Software Economics. Introduction to Business Case Analysis. Session 2

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Software Economics Introduction to Business Case Analysis Session 2

Today Last Session we covered FV, PV and NPV We started with setting up the financials of a Business Case We talked about measurements to compare investment options and talked about NPV, now we continue with ROI (Return on Investment) IRR (Internal Rate of Return) Payback Period 2

Return on Investment Return on Investment Simple ROI (Gain from investment Cost of investment) Cost of Investment Or ROI = Net profit / Cost of investment Simple and flexible tool to measure profit in relation to cost. 3

An example Ini%al Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Sum Total Total Costs 10,000 2,500 2,500 2,500 17,500 Total Benefits 0 20,000 20,000 20,000 60,000 Net Benefits - 10,000 17,500 17,500 17,500 42,500 ROI 243% 42,500 / 17,500 4

ROI - Example A company thinks it can improve performance if they invest in a software package. The investment is 1 000 000 $. The benefit of the investment is estimated to be 1 000 000 $ in year 1 and 3 000 000 $ in year 2 and 3. What is the ROI after year 1, 2 and 3? 5

Solution ROI = Net benefit / Cost Year 1: (1 million 1 million) / 1 million = 0 % Year 2: (1 + 3 1) / 1 = 300 % Year 3: (1 + 3 + 3 1) = 600 % Do you see any issues with the ROI measurement? 6

Weakness of ROI ROI is very flexible and easy to use, but the flexibility make it easy to manipulate to suit your purpose. There is no correct calculation. When presenting ROI, for which year will you choose? What benefits and what costs do you include? For example, an Investment will generate a revenue of 5000 and will cost 1500 to implement. ROI = (5000 1500) / 1500 = 233% What if we take the gross profit or the net profit? 7

Risk Adjusted ROI Simple ROI does not consider time value of money. Profits in the future has same value as today Simple ROI better for short term investments Risk Adjusted ROI considers the time value of money Risk Adjusted ROI = Net Present Value of Cumulative Net Benefit Net Present Value of Total Costs 8

Calculating ROI ROI is basically a cost-benefit analysis Looks at positive (benefits) and negative (costs) cash flows. Calculating the ROI in a Business Case 1. Put the Baseline Scenario down 2. Put the Investment (Upside) Scenario down 3. Calculate the Incremental Cash Flows 4. Divide the net gains with the costs 9

Example Sangar Business Case Exercise: Open the Sangar Case we did last week and calculate the ROI in groups of 4-5. 10

Which ROI? 11

Interpreting ROI Scenario Interpretation Impact on Decision ROI > 0 The investment will add value (positive return). If its inline with strategy, choose the one with highest ROI (regard how large the ROI is) ROI = 0 The investment neither adds nor decreases value. Use other criteria to decide. ROI < 0 The Investment decreases the value (negative return) Do not invest unless other benefits (intangible) justify the investment. 12

When considering ROI ROI states only relative gains, not absolute gains. Be aware of the assumptions behind the ROI number. Don t use only ROI, combine it with other measures for a better understanding and better decision. 13

Risks You have 10 000$. You can either Save it in your bank account for 3% interest rate Or invest it with a 3% return on your investment. Which do you choose and why? If you invest, and take a risk, you want more return than the risk free rate. How much return do you want? Depends on how much risk you are taking. 14

Discount Rate Expected Return (Discount Rate) = Risk-free rate + Risk Premium Expected Rate of Return Risk Premium Risk-free rate of Return 15

Recap of NPV Calculate NPV for the following cash flows: with discount rate of 0, 5, 10, 15 and 20 %. Then make a simple graph. What does these numbers and the graph tell you about the profitability of the investment? At what rate is our does this investment have zero value for the investor? 16

17

Internal Rate of Return IRR gives you the rate at which your investment NPV is 0. It gives you the discount rate at which your investment will have a NPV of zero, i.e. your investment does not add value. Therefore it is a measure of the risk sensitivity of your investment. The higher IRR is, the more things can go wrong before your NPV becomes 0. 18

Calculating IRR 1. Calculate the NPV and then change the discount rate until the NPV gets to zero 2. Use the IRR function of Excel Open the Sangar Case and calculate the IRR. What do you get? What does it mean? 19

Limitations of IRR Calculate the IRR of the following cash flows: You should get 43 % but also close to -76,75 % If your investment has shift in net cash flows from for example negative to positive to negative, the IRR can return multiple values. When we have multiples IRRs, its better to choose another measure. 20

NPV and IRR Which investment would you choose based on NPV and IRR (discount rate 6 %)? 21

NPV versus IRR 22

Why? At discount rates lower than 7 %, project A delivers higher NPV, but has lower IRR. At discount rates above 7 %, project B is better both from a NPV and IRR perspective. When the discount rate is lower than 7 %, the future cash flows of the investment are relatively worth more. At discount rates above 7 %, delayed cash inflows are comparatively worth more. IRR has limited use in comparing two mutually exclusive projects, it is better for estimating for a single project. 23

Reinvestment and IRR IRR assumes that the return of investment is re-invested at the same rate of return. If a project cannot re-invest the return at the same rate, IRR will overestimate the annual equivalent rate of return. Also, as IRR does not consider cost of capital, it is not always wise to use it for comparing projects of different durations. 24

MIRR (Modified IRR) MIRR takes into consideration the rate at which you can re-invest cash flows. 25

Payback Period Payback period tells you how long it takes for the investments net cash flows to be positive (recover the initial investment). Usually expressed in years and months. Calculate the payback time of the following cash flows: 26

Calculating the Payback Period Net CF of Year 0 (-5000) + Net CF of Year 1 (1000) Before the end of year 3, we cover the investment. We need to cover 1000 and we will get 3400 during year 3 so =1000/3400 = 0,29 *12 = 3.5 months. Payback Period is therefore 2 years and 3.5 months 27

Discounted Payback Period 28

Quick Summary How much profit will my investment give? What is the Risk of my Investment? When do I get benefit from my investment? Net Present Value (NPV) Internal Rate of Return (IRR) Payback Period Return on Investment (ROI) Modified Internal Rate of Return (MIRR) Discounted Payback Risk Adjusted ROI 29

Practice Business Case 1. Read the Selver case 2. List the assumptions 3. Do the baseline 4. Do the upside 5. Calculate NPV, ROI, IRR and Payback Period 6. Interpret the results 30