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Using ARR to make capital investment decisions Refer to the Henry Hardware information in Exercise E26-20. Assume the project has no residual value. Compute the ARR for the investment. Round to two places.

Henry Hardware is adding a new product line that will require an investment of \(1,512,000. Managers estimate that this investment will have a 10-year life and generate net cash inflows of \)310,000 the first year, \(270,000 the second year, and \)240,000 each year thereafter for eight years.

Short Answer

Expert verified

ARR is 13.07%

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of ARR

ARR depicts the effect of the investment on the company's accrual-based income. The accounting rate of return could be a proportion that does not consider the thought of time worth of cash.

02

Computing the ARR for the investment

Totalnetcashinflowssuringoperatinglifeofproject=Sumofnetcashinflowsduringoperatinglifeofproject=$310,000Yr.1+$270,000Yr.2+(240,000×8yrs.)=$2.500,000

Totaldepreciationduringoperatinglifeofproject=Cost-Residualvalue=$1,512,000-$0=$1,512,000

Average annual operating income

Total net cash inflows during the operating life of the project

$2,500,000

Less: Total depreciation during the operating life of the project

1,512,000

Total operating income during the operating life

988,000

Divide by: Project’s operating life in years

10 years

Average annual operating income from the project

$ 98,800

Averageamountinvested=Amountinvested+Residualvalue2=$1,512,000+$02=$756,000

ARR=AverageannualoperationIncomeAverageamountinvested=$98,800$756,000=13.07%(rounded)

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Most popular questions from this chapter

How does compound interest differ from simple interest?

Describe the capital budgeting process.

How is ARR calculated?

Spencer Wilkes is the marketing manager at Darby Company. Last year, Spencer recommended the company approve a capital investment project for the addition of a new product line. Spencer’s recommendation included predicted cash inflows for five years from the sales of the new product line. Darby Company has been selling the new products for almost one year. The company has a policy of conducting annual post audits on capital investments, and Spencer is concerned about the one-year post-audit because sales in the first year have been lower than he estimated. However, sales have been increasing for the last couple of months, and Spencer expects that by the end of the second year, actual sales will exceed his estimates for the first two years combined.

Spencer wants to shift some sales from the second year of the project into the first year. Doing so will make it appear that his cash flow predictions were accurate. With accurate estimates, he will be able to avoid a poor performance evaluation. Spencer has discussed his plan with a couple of key sales representatives, urging them to report sales in the current month that will not be shipped until a later month. Spencer has justified this course of action by explaining that there will be no effect on the annual financial statements because the project year does not coincide with the fiscal year––by the time the accounting year ends, the sales will have actually occurred.

Requirements

1. What is the fundamental ethical issue? Who are the affected parties?

2. If you were a sales representative at Darby Company, how would you respond to Spencer’s request? Why?

3. If you were Spencer’s manager and you discovered his plan, how would you respond?

4. Are there other courses of action Spencer could take?

What is the decision rule for NPV?

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