📌 Part A – 1 Mark Questions (Very Short Answer)
- What is capital budgeting?
Capital budgeting is the process of making decisions about long-term investments in fixed assets. - Give another name for capital budgeting.
Long-term investment decision or capital expenditure decision. - What is Payback Period (PBP)?
Payback Period is the time taken to recover the original cost of an investment. - What is ARR?
ARR (Accounting Rate of Return) is the average annual profit divided by the average investment. - What is Net Present Value (NPV)?
NPV is the difference between the present value of cash inflows and the present value of cash outflows. - Write the formula for Profitability Index (PI).
PI = Total discounted cash inflows ÷ Initial cash outlay. - What is Internal Rate of Return (IRR)?
IRR is the discount rate at which the Net Present Value of an investment becomes zero. - If NPV is greater than zero, should we accept or reject the project?
Accept the project. - If PI is less than 1, should we accept or reject the project?
Reject the project. - Name one traditional method of capital budgeting.
Payback Period (or Accounting Rate of Return). - Name one modern method of capital budgeting.
Net Present Value (or Internal Rate of Return, or Profitability Index). - Why is capital budgeting important? (Give one reason)
Because it involves huge investments that are difficult to reverse. - Which method ignores the time value of money?
Payback Period and ARR. - Which method considers the time value of money?
Net Present Value (NPV), Profitability Index (PI), and Internal Rate of Return (IRR). - What is the decision rule for ARR?
Accept the project if ARR is higher than the minimum required rate. - Complete the series: NPV = PV of inflows – PV outflows. If NPV = 0, then the discount rate is called ______.
IRR (Internal Rate of Return). - Find the odd one out and state the reason: (a) NPV (b) IRR (c) ARR (d) Profitability Index
ARR is odd because it is a traditional method, while the others are discounted cash flow methods. - What is the meaning of 'time value of money'?
A rupee today is worth more than a rupee received in the future.
📌 Part B – 2/4 Marks Questions (Short Answer)
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State any four reasons why capital budgeting is important.
- Cost: Capital budgeting decisions involve huge amounts of money.
- Time: The results or profits from these decisions come only after many years.
- Irreversibility: Once made, these decisions cannot be changed easily without incurring big losses.
- Risk: Because the returns are in the future, there is a higher risk of uncertainty.
- Complexity: These decisions require careful planning and forecasting of future events.
(Any four points are sufficient)
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Explain the steps in the capital budgeting process.
- Step 1 – Identify Projects: Find different long-term investment opportunities.
- Step 2 – Evaluate Projects: Calculate the costs and future benefits of each project.
- Step 3 – Select Project: Choose the best project that gives maximum return.
- Step 4 – Execute Project: Implement the project by buying assets and starting the work.
- Step 5 – Feedback: Monitor the project's performance and compare it with expectations.
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What is the Payback Period method? State its advantages and disadvantages.
Meaning: Payback Period is the time required to recover the initial investment from the project's cash inflows.
Advantages: Simple to calculate and easy to understand. Good for risky projects where quick recovery is needed. Focuses on liquidity.
Disadvantages: Ignores the time value of money. Ignores cash inflows received after the payback period. Does not measure overall profitability.
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What is the Net Present Value (NPV) method? Write its decision rule.
Meaning: NPV is the difference between the present value of all future cash inflows and the present value of the initial investment.
Decision Rule:
- If NPV is greater than 0 (positive) → Accept the project.
- If NPV is less than 0 (negative) → Reject the project.
- If NPV is exactly 0 → The project can be accepted or rejected (indifferent).
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Distinguish between traditional methods and modern methods of capital budgeting.
- Traditional Methods (like PBP, ARR): They are simple and easy to calculate. They ignore the time value of money. They are also called non-discounted methods.
- Modern Methods (like NPV, IRR, PI): They are more complex. They consider the time value of money. They give a better picture of profitability and are also called discounted cash flow methods.
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A project requires an initial investment of ₹1,00,000 and generates a constant annual cash inflow of ₹20,000. Calculate the Payback Period.
PBP = Initial Investment ÷ Constant Annual Cash Inflow
PBP = ₹1,00,000 ÷ ₹20,000 = 5 years.
📌 Part C – 6/8 Marks Questions (Long Answer)
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Explain in detail any two methods of capital budgeting with examples.
Method 1: Payback Period (PBP)
- Definition: PBP is the time taken to recover the initial investment.
- Example (Equal Cash Flows): Investment = ₹1,00,000, Yearly cash inflow = ₹20,000. PBP = 1,00,000 ÷ 20,000 = 5 years.
