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Unit 6: Capital Budgeting




          and the benefits are returns on the investments. The objective is to select the combination of  Notes
          projects, which would give maximization of the total NPV. The project selection under capital
          rationing involves two stages:
          1.   The identification of the acceptable projects,
          2.   To select the combination, of projects. The acceptability of projects can be based either on
               profitability/present value index or IRR.




             Notes  Many firms' capital constraints are 'Soft'. They reflect no imperfections in capital
             markets. Instead they are provisional limits adapted by management as an aid to financial
             control. Soft rationing should never cost the firm anything. If capital constraints become
             tight enough to hurt in the sense that projects with significant positive NPV's are passed
             up then the firm raises more money and loosens the constraint. But when it can't raise
             more money,  then it  faces hard  rationing. 'Hard'  capital rationing  always reflects on
             market imperfection a barrier between the firm and capital markets, which can be attributed
             to non-availability of market information, investor attitude etc.

          There are various ways of resorting to capital rationing. For instance, a firm may effect capital
          rationing through budgets. Capital rationing may also be exercised by following the concept of
          "responsibility  accounting",  whereby  management  may  introduce  capital  rationing  by
          authorizing a particular department to make investment only up to a specified limit, beyond
          which the investment decisions are to be taken up by higher-ups.

          In capital rationing, it may also be more desirable to accept small investment proposals than a
          few large investment proposals so that there may be full utilization of budgeted amount. This
          may result in accepting  relatively less profitable investment  proposals if full utilization of
          budget is a primary consideration.
          Similarly, capital rationing  may also  mean that the firm  foregoes the next most profitable
          investment following after the budget ceiling, even though it is estimated to yield a rate  of
          return much higher than the required rate of return. Thus, capital rationing does not always lead
          to optimum results.


                 Example: S. Ltd. has  10,00,000 allocated for capital budgeting purposes. The following
          proposals and associated profitability indexes have been determined:

                   Project            Amount           Profitability
                     ( )                                 Index
                      1                3,00,0.00          1.22

                      2                1,50,000           0.95
                      3                3,50,000           1.20
                      4                4,50,000           1.18
                      5                2,00,000           1.20
                      6                4,00,000           1.05

          Which of the above investments should be undertaken? Assume that projects are indivisible and
          there is no alternative use of the money allocated for capital budgeting:






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