Course Content
Section 2: Financial Accounting and the Accounting Cycle
Understand the full accounting cycle from transaction to financial report, including adjusting entries that make your figures accurate under accrual accounting.
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Section 4: Financial Ratio Analysis
Use financial ratios to analyse profitability, liquidity, efficiency, and solvency — and make smarter business and investment decisions.
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Section 6: Equity and Debt Financing
Understand how companies raise long-term capital through bonds and equity, and how these instruments are accounted for on the balance sheet.
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Section 7: Managerial Accounting and Business Decisions
Apply accounting to real management decisions: break-even analysis, profit improvement strategies, and evaluating capital investments.
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Section 8: Time Value of Money
Understand present value, future value, and annuities — the mathematical foundation behind loan calculations, investment decisions, and retirement planning.
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Section 9: Cost Accounting — Overheads, ABC, and Standard Costing
Understand how manufacturing and non-manufacturing overheads are allocated, how Activity-Based Costing improves accuracy, and how standard costing drives performance management.
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Complete Accounting & Bookkeeping Masterclass for Beginners

Evaluating Business Investments: Making the Right Capital Decisions

Capital budgeting is the process of deciding which long-term investments — new machinery, expansion projects, acquisitions — are worth committing scarce financial resources to. These decisions are typically large, long-lasting, and difficult to reverse, making rigorous analysis essential.

Payback Period

How long does it take to recover the initial investment from the project’s cash inflows?

Investment: $500,000. Annual cash flows: Year 1 $150,000; Year 2 $200,000; Year 3 $250,000.
Cumulative: End Y1 $150,000; End Y2 $350,000; End Y3 $600,000.
Payback is reached partway through Year 3: $150,000 remaining ÷ $250,000 = 0.6 years.
Payback Period ≈ 2.6 years.

Simple and intuitive but ignores time value of money and cash flows after the payback period.

Net Present Value (NPV)

NPV discounts all future cash flows to today’s value using the required rate of return (discount rate), then subtracts the initial investment. An NPV > 0 means the investment creates value; NPV < 0 destroys value.

NPV = Σ [Cash Flow_t ÷ (1 + r)^t] − Initial Investment

Investment: $500,000. Discount rate: 10%. Cash flows: Y1 $200,000; Y2 $250,000; Y3 $200,000.
PV(Y1) = $200,000 ÷ 1.10 = $181,818
PV(Y2) = $250,000 ÷ 1.21 = $206,612
PV(Y3) = $200,000 ÷ 1.331 = $150,263
Total PV = $538,693. NPV = $538,693 − $500,000 = $38,693 (Positive → Accept)

Internal Rate of Return (IRR)

IRR is the discount rate at which NPV equals zero. If IRR > cost of capital, the investment is worthwhile. IRR is useful for comparing projects of different sizes.

Accounting Rate of Return (ARR)

ARR = Average Annual Profit ÷ Initial Investment × 100. Quick to calculate but uses accounting profit rather than cash flow — less theoretically sound than NPV.

Which Method to Use?

NPV is theoretically superior — it accounts for time value of money, uses all cash flows, and directly measures value creation in Dollars terms. IRR is useful as a percentage return metric for communicating to non-finance stakeholders. Payback period works as a quick liquidity/risk screen, not a primary decision tool.

Lesson Summary

  • Payback period: simple but ignores time value and post-payback flows.
  • NPV: the gold standard — discounts all cash flows; accept if NPV > 0.
  • IRR: the discount rate that makes NPV = 0; accept if IRR > cost of capital.

Capital Budgeting: The Four Key Methods Compared

MethodWhat It MeasuresProsConsDecision Rule
Payback PeriodHow quickly initial investment is recoveredSimple; good for liquidity focusIgnores time value of money; ignores cash flows after paybackShorter = better
Discounted PaybackTime to recover investment using PV cash flowsAccounts for time valueStill ignores post-payback flowsShorter = better
Net Present Value (NPV)Dollar value created above the cost of capitalMost theoretically sound; considers all cash flowsRequires accurate discount rate estimatePositive = accept
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)Percentage return on investmentEasy to compare to hurdle rateCan give multiple answers; ignores project scaleIRR > hurdle rate = accept

Full NPV Example: Automated Packaging Machine

Cost: $150,000 | Life: 5 years | Discount Rate: 10%

YearCash InflowPV Factor (10%)Present Value
1$40,0000.909$36,360
2$45,0000.826$37,170
3$50,0000.751$37,550
4$45,0000.683$30,735
5$35,0000.621$21,735
Total PV of Inflows$163,550
Initial Investment($150,000)
NPV$13,550 ✓ ACCEPT

Since NPV > $0, this project creates $13,550 of value above the required return. Accept it.

IRR and Sensitivity Analysis

The IRR is the rate that makes NPV = $0. For this project, IRR ≈ 13.2%. Since this exceeds our 10% hurdle rate, it confirms the acceptance decision.

Sensitivity test: What if cash inflows are 20% lower (pessimistic scenario)?

ScenarioTotal PV of InflowsNPVDecision
Base Case$163,550$13,550Accept
Pessimistic (−20%)$130,840($19,160)Reject
Optimistic (+20%)$196,260$46,260Strongly Accept
💡 Real-World Use
Large companies like Amazon and Apple use NPV and IRR together for every major capex decision — new warehouses, data centres, product lines. The discount rate used is typically the company’s Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC), which blends the cost of equity and debt.
📥 Practice Worksheet
Capital Budgeting Practice Worksheet — Download, print, and complete to reinforce this lesson.
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