estimate
NPV, a financial expert forecasts how much cash inflow and outflow an asset
will generate over time. Then he or she discounts each period’s expected net
cash flows to its current market value, using the company’s cost of capital or
a rate commensurate with the asset’s risk. In general, assets that generate an
NPV greater than zero are worth pursuing.
Internal rate of return (IRR). Here an
expert estimates a single rate of return that summarizes the investment
opportunity. Most companies have a predetermined “hurdle rate” that an
investment must exceed to justify pursuing it. Often the hurdle rate equals the
company’s overall cost of capital — but not always.
A mathematical approach
Like most companies, yours probably has limited funds and can’t
pursue every investment opportunity that comes along. Using metrics improves
the chances that you’ll not only make the right decisions, but that other
stakeholders will buy into the move. Please contact our firm for help crunching
the numbers and managing the decision-making process.
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