HEALTHY OPTIONS INC.
Healthy Options is a Pharmaceutical Company which is
considering investing in a new production line of portable
electrocardiogram (ECG) machines for its clients who suffer from
cardiovascular diseases. The company has to invest in equipment
which costs $2,500,000 and falls within a MARCS depreciation of 5
years, and is expected to have a scrap value of $200,000 at the end
of the project. Other than the equipment, the company needs to
increase its cash and cash equivalents by $100,000, increase the
level of inventory by $30,000, increase accounts receivable by
$250,000 and increase accounts payable by $50,000 at the beginning
of the project. Healthy Options expects the project to have a life
of five years. The company would have to pay for transportation and
installation of the equipment which has an invoice price of
$450,000.
The company has already invested $75,000 in Research and
Development and therefore expects a positive impact on the demand
for the new product line. Expected annual sales for the ECG
machines in years one to three are $1,200,000, and $850,000 in the
following two years. The variable costs of production are projected
to be $267,000 per year in years one to three and $375,000 in years
four and five. Fixed overhead is $180,000 per year over the life of
the project.
The introduction of the new line of portable ECG machines will
cause a net decrease of $50,000 in profit contribution after taxes,
due to a decrease in sales of the other lines of tester machines
produced by the company. By investing in the new product line
Healthy Options would have to use a packaging machine which the
company already has and which will be sold at the end of the
project for $350,000 after-tax in the equipment market.
The company’s financial analyst has advised Healthy Options to
use the weighted average cost of capital as the appropriate
discount rate to evaluate the project.
Information about the company’s sources of financing is
provided below:
• The company will contract a new loan in the sum of
$2,000,000 that is secured by machinery and the loan has an
interest rate of 6 percent. Healthy Options has also issued 4,000
new bond issues with an 8 percent coupon, paid semiannually, and
which matures in 10 years. The bonds were sold at par, and incurred
floatation cost of 2 percent per issue.
• The company’s preferred stock pays an annual dividend of 4.5
percent and is currently selling for $60, and there are 100,000
shares outstanding.
• There are 300,000 million shares of common stock
outstanding, and they are currently selling for $21 each. The beta
on these shares is 0.95.
Other relevant information about the company follows:
The 20-year Treasury Bond rate is currently 4.5 percent and
you have estimated market-risk premium to be 6.75 percent using the
returns on stocks and Treasury Bonds from 2010 to 2019. Healthy
Options has a marginal tax rate of 25 percent.
As a recent graduate, The General Manager of the company has
hired you to work alongside the Financial Controller of the company
to help determine whether the company should invest in the new
product line. He has provided you with the following questions to
guide you in your assessment of the project and to present your
findings to the Company.
REQUIRED:
7. Determine the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) for
Healthy Options.
8. Calculate the initial investment cash-flows.
9. Calculate the after-tax operating cash-flows.
10. Determine the tax on salvage value of the equipment, then
show the terminal year cash-flows.
11. Identify three (3) relevant cash flows which were
mentioned in the case and how they should be treated in the capital
budgeting decision.
12. Taking into consideration all the information given,
determine the Net Present Value of the project and advise the
company on whether to invest in the new line of product.
(Use your answer to Q7 rounded to the nearest whole in the
calculations of the other questions where necessary.)