Chapter 16THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY AND NET PRESENT VALUE
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
For economic progress to be possible, in normal economic conditions, there must be a time value of money, even in a risk-free environment. This fundamental concept gives rise to the techniques of capitalisation, discounting and net present value, described below.
Section 16.1 CAPITALISATION
Consider an example of a businessman who invests €100,000 in his business at the end of 2011 and then sells it 10 years later for €1,800,000. In the meantime, he receives no income from his business, nor does he invest any additional funds into it. Here is a simple problem: given an initial outlay of €100,000 that becomes €1,800,000 in 10 years, and without any outside funds being invested in the business, what is the return on the businessman's investment?
His profit after 10 years was €1,700,000 (€1,800,000 – €100,000) on an initial outlay of €100,000. Hence, his return was (1,700,000 / 100,000) or 1,700% over a period of 10 years.
Is this a good result or not?
Actually, the return is not quite as impressive as it first looks. To find the annual return, our first thought might be to divide the total return (1,700%) by the number of years (10) and say that the average return is 170% per year.
While this may look like a reasonable approach, it is in fact far from accurate. The value 170% has nothing ...
Get Corporate Finance, 6th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.