Net present value analysis and the wealth creation process: a case illustration
Net present value analysis and the wealth creation process: a case illustration
This case is intended to help students on accounting undergraduate and postgraduate courses deepen their understanding of capital budgeting. We introduce a working example and hypothetical case to show that knowing an investment project’s net present value (NPV) is important but is not sufficient. Shareholders would also like to know how and when a project pays the excess wealth it generates. In the case we show in monetary amounts, how much each group receives in every time period; how much is received in the form of excess wealth by the existing shareholders; and, when does that excess wealth starts to accrue. The case can be used specifically in the final year undergraduate and postgraduate accounting study programmes.
85-99
Jory, Surendranath
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Benamraoui, Abdelhafid
cab76a76-4275-4da9-9a09-7fc06eb3887e
Roshan Boojihawon, Devkumar
4b12a556-5ffa-48eb-909e-0f02489d5224
Madichie, Nnamdi O.
cc2170cd-51ef-4e32-8af2-b2caf2bd820b
2016
Jory, Surendranath
2624eb24-850a-48f6-b3c6-c96749b87322
Benamraoui, Abdelhafid
cab76a76-4275-4da9-9a09-7fc06eb3887e
Roshan Boojihawon, Devkumar
4b12a556-5ffa-48eb-909e-0f02489d5224
Madichie, Nnamdi O.
cc2170cd-51ef-4e32-8af2-b2caf2bd820b
Jory, Surendranath, Benamraoui, Abdelhafid, Roshan Boojihawon, Devkumar and Madichie, Nnamdi O.
(2016)
Net present value analysis and the wealth creation process: a case illustration.
The Accounting Educators Journal, 26, .
Abstract
This case is intended to help students on accounting undergraduate and postgraduate courses deepen their understanding of capital budgeting. We introduce a working example and hypothetical case to show that knowing an investment project’s net present value (NPV) is important but is not sufficient. Shareholders would also like to know how and when a project pays the excess wealth it generates. In the case we show in monetary amounts, how much each group receives in every time period; how much is received in the form of excess wealth by the existing shareholders; and, when does that excess wealth starts to accrue. The case can be used specifically in the final year undergraduate and postgraduate accounting study programmes.
Text
__soton.ac.uk_UDE_PersonalFiles_Users_sb1u11_mydocuments_Academic Papers EPrints & REF_SBS Papers in ePrints_Manuscript Final Version November 2016.doc
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 November 2016
Published date: 2016
Organisations:
Banking & Finance, Southampton Business School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 404942
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404942
PURE UUID: a929ab2f-5720-4e2d-968e-1cfb2d432812
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Date deposited: 25 Jan 2017 10:50
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:14
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Contributors
Author:
Abdelhafid Benamraoui
Author:
Devkumar Roshan Boojihawon
Author:
Nnamdi O. Madichie
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