Hospitality Financial Management Educators Volume 8 | Issue 1 Article 1 1-1-2000 A Survey of Capital Budgeting Methods Used by the Restaurant Industry Robert A. Ashley Stanley M. Atkinson Stephen M. LeBruto Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.umass.edu/jhfm Recommended Citation Ashley‚ Robert A.; Atkinson‚ Stanley M.; and LeBruto‚ Stephen M. (2000) "A Survey of Capital Budgeting Methods Used by the Restaurant Industry‚" Journal of Hospitality Financial Management: Vol. 8:
Premium Capital budgeting Net present value Internal rate of return
Trident University International Willie Bates Module 2 Case ITM524: Foundations of Information Technology Management Dr. Mina Richards Introduction We live in an environment which changes often. In the business world‚ what is in demand today for an organization may not be a requirement for tomorrow. Smart managers know that organizations that succeed do so because they adjust to keep up with the changes that are taking place (Harmon‚ 2007). Change in business comes in many forms and
Premium Management Value chain Michael Porter
Mini-Case Study: McDonald’s Corporation: Firing on all cylinders while preparing for the future McDonald’s Corporation is the largest fast food restaurant chain in the world‚ operating more than 32‚000 restaurants in 118 countries. In 2008‚ McDonalds and Wal-Mart were the only stocks in the Dow Jones to end the year with a gain. From 2007 to 2008 they raised revenues in billion dollars earning above average returns. Its ability to create value for its stakeholders is impressive‚ but this trend
Premium Fast food restaurant Strategic management
new project. A positive incremental cash flow means that the company ’s cash flow will increase with the acceptance of the project. Cash flow analysis should not include the interest expense. We discount project cash flows with a cost of capital that is the rate of return required by all investors. Interest expenses are part of the costs of capital. If we subtracted them from cash flows‚ we would be double counting capital costs. 2. Suppose another juice producer had expressed an interest
Premium Net present value Cash flow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Chapter 6 (11ed. Ch.)4 Risk and Return: The Basics MINI CASE Assume that you recently graduated with a major in finance‚ and you just landed a job as a financial planner with Barney Smith Inc.‚ a large financial services corporation. Your first assignment is to invest $100‚000 for a client. Because the funds are to be invested in a business at the end of one year‚ you have been instructed to plan for a one-year holding period. Further‚ your boss has restricted you to the following investment
Premium Marketing Costs Management
Internet Mini Case #2 Tech Data Corporation Maryanne M. Rouse The Company TECH DATA CORPORATION’S (TECD) AGGRESSIVE GROWTH HAD TAKEN THE COMPANY from 10 employees and $2 million in sales in 1983 to approximately 8‚000 employees and $15.7 billion in sales for fiscal 2002 (fiscal year ended January 31‚ 2003) and secured the company’s position as a leading distributor of information technology (IT)‚ logistics management‚ and other value-added services to “solution providers‚” including value-added
Premium Customer service Strategic management Logistics
“Budgeting is a key component in management short and long term planning” INTRODUCTION Budgeting (or profit planning) is a process or technique with broad applications in the management of a business‚ school or government agency. The rules apply to not-for-profits‚ as well. The process involves the formation of definite and specific plans or budgets for a limited future period‚ usually the ensuing fiscal or calendar year. These plans‚ which take into account all phases of the budgeted operations
Premium Management Budget
need “to protect their existing markets‚ profits‚ and sales”(Ball‚ 2007) from other international businesses. Finally‚ the third reason that Wal-Mart viewed international expansion as a critical part of its strategy was “to help satisfy management ’s overall desire for growth”(Ball‚2007). What did Wal-Mart do to enable the company to achieve success in Canada and Latin America? Why did Wal-Mart fail to achieve similar Success in Europe? Wal-Mart achieved success in Canada and Latin America
Free United States
The Oceanic Corporation (Determining the Cost of Capital) Larry Stone wants to estimate the firm’s hurdle rate because it is a benchmark for how well the company needs to do on a project in order to at least break even. The higher the hurdle rate‚ the riskier the project will have to be and the lower the hurdle rate is‚ the safer the project will be for a company. A company should strive for a financing mix that minimizes the hurdle rate and matches the assets being financed. If there
Premium Marketing United States Balance sheet
- A Capital Budgeting Method. (The evaluation of two mutually exclusive projects with varying lives requires careful examination of the existence of the reinvestment opportunities at the end of the different economic lives of the projects. The current article deals with a method that may be adopted in situations wherein the level of investments‚ the life of the projects and cash inflows (or outflows) are unequal.) Risk is inherent in almost every business decisions. Capital budgeting being
Premium Net present value Time value of money Investment