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Chapter 3 - Cash flow accounting


Chapter objectives
Structure of the chapter
Aim of a cash flow statement
Statements of source and application of funds
Funds use and credit planning
Key terms

It can be argued that 'profit' does not always give a useful or meaningful picture of a company's operations. Readers of a company's financial statements might even be misled by a reported profit figure.

Shareholders might believe that if a company makes a profit after tax of say $100,000, then this is the amount which it could afford to pay as a dividend. Unless the company has sufficient cash available to stay in business and also to pay a dividend, the shareholders' expectations would be wrong. Survival of a business depends not only on profits but perhaps more on its ability to pay its debts when they fall due. Such payments might include 'profit and loss' items such as material purchases, wages, interest and taxation etc, but also capital payments for new fixed assets and the repayment of loan capital when this falls due (e.g. on the redemption of debentures).

Chapter objectives

This chapter is intended to provide an explanation of:

· The aim, use and construction of cash flow statements

· The meaning and calculation of the source and application of funds statement and their importance to business

· A discussion on credit and types of loans available to businesses

· An explanation of the cost of funds and capital

· The importance and calculation of ownership costs, including depreciation, interest, repair, taxes and insurance.

Structure of the chapter

"Cash flow" is one of the most vital elements in the survival of a business. It can be positive, or negative, which is obviously a most undesirable situation. The chapter develops the concept of cash flow and then shows how the funds can be used in the business. Funds are not only generated internally; they may be externally generated, and so the chapter finishes with a discussion of externally generated funds.

Aim of a cash flow statement

The aim of a cash flow statement should be to assist users:

· to assess the company's ability to generate positive cash flows in the future
· to assess its ability to meet its obligations to service loans, pay dividends etc
· to assess the reasons for differences between reported and related cash flows
· to assess the effect on its finances of major transactions in the year.

The statement therefore shows changes in cash and cash equivalents rather than working capital.

Indirect method cash flow statement

Figure 3.1 shows a pro forma cash flow statement.

Figure 3.1 Pro forma cash flow statement

Cash Flow Statement For The Year Ended 31 December 19X4


$

$

Net cash inflow from operating activities

X


Returns on investments and servicing of finance



Interest received

X


Interest paid

(X)


Dividends paid

(X)


Net cash inflow/ (outflow) from returns on investments and servicing of finance


X

Taxation



Corporation tax paid

(X)


Tax paid


(X)

Investing activities



Payments to acquire intangible fixed assets

(X)


Payments to acquire tangible fixed assets

(X)


Receipts from sales of tangible fixed assets

X


Net cash inflow/ (outflow) from investing activities

X or

(X)

Net cash inflow before financing


X

Financing



Issue of ordinary capital

X


Repurchase of debenture loan

(X)


Expenses paid in connection with share issues

(X)


Net cash inflow/ (outflow) from financing

X or

(X)

Increase/ (Decrease) in cash and cash equivalents


X

NOTES ON THE CASH FLOW STATEMENT

1. Reconciliation of operating profit to net cash inflow from operating activities



$

Operating profit


X

Depreciation charges


X

Loss on sale of tangible fixed assets


X

Increase/(decrease) in stocks

(X)


Increase/(decrease) in debtors

(X)


Increase/(decrease) in creditors


X

Net cash inflow from operating activities


X

2. Analysis of changes in cash and cash equivalents during the year

Balance at 1 January 19X4

X

Net cash inflow

X

Balance at 31 December 19X4

X

3. Analysis of the balances of cash and cash equivalents as shown in the balance sheet

 

19X4

19X3

Change in year

$

$

$

Cash at bank and in hand

X

X

(X)

Short term investments

X

X

X

Bank overdrafts

(X)

(X)

(X)


X

X

X

4. Analysis of changes in finance during the year

 

Share capital

Debenture loan

$

$

Balance at 1 January 19X4

X

X

Cash inflow/(outflow) from financing

X

(X)

Profit on repurchase of debenture loan for less than its book value

-

(X)

Balance at 31 December 19X4

X

X

Note: Any transactions which do not result in a cash flow should not be reported in the statement. Movements within cash or cash equivalents should not be reported.

