Week 1- Introduction To Discounting Flashcards

1
Q

Define shares

A

Are a unit of ownership of a company

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2
Q

Define Shareholders

A

Those who own a share in the company

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3
Q

Define Share Price (2)

A

• The market value of the share as determined by the market itself
• is a function of the sum of expected future dividends

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4
Q

Define dividend

A

Is the distributed profit given to shareholders (as decided by the board) divided by the number of shares in circulation

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5
Q

Define risk

A

Is an event which can be described in terms of probability

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6
Q

Define uncertainty

A

An event which cannot be assigned a probability

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7
Q

Define Investment

A

An outlay, usually at the start of a scheme, assigned (usually) with the intention of making a (sufficient) return

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8
Q

Define return on investment

A

The amount returned following the investment; there are various ways of measuring it

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9
Q

Define profit

A

Profit can be gross or net influenced by non-cash items such as depreciation of assets

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10
Q

Define cash

A

Is the physical increase or decrease in the volume of money

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11
Q

Define cash flow

A

Is the increase or decrease of cash over time

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12
Q

Define tax

A

Is the corporation tax paid to government based on a % of a profit. Tax is a real cash movement

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13
Q

Define depreciation

A

A “non-cash” allocation made to allow for the “consumption” of an asset, which is deducted from gross profit

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14
Q

What is shareholders wealth and what is the benefit of it increasing?

A

• Shareholder wealth usually means increasing the share price and paying dividends
• It can be beneficial because it can lead to companies paying more tax, hiring new people and they are paying tax (so increased employment and tax to the state on public services)

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15
Q

Which factors can influence shareholder value? (7)

A

• Customer Service
• Employee Morale
• Corporate Social responsibility
• Credit rating
• Attitude to risk
• Reputation of the business
• Innovation capability

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16
Q

What does the decision to proceed with an investment require?

A

It requires the expected outcome/return being greater than the required outcome/return

17
Q

3 ways of defining the viability of an investment

A

• Accounting rate of return (ARR)
• Simple payback
• Discounted cash flow (DCF) Analysis

18
Q

What is the formula for the accounting rate of return (ARR)?

A

ARR = Average profit (profit before interest and tax across the years of the investment )/initial investment

19
Q

Define simple payback (2)

A

• Is another way of measuring whether to proceed with an investment where if cash returned is greater than cash outlay within a defined period then proceed with the investment
• Example: Payback period limit is set at 5 years. Outlay was £20,000 and cash returned each year was £3000. The total cash returned in the payback period would be 5 x £3000 = £15,000 which less than the outlay this the project would not proceed

20
Q

What is a limitation of simple payback?

A

Is a very rudimentary (limited/basic) method and is generally used as an initial guide

21
Q

What is Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis (2)

A

• Is where the net present value (NPV) is the SUM of future discounted cash flows
• NPV represents the summated cash of a project or investment expressed in terms of money TODAY

22
Q

What is the core principle surrounding money? (3)

A

• Money today is worth more than money tomorrow because it could be invested to achieve a return, or it could be used to avoid borrowing costs, thus saving interest charges
• The investment return or borrowing interest rate avoided is called the discount rate “r” (or i, k)
• Each year the value of a unit of money reduces by r (or i,k) sometimes referred to as the time value of money

23
Q

What is the formula for discounted present value (DPV)? (4)

A

• FV = Future value (expected cash income/outlay during any use year)
• I (or r,k) = discount rate
• n = Years into the future
• 1/(1+i)^n = the “discount factor”

24
Q

What is the formula for discounted present value (DPV)? (4)

A

• FV = Future value (expected cash income/outlay during any use year)
• I (or r,k) = discount rate
• n = Years into the future
• 1/(1+i)^n = the “discount factor” this is the bottom half of the equation

25
Q

What is the NPV/DCF formula?

A

• k (or r) = discount rate
• CF = Cash flow in the year
• CF0 = Initial cash flow (year zero)
• n = number of years
• NPV = Net present value of the project

26
Q

How’s does NPV impact the viability of a investment

A

If the NPV is greater than zero than it is worth doing

27
Q

Tips for answering NPV/DCF Questions

A

• Remember to add the residual/scrap value in the final year NPV calculation if it’s not sold a year after the project/investment is completed
• Always use the discount factor: 1/1+K^n

28
Q

Formula for discounted cash flow (DCF Analysis)

29
Q

Formula for the NPV for an investment that goes over a number of years

A

Is the sum of the DCF for each year