- Example (Unequal Cash Flows): Investment = ₹20,000. Cash inflows: Year1: ₹6,000, Year2: ₹8,000, Year3: ₹5,000, Year4: ₹4,000, Year5: ₹4,000.
After 3 years, cumulative inflow = ₹19,000. Remaining = ₹1,000.
In year 4, inflow is ₹4,000. Time for ₹1,000 = (1000/4000) × 12 months = 3 months.
So, PBP = 3 years and 3 months. - Decision: Accept if PBP is less than the target period.
Method 2: Net Present Value (NPV)
- Definition: NPV is the present value of cash inflows minus the initial investment.
- Example: Project cost = ₹2,50,000. Cost of capital = 10%. Cash inflows: Year1: ₹90,000, Year2: ₹80,000, Year3: ₹70,000, Year4: ₹60,000, Year5: ₹50,000.
Present Value (PV) factors @10%: Year1: 0.909, Year2: 0.826, Year3: 0.751, Year4: 0.683, Year5: 0.621.
PV of inflows = (90,000×0.909) + (80,000×0.826) + (70,000×0.751) + (60,000×0.683) + (50,000×0.621) = ₹2,72,490.
NPV = ₹2,72,490 – ₹2,50,000 = ₹22,490 (Positive). - Decision: Since NPV > 0, accept the project.
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Calculate the Payback Period for a project requiring an initial cash outflow of ₹20,000 and annual cash inflows of ₹6,000, ₹8,000, ₹5,000, ₹4,000, and ₹4,000 for five years.
Step-by-step solution:
- Year 1: Inflow = ₹6,000, Cumulative = ₹6,000. Amount left to recover = ₹14,000.
- Year 2: Inflow = ₹8,000, Cumulative = ₹14,000. Amount left to recover = ₹6,000.
- Year 3: Inflow = ₹5,000, Cumulative = ₹19,000. Amount left to recover = ₹1,000.
- In Year 4, the inflow is ₹4,000. We need only ₹1,000 to recover the full investment.
- Fraction of year 4 needed = (1,000 ÷ 4,000) = 0.25 years.
- 0.25 years × 12 months = 3 months.
Answer: The Payback Period is 3 years and 3 months.
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Calculate the Accounting Rate of Return (ARR) for a project with an initial investment of ₹10,00,000 and a scrap value of ₹80,000 after 5 years. The profits after tax are: Year1: ₹1,50,000, Year2: ₹2,00,000, Year3: ₹2,50,000, Year4: ₹1,50,000, Year5: ₹1,00,000.
Step 1: Calculate Average Annual Profit
Total Profit = 1,50,000 + 2,00,000 + 2,50,000 + 1,50,000 + 1,00,000 = ₹8,50,000
Average Annual Profit = ₹8,50,000 ÷ 5 = ₹1,70,000Step 2: Calculate Average Investment
Average Investment = (Initial Investment + Scrap Value) ÷ 2
= (10,00,000 + 80,000) ÷ 2 = 10,80,000 ÷ 2 = ₹5,40,000Step 3: Calculate ARR
ARR = (Average Annual Profit ÷ Average Investment) × 100
= (1,70,000 ÷ 5,40,000) × 100
= 0.3148 × 100 = 31.48%Answer: The Accounting Rate of Return for the project is 31.48%.
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Calculate the Net Present Value (NPV) for Project X with an initial cost of ₹2,50,000 and a 10% cost of capital. Cash flows: Year1: ₹90,000, Year2: ₹80,000, Year3: ₹70,000, Year4: ₹60,000, Year5: ₹50,000. State whether the project should be accepted.
Step 1: Identify Present Value (PV) factors @10%
Year 1: 0.909, Year 2: 0.826, Year 3: 0.751, Year 4: 0.683, Year 5: 0.621Step 2: Calculate Present Value of Cash Inflows
Year 1: 90,000 × 0.909 = ₹81,810
Year 2: 80,000 × 0.826 = ₹66,080
Year 3: 70,000 × 0.751 = ₹52,570
Year 4: 60,000 × 0.683 = ₹40,980
Year 5: 50,000 × 0.621 = ₹31,050
Total PV of Inflows = 81,810 + 66,080 + 52,570 + 40,980 + 31,050 = ₹2,72,490Step 3: Calculate NPV
NPV = PV of Inflows – Initial Investment
NPV = ₹2,72,490 – ₹2,50,000 = ₹22,490Step 4: Decision Rule
Since the NPV is positive (₹22,490 > 0), the project should be accepted.