Explanations

It is often difficult to conceptualise just what is "cash" and what are "cash equivalents". Cash need not be physical money; it can take other forms:

a) Cash in hand and deposits repayable on demand with any bank or financial institution.

b) Cash equivalents: Short term, highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and which are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.

c) Operating activities: Principal revenue-producing activities of the company and other activities that are not investing or financing activities. The reconciliation between the operating profit reported in the profit and loss account and the net cash flow from operating activities must show the movements in stocks, debtors and creditors related to operating activities.

d) Returns on investments and servicing of finance. Cash inflows from these sources includes:

i) interest received, also any related tax recovered, and
ii) dividends received.

Cash outflows from these sources includes:

i) interest paid
ii) dividends paid
iii) interest element of finance lease payments.

e) Taxation: These cash flows will be those to and from the tax authorities in relation to the company's revenue and capital profits, i.e. corporation tax.

f) Investing activities: the acquisition and disposal of long term assets and other investments not included in cash equivalents.

Cash receipts include:

i) receipts from sales or disposals of fixed assets (or current asset investments)

ii) receipts from sales of investments in subsidiary undertakings net of any cash or cash equivalents transferred as part of the sale

iii) receipts from sales of investments in other entities

iv) receipts from repayment or sales of loans made to other entities.

Cash payments include;

i) payments to acquire fixed assets

ii) payments to acquire investments in subsidiary net of balances of cash and cash equivalents acquired

iii) payments to acquire investments in other entities

iv) loans made and payments to acquire debt of other entities.

g) Financing: activities that result in changes in the size and composition of the equity capital and borrowings of the enterprise.

Financing cash inflows include:

i) receipts from issuing shares or other equity instruments
ii) receipts from issuing debentures, loans, notes and bonds and so on.

Financing cash outflows include:

i) repayments of amounts borrowed
ii) the capital element of finance lease rental payments
iii) payments to re-acquire or redeem the entity's shares.

Now attempt exercise 3.1.

Exercise 3.1 Cash flow statement

Set out below are the accounts for TPK Pvt Ltd as at 31 December 19X4 and 19X5.

PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEARS TO 31 DECEMBER

 

19X4

19X5

Z$'000

Z$'000

Operating profit

9,400

20,640

Interest paid

-

(280)

Interest received

100

40

Profit before taxation

9,500

20,400

Taxation

(3,200)

(5,200)

Profit after taxation

6,300

15,200

Dividends




Preference (paid)

(100)

(100)


Ordinary: interim (paid)

1,000)

(2,000)



final (proposed)

(3,000)

(6,000)

Retained profit for the year

2,200

7,100

BALANCE SHEETS AS AT 31 DECEMBER



Fixed Assets



Plant, machinery and equipment at cost

17,600

23,900

Less: accumulated depreciation

9,500

10,750


8,100

13,150

Current Assets



Stocks

5,000

15,000

Trade debtors

8,600

26,700

Prepayments

300

400

Cash at bank and in hand

600

-


14,500

42,100

Current liabilities



Bank overdraft

-

16,200

Trade creditors

6,000

10,000

Accruals

800

1,000

Taxation

3,200

5,200

Dividends

3,200

6,000


3,000

38,400


9,600

16,850

Share capital



Ordinary shares of $1 each

5,000

5,000

10% preference shares of $1 each

1,000

1,000

Profit and loss account

3,000

10,100


9,000

16,100

Loans



15% debenture stock

600

750


9,600

16,850

Prepare a cash flow statement for the year to 31 December 19X5.

Statements of source and application of funds

Although cash flow statements have now superseded statements of source and application of funds, funds flow statements may not disappear entirely. Some businesses or industries will continue to find fund flow statements useful and informative. For this reason, it is necessary to examine funds flow statements.

Funds statement on a cash basis

Funds statements on a cash basis can be prepared by classifying and/or consolidating:

a) net balance sheet changes that occur between two points in time into changes that increase cash and changes that decrease cash

b) from the Income statement and the surplus (profit and loss) statement, the factors that increase cash and the factors that decrease cash and

c) this information in a sources and uses of funds statement form.

