Chapter 15 Project Risk Analysis Flashcards
Risk Analysis in Capital budgeting: 3 Elements
- Defining the type of risk relevant to the prject
- Measuring the risk
- Incorporating the risk assessment into the capital budgeting process
Ultimate goal in project risk analysis is to ensure that the cost of capital used as the discount rate in a project’s ROI analysis properly reflects the riskiness of that project.
Corporate cost of capital reflects the cost of capital to the organization based on its aggregate risk: The riskiness of the firm’s average project.
In project risk analysis, the risk of the project is compared to the firm’s average project
The Corporate cost of capital is adjusted to reflect any differential risk
Three distinct types of financial risks
- Stand-alone risk: Assumes the project is held in isolation and ignores portfolio effects
- Corporate risk: Views the risks of a project within the context of the firm’s portfolio of projects
- Market Risk: Views the project from the perspective of a business’s owner who holds a well-diversified protfolio of stocks
Stand-Alone Risk
- Chance of return is < the expected return
- When cash flows are not know with certainty
Stand-alone risk Con’t
Can be measure by:
- Standard deviation (or coefficient of variation) of the project’s profitability (ROI) as measured by NPV, IRR, MIRR
- The larger the Standard deviation the greater the risk
- Only relevant when a not-for-profit is evaluating its first project
- No protfolio diversification is present
Corporate Risk:
- A new project’s risk is its contribution to the business’s overall risk
- Measured by Corporate beta
- Standard deviation of the business’s ROE
- Depends on:
- Project’s stand alone risk (Standard deviation)
- Correlation of the project’s return to the overall returns of the business
Market risk:
- Risk of projects being evaluated by investor-owned businesses
- Risk contribution to the riskiness (Standard deviation) of a well-diversified stock portfolio
- Depends on:
- Project’s stand alone risk (Standard deviation)
- Correlation of the project’s return to the overall returns of the market portfolio
- Measured by Market beta
Sensitivity Analysis
- Shows exactly how much a project’s profitability - NPV, IRR, MIRR - will change in response to a given change in a single input variable with other things held constant
Sensitivity Analysis Steps:
- Base case developed using expected values for all uncertain variables.
- A negative slope indicates that increases in the value of that input variable decreases that project’s NPV
- Profitability break-even information
- Ignores interaction among the input variables
Scenario Analysis
- Stand alone risk analysis
- Calculate the expected NPV, IRR, MIRR
- Calculate the Standard deviation of the distribution of the NPVs or IRR or MIRR using the expected return (NPV, IRR, MIRR)
- Standard deviation = square root of variiance or (variance)1/2
- Calculate the coefficient of variation
- CV = Standard deviation / expected return
- CV is a measure of rick per unit of return
- If the CV of a project is higher than the CV of a average project, the project has an above average risk.
Benefit of the Scenario Analysis
- Provides a quantitative measure
- Provides information about the worst and best possible results
- Considers more than one variable at a time
Limitations of the Scenario Analysis
- Only considers a few states of the economy
- Implies a definite relationship among the variables
- Tends to create extreme profitability values for the worst and best cases
Qualitative Questions related to CF uncertainty:
- Does the project require additional market share or represent a new serivce initiative?
- Is the current management unqualified for the project?
- Does it require a technical expert?
- Are there srong competitiors in the market?
- Does it need new / unproven technology?
Yes = 1
Score analysis
0 = less than avg. risk, 1 - 2 = avg. risk, 3 or more = avove avg. risk.
Incorporating Risk in the decision process:
Two methods:
- The certainty equivalent method
- Risk-adjusted discount rate method
1. The certainty equivalent Method
Derived from the economic concept of Utility:
- Evaluate a CF’s risk
- Specify how much money, with certainty, would be required to be indifferent between the riskless sum and the risky sum.
- The greater the degree of risk aversion, the lower the certainty equivalent amount.
2. The Risk Adjusted Discount Rate (RADR)
Project Cost of Capital = Corporate Cost of Capital + Risk Adjustment
- The risk adjustment is made to the discount rate (the opportunity cost of capital).
- All avg. risk projects are discounted at the firm’s corporate cost of capital, above-avg.-risk projects are assigned to a higher cost of capital etc.
Benefits:
- Has a bench mark: The firm’s corporate cost of capital (the riskiness of the business in the aggregate)
- Requires a single adjustment to the cost of capital
- It combines the factors that account for time-value with adjusment for risk
- Compounds risk premium over time
- Short-term projects look better as compared to long-term projects
Adjusting Cash outflows:
- Applied when two projects will produce the same revenue stream.
- Make a decisio based on the PV of the expected future costs.
- Choose the value with the lower NPV
- Cash outflow that has above-average risk must be evaluated with a lower-than-averge cost of capital.
- Higher risk –> lower discount rate –> lower NPV
Profitability Index of a project =
PV of Cash inflows / PV of Cash outflows
- Measures a project’s dollars profitability per dollar of investment
EX: PI of a project = 1.03
- 3 cents of profit for every dollar invested
- Need to make sure if it is before or after adjusting for risk.