Saturday, 3 September 2011

What Does Net Present Value - NPV Mean?


What Does Net Present Value - NPV Mean?
The difference between the present value of cash inflows and the present value of cash outflows. NPV is used in capital budgeting to analyze the profitability of an investment or project.

NPV analysis is sensitive to the reliability of future cash inflows that an investment or project will yield.

Formula:

Net Present Value (NPV)


In addition to the formula, net present value can often be calculated using tables, and spreadsheets such as Microsoft Excel.
  
Watch: Understanding Net Present Value




Investopedia Says
Investopedia explains Net Present Value - NPV
NPV compares the value of a dollar today to the value of that same dollar in the future, taking inflation and returns into account. If the NPV of a prospective project is positive, it should be accepted. However, if NPV is negative, the project should probably be rejected because cash flows will also be negative.

For example, if a retail clothing business wants to purchase an existing store, it would first estimate the future cash flows that store would generate, and then discount those cash flows into one lump-sum present value amount, say $565,000. If the owner of the store was willing to sell his business for less than $565,000, the purchasing company would likely accept the offer as it presents a positive NPV investment. Conversely, if the owner would not sell for less than $565,000, the purchaser would not buy the store, as the investment would present a negative NPV at that time and would, therefore, reduce the overall value of the clothing company.








 http://www.investopedia.com/terms/n/npv.asp?partner=basics090211#ixzz1WtS9g5kS

Thursday, 1 September 2011

Interview: Sir John Templeton and Peter Lynch

Peter Lynch - Finance and Investing



Company business should be the focus, not the price.

Peter Lynch on Stock Market



A lot of good advice on these topics:

Upsides of a downmarket.
Historical market rebounds.
Timing the market is not a Winning Strategy.
Why it's important to stay the course.
Don't listen to background noise.
Know your Time Horizon, stay invested.
Benefit of Regular Investing for Retirement.
Portfolio Diversification
Be comfortable with what you own.
How can Fidelity financial planning help you?


Nature of the Stock Market
Market went down 1% per month and 2% per month regularly in the past.
Once in 2 years, market went down 10% per month.
Every 18 months, some market somewhere was down 10% per month.
Once every 5 or 6 years, the stock market declined 20% to 25% per month.

Historical market rebounds
Over the last 15 years, there were 13 months when the market went down 8% or more.
Of these, 11x out of these 13, the market was higher subsequently.

Stay fully invested. Know your time horizon.
The market went down 10 to 12 x, I went down 10 to 12 x.
When market went up I went up.
The upside is more than the downside.
Need to know your own time horizon.

Timing the market is not a winning strategy
All the wealthy people in the world are not market timers.
You might be right to miss some declines.
However, market turned up very fast.
Over the last 15 years, missing the best 15 months (that is 1 month per year) ..
.. meant a fall of portfolio return from 11% to 3%.

Portfolio Diversification
As long as it makes sense.

Peter Lynch Induction and Speech - Academy of Distinguished Bostonians




Peter Lynch talks about bottom-fishing on Wall Street

Peter Lynch: Market Prediction



Market ought to be irrelevant to your investing.
I made money in lousy market and I lose money in good market.

Investing strategy of Peter Lynch
http://multibaggersindia.blogspot.com/2010/11/investing-strategies-from-peter-lynch.html