Step (a) involves comparing two relevant Balance sheets side by side and then computing the changes in the various accounts.

Sources of funds that increase cash

Sources of funds which increase cash are as follows:

· a net decrease in any asset other than cash or fixed assets
· a gross decrease in fixed assets
· a net increase in any liability
· proceeds from the sale of preferred or common stock
· funds provided by operations (which usually are not expressed directly in the income statement).

To determine funds provided by operations, we have to add back depreciation to net income after taxes. In other words, suppose we have:

Net income after taxes of a company, being

= $750,000

and depreciation (non-cash expense), being

= $100,500


850,500

Then, the funds provided by operations of such a company will be obtained by adding the values of the two above items, i.e. $850,500. Thus, the net income of a company usually understates the value of funds provided by operations by the value of the depreciation - in this case by $100,500.

But then, depreciation is not a source of funds, since funds are generated only from operations. Thus, if a company sustains an operating loss before depreciation, funds are not provided regardless of the magnitude of the depreciation charges.

Application of funds of a company usually include:

· a net increase in any asset other than cash or fixed assets
· a gross increase in fixed assets
· a net decrease in any liability
· a retirement or purchase of stock and
· the payment of cash dividends.

To avoid double counting, we usually compute gross changes in fixed assets by adding depreciation for the period to net fixed assets at the ending financial statement date and subtract from the resulting amount the net fixed assets at the beginning financial statement date. The residual represents the gross change in fixed assets for the period. If the residual is positive, it represents a use of funds; if it is negative, it represents a source of funds.

Once all sources and applications of funds are computed, they may be arranged in statement form so that we can analyse them better.

Now attempt exercises 3.2 and 3.3

Exercise 3.2 Source and application of funds I

Given below are some different sources and applications of funds finance items purposely scattered for an Agribusiness Company K for the year ended 31 December 19X8.

1) Identify them as sources and applications of funds, and arrange them in a proper manner with the Sources of funds on the left and the Applications on the right of a tabulated statement for the said period.

2) Comment briefly on some of the uses of the tabulated statement.


$

Increase in cash position =

12,000

Decrease in debtors =

8,000

Increase in long term debt =

2,500

Increase in stocks =

26,500

Increase in tax prepayments =

2,000

Net profit =

35,000

Increase in other accruals =

3,000

Additions to fixed assets =

4,500

Cash dividends =

15,000

Increase in bank loans =

20,000

Increase in prepaid expenses =

2,500

Increase in investments =

9,000

Increase in creditors =

5,000

Decrease in accrued taxes =

8,000

Depreciation =

6,000

Note: The above figures are based on the balance sheet and income statement of Company K, which are not shown in this exercise.

Exercise 3.3 Sources and applications of funds II

Using the data and information in the annual reports (especially the balance sheet and income statements) of Cerial Marketing Board provided for 1993 and 1992:

a) compute and identify the sources and applications of funds of the parastatal for the years 1992 and 1993 and

b) arrange them into a sources and applications of funds statement for 1993.

Funds use and credit planning

Funds (or capital) is a collective term applied to the assortment of productive inputs that have been produced. Funds may be broadly categorised into operating (or working) capital (difference between current assets and current liabilities), and ownership (or investment) capital.

Operating capital in a company or firm usually refers to production inputs that are normally used up within a production year. On the other hand, investment capital (or funds) refers to durable resources like machines and buildings in which money invested is tied up for several years. Funds are generally quantified in monetary value terms.

Funds use, especially borrowed capital, is usually influenced by many factors, namely: the alternative demands for it; the availability of credit as and when needed; the time and interest rate payable on it; the types of loans that might be needed to generate it; and the cost of funds and business ownership cost. Thus, careful credit planning is essential in the successful operations of any company.

In general, this requires the application of what, in strategic company management, has come to be known as the strategic four-factor model called "SORS". The letters that make up SORS stand for:-

· Strategic planning (S)
· Organisational planning (O)
· Resource requirements (R)
· Strategic control (S).

Figure 3.2 summarises the simplified matrix of interacting factors and component parts that make up 'SORS'. In general terms, SORS is influenced or determined by four major factors: the external environment, the internal environment, organisational culture and resource (especially funds) availability. These four factors interact to create four inter-related components which normally determine the success or failure of any given company. These are:

a) competitive environment
b) strategic thrust
c) product/market dynamics
d) competitive cost position and restructuring.

A proper and pragmatic manipulation of these four component parts requires:

· assessing the external environment
· understanding the internal environment
· adopting a leadership strategy
· strategically planning the finances of the company.

The purpose of this text is not to cover all the components summarised in figure 3.1. Instead, the major concern is to have a proper understanding of financial analysis for strategic planning. This, in strategic management, requires a sound financial analysis backed by strategic funds programming, baseline projections (or budgeting), what-if (decision tree) analysis, and risk analysis. This book attempts to cover all these areas.

Alternative uses of funds

Dealing with alternatives is what management is all about. Some of the tools for evaluating alternatives (e.g. partial budgets, cash flow budgets and financial statements), are covered in this text.

It is assumed that most people are already familiar with the analysis that usually leads to major capital use decisions in various companies. However, highlighted are some of these points throughout the book, since company backgrounds differ and what is considered "major capital use decisions" varies with the size of businesses. For instance, a $50,000 expenditure may be major to one company and of little significance to another.

Figure 3.2 The strategic four-factor model

Almost everyone is familiar with the substantial capital or funds demand in all forms of business. Obviously, this does not all have to be owned capital. Evaluation of successful businesses has found that many of them operate with 50 percent or more rented or borrowed capital. The pressure on businesses to grow is likely to continue, and these businesses are likely to grow faster than will be permitted by each reinvesting its own annual savings from net income alone. Thus, because demand for credit will continue to expand, careful credit planning and credit use decisions are of paramount importance to marketing companies in any country.

Credit and types of loans

Credit is the capacity to borrow. It is the right to incur debt for goods and/or services and repay the debt over some specified future time period. Credit provision to a company means that the business is allowed the use of a productive good while it is being paid for.

Other than the fact that funds generated within a business are usually inadequate to meet expanding production and other activities, credit is often used in order to:

· increase the returns on equity capital
· allow more efficient labour utilisation
· increase income.

The process of using borrowed, leased or "joint venture" resources from someone else is called leverage. Using the leverage provided by someone else's capital helps the user business go farther than it otherwise would. For instance, a company that puts up $1,000 and borrows an additional $4,000 is using 80% leverage. The objective is to increase total net income and the return on a company's own equity capital.

Borrowed funds are generally referred to as loans. There are various ways of classifying loans, namely:

· in payment terms, e.g. instalment versus single payment
· in period-of-payment terms, e.g. short-term versus intermediate-term or long-term
· in the manner of its security terms, e.g. secured versus unsecured
· in interest payment terms, e.g. simple interest versus add-on, versus discount, versus balloon.

On the basis of the above classification, there are twelve common types of loans, namely: short-term loans, intermediate-term loans, long-term loans, unsecured loans, secured loans, instalment loans, single payment loans, simple-interest loans, add-on interest loans, discount or front-end loans, balloon loans and amortised loans.

Short-term loans are credit that is usually paid back in one year or less. Short term loans are usually used in financing the purchase of operating inputs, wages for hired labour, machinery and equipment, and/or family living expenses. Usually lenders expect short-term loans to be repaid after their purposes have been served, e.g. after the expected production output has been sold.

Loans for operating production inputs e.g. cotton for the Cotton Company of Zimbabwe (COTCO) and beef for the Cold Storage Company of Zimbabwe (CSC), are assumed to be self-liquidating. In other words, although the inputs are used up in the production, the added returns from their use will repay the money borrowed to purchase the inputs, plus interest. Astute managers are also expected to have figured in a risk premium and a return to labour management. On the other hand, loans for investment capital items like machinery are not likely to be self-liquidating in the short term. Loans for family living expenses are not at all self-liquidating and must come out of net cash income after all cash obligations are paid.

Intermediate-term (IT) loans are credit extended for several years, usually one to five years. This type of credit is normally used for purchases of buildings, equipment and other production inputs that require longer than one year to generate sufficient returns to repay the loan.

Long-term loans are those loans for which repayment exceeds five to seven years and may extend to 40 years. This type of credit is usually extended on assets (such as land) which have a long productive life in the business. Some land improvement programmes like land levelling, reforestation, land clearing and drainage-way construction are usually financed with long-term credit.

Unsecured loans are credit given out by lenders on no other basis than a promise by the borrower to repay. The borrower does not have to put up collateral and the lender relies on credit reputation. Unsecured loans usually carry a higher interest rate than secured loans and may be difficult or impossible to arrange for businesses with a poor credit record.

Secured loans are those loans that involve a pledge of some or all of a business's assets. The lender requires security as protection for its depositors against the risks involved in the use planned for the borrowed funds. The borrower may be able to bargain for better terms by putting up collateral, which is a way of backing one's promise to repay.

Instalment loans are those loans in which the borrower or credit customer repays a set amount each period (week, month, year) until the borrowed amount is cleared. Instalment credit is similar to charge account credit, but usually involves a formal legal contract for a predetermined period with specific payments. With this plan, the borrower usually knows precisely how much will be paid and when.

Single payment loans are those loans in which the borrower pays no principal until the amount is due. Because the company must eventually pay the debt in full, it is important to have the self-discipline and professional integrity to set aside money to be able to do so. This type of loan is sometimes called the "lump sum" loan, and is generally repaid in less than a year.

Simple interest loans are those loans in which interest is paid on the unpaid loan balance. Thus, the borrower is required to pay interest only on the actual amount of money outstanding and only for the actual time the money is used (e.g. 30 days, 90 days, 4 months and 2 days, 12 years and one month).

Add-on interest loans are credit in which the borrower pays interest on the full amount of the loan for the entire loan period. Interest is charged on the face amount of the loan at the time it is made and then "added on". The resulting sum of the principal and interest is then divided equally by the number of payments to be made. The company is thus paying interest on the face value of the note although it has use of only a part of the initial balance once principal payments begin. This type of loan is sometimes called the "flat rate" loan and usually results in an interest rate higher than the one specified.

Discount or front-end loans are loans in which the interest is calculated and then subtracted from the principal first. For example, a $5,000 discount loan at 10% for one year would result in the borrower only receiving $4,500 to start with, and the $5,000 debt would be paid back, as specified, by the end of a year.

On a discount loan, the lender discounts or deducts the interest in advance. Thus, the effective interest rates on discount loans are usually much higher than (in fact, more than double) the specified interest rates.

Balloon loans are loans that normally require only interest payments each period, until the final payment, when all principal is due at once. They are sometimes referred to as the "last payment due", and have a concept that is the same as the single payment loan, but the due date for repaying principal may be five years or more in the future rather than the customary 90 days or 6 months for the single payment loan.

In some cases a principal payment is made each time interest is paid, but because the principal payments do not amortise (pay off) the loan, a large sum is due at the loan maturity date.

Amortised loans are a partial payment plan where part of the loan principal and interest on the unpaid principal are repaid each year. The standard plan of amortisation, used in many intermediate and long-term loans, calls for equal payments each period, with a larger proportion of each succeeding payment representing principal and a small amount representing interest.

The repayment schedule for a 10 year standard amortised loan of $10,000 at 7% is presented in table 3.1.

The constant annual payment feature of the amortised loan is similar to the "add on" loan described above, but involves less interest because it is paid only on the outstanding loan balance, as with simple interest. Amortisation tables are used to determine the regular payment for an amortised loan. The $1,424.00 annual payment for the 10 year loan was determined by using the amortisation factor (AF) of 0.1424 and multiplying that by $10,000, the face value of the loan. The proper procedure for deriving a schedule as in table 3.1 is to:

a) first read off the amortisation factor from an amortisation table for a given interest rate against the given year the loan is expected to last

b) calculate the total payment at the end of each year

c) then, on a year-by-year basis, calculate the annual interest payable on the balance of the principal

d) obtain the annual principal payment by subtracting the calculated annual interest from the total end-of-year payment.

Repeat the procedure for each of the years involved. Now attempt exercise 3.4.

Table 3.2 Amortisation of a $10,000 loan in 10 years by equal annual instalments @ 7% interest

Year

Unpaid principal at beginning of year ($)

Payment at the end of the year

Interest ($)

Principal ($)

Total ($)

1

10,000.00

700.00

724.00

1,424.00

2

9,276.00

649.30

774.70

1,424.00

3

8,501.30

595.10

828.90

1,424.00

4

7,672.40

537.10

886.90

1,424.00

5

6,785.50

475.00

949.00

1,424.00

6

5,836.50

408.60

1,015.40

1,424.00

7

4,821.10

337.50

1,086.50

1,424.00

8

3,734.60

261.40

1,162.60

1,424.00

9

2,572.00

180.00

1,244.00

1,424.00

10

1,328.00

93.00

1,331.00

1,424.00

Total


4,240.00

10,000.00

14,240.00

Exercise 3.4 Amortised loan

Suppose a new machine is being financed by the Dairiboard of Zimbabwe Ltd with an 18 year $25,000 loan at a 9% interest rate. Obtain an amortisation schedule to show how the Dairiboard of Zimbabwe Ltd will pay off the resulting amortised loan. (Hint: the AF is 0.1142).

Cost of funds

The cost of funds (capital) is crucial to investment analysis. Usually, the present value measures of an investment's economic worth depend on the use of an appropriate discount rate (or rate of return). The most appropriate rate is the firm's cost of capital. This rate, when determined, provides a yardstick for testing the acceptability of any investment; those that have a high probability of achieving a rate of return in excess of the firm's cost of capital are acceptable.

A firm's cost of capital may be estimated through:

a) the use of the interest rate attainable by "investing" in lending institutions (deposits or securities) before taxes as an estimate of opportunity cost of capital and

b) the determination of the weighted average after-tax cost of capital, which reflects the cost of all forms of capital the firm uses. The two basic sources of capital are borrowed funds from lending institutions and ownership or internal capital representing profits reinvested in the business.

To estimate the weighted average cost of capital, one needs to determine:

a) the present cost of borrowed or leased funds from each source

b) an average cost of internal capital as reflected by the percentage of equity in business and risks being taken and

c) an adjustment for income tax effect.

Cost of borrowed capital

Lenders' interest rates vary by type of lender. And since many of these lenders' rates are keyed to money market conditions, predicting costs of borrowed capital through time is imprecise. Less difficulty exists when borrowers have considerable long-term borrowings at fixed rates. Normally, a rough idea of the average cost of borrowed capital for a firm is obtained by dividing the total interest paid by the company by the capital borrowed by the same company.

Cost of ownership (Equity) capital

Cost of ownership capital is more difficult to determine than that of borrowed capital. Theoretically, one knows that the cost of ownership capital is the opportunity cost of placing the owner's funds elsewhere in comparable risk situations. Generally, the guide for selecting an appropriate ownership cost of capital is to use the condition that the cost of equity or ownership capital should be equal to or greater than the cost of borrowed capital.

Average cost of capital

Using a balance sheet or other information, one can estimate the percentage of the sources of capital in a business. Assuming that a company has a 50% equity (or will average about half borrowed and half owned capital over the investment period) the average cost of capital is estimated as follows:

Table 3.2 Average cost of capital

Sources of capital

(1) % of Capital

(2) % of cost

Weighted cost (1) x (2)

Equity capital borrowed

50

0.10

5.00

Bank

40

0.09

3.60

Insurance company

10

0.08

0.80

TOTAL



9.40

Business ownership costs

There are five ownership costs that every company incurs, namely: depreciation costs, interest costs, repair costs taxes, and insurance costs. They are commonly referred to as the "DIRTI 5".

a) Depreciation

This is a procedure for allocating the used up value of durable assets over the period they are owned by the business or until they are salvaged. By depreciating an asset, an allowance is made for the deterioration in the asset's value as a result of use (wear and tear), age and obsolescence. Generally, property is depreciable if it is used in business or to earn income;, wears out, decays, gets used up or becomes obsolete, and has a determinable useful life of more than one year. The proportion of the original cost to be depreciated in any one year is largely a matter of judgement and financial management. Normally, the depreciation allowance taken in any given year should reflect the actual decline in value of the asset - whether it is designed to influence income taxes or the undepreciated value of an asset reflecting the resale value of the asset.

There are four main and acceptable methods of calculating depreciation, namely:

· the accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS) method
· the straight line method
· the declining balance method
· the sum of the years-digits method.

The accelerated cost recovery system method is a relatively new method of calculating depreciation for tangible property. It came into use effectively in 1981. As a method ACRS generally gives much faster write off than other methods because it has tax savings as its primary objective. It usually gives little consideration to actual year-to-year change in value. Thus, for accounting purposes, other methods are more appropriate.

For tax purposes, property is classified as follows:-

i) 3 year property - automobiles and light-duty trucks used for business purposes and certain special tools, and depreciable property with a midpoint life of 4 years or less.

ii) 5 year property - most farm equipment, grain bins, single purpose structures and fences, breeding beef and dairy cattle, office equipment and office furniture.

iii) 10 year property- includes depreciable property with an expected life between 10 and 12.4 years.

iv) 15 year property - buildings.

The straight line method computes depreciation, Ds, as follows:

where:

OC = Original cost or basis
SV = Salvage value
L = expected useful life of the asset in the business.

Declining balance method calculates depreciation as:-

Dd = RV x R

where:

RV = undepreciated value of the asset at the start of the accounting period such that, in year 1, RV = OC, and in succeeding years,

RVi = [RVi-1 - Dd,i-1] x R (with salvage value not being deducted from original value before computing depreciation),

R = the depreciation rate, which may be up to twice the rate of decline, 1/L, allowed under straight line method.

Sum of the year-digits method estimates the depreciation of an asset as follows:-

where:

RY = estimated years of useful life remaining

S = sum of the numbers representing years of useful life (i.e. for an asset with 5 years useful life, S would be 1+2+3+4+5 = 15).

b) Interest costs (rates) are incurred by a company when owned or borrowed funds are invested in durable assets, because such money is tied up and cannot be used for other purposes. On borrowed money, there will be a regular interest payment, a standing obligation which must be met regardless of the level of use of the asset purchased with the borrowed money. Also, an interest charge should be calculated on equity capital. In this case, the charge would be an opportunity interest cost. An annual charge should be made because the money invested has alternative productive uses, which may range from earning interest on a savings account to increasing production.

c) Repairs costs are principally variable costs incurred on assets because of the level of use of the assets through wear and tear. Some durable assets, however, deteriorate with time even though they are not used. Fences, buildings and some moving parts on machinery and equipment are prime examples, although they deteriorate even more rapidly with use.

d) Taxes are fixed costs that are usually incurred on machinery, buildings and some other durable assets. Taxes are usually not related to the level of use or productive services provided. Thus, any investment analysis that ignores the annual tax obligation associated with the proposed investment will be incomplete.

e) Insurance costs are also fixed costs that are incurred when a financed asset is purchased and has to be protected against fire, weather, theft, etc. Usually, lenders require that a financed asset be insured as a meant of security for the loan. Some operators, particularly those with low equity, also insure some of their more valuable assets because of the strain the loss of those assets would place on the financial condition of the business. In this country, the major insurance companies are Old Mutual Insurance and General Accident Insurance, Minet Insurance, Prudential Insurance, etc. Now attempt exercise 3.5.

Exercise 3.5 Computation of depreciation

Using the straight line, declining balance, and sum of the year-digits methods, compute and tabulate the depreciation of a $1,000 asset with an estimated 10 years' life and projected salvage value of 10% of the original cost. (Assume for the declining balance method a depreciation rate calculated as 20% of the value at the beginning of the year. Usually the rate may not be greater than twice the rate which would be used under the straight line method).

Key terms

Average cost of capital
Business ownership costs
Cash
Cash equivalents
Cash flow statement
Cash payments
Cost of borrowed capital
Cost of equity capital
Depreciation
DIRTI 5
Financing
Funds use
Insurance costs
Interest rates
Investing activities
Operating activities
Pro forma cash flow statement
Repair costs
Returns on investment and servicing of finance
SORS
Source and application of funds
Strategic four-factor model
Taxation
Taxes


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