978-0134472133 Test Bank Chapter 18

subject Type Homework Help
subject Pages 11
subject Words 4081
subject Authors Arthur I. Stonehill, David K. Eiteman, Michael H. Moffett

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Fundamentals of Multinational Finance, 6e (Moffett et al.)
Chapter 18 Multinational Capital Budgeting and Cross-Border Acquisitions
18.1 Complexities of Budgeting for a Foreign Project
1) The traditional financial analysis applied to foreign or domestic projects, to determine the
project's value to the firm is called:
A) cost of capital analysis.
B) capital budgeting.
C) capital structure analysis.
D) agency theory.
2) Which of the following is NOT a basic step in the capital budgeting process?
A) Identify the initial capital invested.
B) Estimate the cash flows to be derived from the project over time.
C) Identify the appropriate interest rate at which to discount future cash flows.
D) All of the above are steps in the capital budgeting process.
3) Of the following capital budgeting decision criteria, which does NOT use discounted cash
flows?
A) net present value
B) internal rate of return
C) accounting rate of return
D) All of these techniques typically use discounted cash flows.
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4) Which of the following is NOT a reason why capital budgeting for a foreign project is more
complex than for a domestic project?
A) Parent cash flows must be distinguished from project cash flows.
B) Parent firms must specifically recognize remittance of funds due to differing rules and
regulations concerning remittance of cash flows, taxes, and local norms.
C) Differing rates of inflation exist between the foreign and domestic economies.
D) All of the above add complexity to the international capital budgeting process.
5) For purposes of international capital budgeting, which of the following statements is NOT
true?
A) Managers must evaluate political risk because political events can drastically reduce the value
or availability of expected cash flows.
B) Parent cash flows must be distinguished from project cash flows. Each of these two types of
flows contributes to a different view of value.
C) An array of nonfinancial payments can generate cash flows from subsidiaries to the parent,
including payment of license fees and payments for imports from the parent.
D) All of the above are true statements.
6) Project evaluation from the ________ viewpoint serves some useful purposes and/but should
________ the ________ viewpoint.
A) local; be subordinated to; parent's
B) local; not be subordinated to; parent's
C) parent's; be subordinated to; local
D) none of the above
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7) For financial reporting purposes, U.S. firms must consolidate the earnings of any subsidiary
that is over ________ owned.
A) 20%
B) 40%
C) 50%
D) 75%
8) A foreign firm that is 20% to 49% owned by a parent is called a/an:
A) subsidiary.
B) affiliate.
C) partner.
D) rival.
9) Affiliate firms are consolidated on the parent's financial statements on a ________ basis.
A) pro rated
B) 50%
C) 75%
D) 100%
10) When engaged in international capital budgeting, the analyst must identify the initial amount
of capital invested or put at risk.
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11) In international capital budgeting, the appropriate discount rate for determining the present
value of the expected cash flows is always the firm's domestic WACC.
12) For purposes of international capital budgeting, it is NOT important to distinguish between
parent and total project cash flows.
13) For purposes of international capital budgeting, parent cash flows often depend on the form
of financing. Thus, we cannot clearly separate cash flows from financing decisions, as we can in
domestic capital budgeting.
14) There are no important differences between domestic and international capital budgeting
methods.
15) It is important that firms adopt a common standard for the capital budgeting process for
choosing among foreign and domestic projects.
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16) The only proper way to estimate the NPV of a foreign project is to discount the appropriate
cash flows first and then convert them to the domestic currency at the current spot rate.
17) For purposes of international capital budgeting, evaluation of a project from the PARENT
viewpoint serves some useful purposes, but it should be subordinated to evaluation from the
LOCAL's viewpoint.
18) Multinational firms should invest only if they can earn a risk-adjusted return greater than
locally based competitors can earn on the same project.
19) The authors highlight a strong theoretical argument in favor of analyzing any foreign project
from the viewpoint of the parent. Provide at least three reasons why the parent's viewpoint is
superior to the local viewpoint and give an example of when the local viewpoint fails to
maximize the value of the firm.
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Copyright © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
18.2 Illustrative Case: Cemex Enters Indonesia
1) Which of the following is NOT an example of political risk?
A) Expropriation of cash flows by a foreign government.
B) The U.S. government restricts trade with a foreign country where your firm has investments.
C) The foreign government nationalizes all foreign-owned assets.
D) All of the above are examples of political risk.
2) Given a current spot rate of 8.10 Norwegian krone per U.S. dollar, expected inflation rates of
6% in Norway and 3% per annum in the U.S., use the formula for relative purchasing power
parity to estimate the one-year spot rate of krone per dollar.
A) 7.87 krone per dollar
B) 8.10 krone per dollar
C) 8.34 krone per dollar
D) There is not enough information to answer this question.
3) When evaluating capital budgeting projects, which of the following would NOT necessarily
be an indicator of an acceptable project?
A) an NPV > $0
B) an IRR > the project's required rate of return
C) an IRR > $0
D) All of the above are correct indicators.
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4) Given a current spot rate of 8.10 Norwegian krone per U.S. dollar, expected inflation rates of
3% in Norway and 6% per annum in the U.S., use the formula for relative purchasing power
parity to estimate the one-year spot rate of krone per dollar.
A) 7.87 krone per dollar
B) 8.10 krone per dollar
C) 8.34 krone per dollar
D) There is not enough information to answer this question.
5) When determining a firm's weighted average cost of capital (wacc) which of the following
terms is NOT necessary?
A) the firm's tax rate
B) the firm's cost of debt
C) the firm's cost of equity
D) All of the above are necessary.
6) When determining a firm's weighted average cost of capital (WACC) which of the following
terms is NOT necessary?
A) the firm's weight of equity financing
B) the risk-free rate of return
C) the firm's weight of debt financing
D) All of the above are necessary to determine a firm's WACC.
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Instruction 18.1:
Use the information to answer the following question(s).
7) Refer to Instruction 18.1. What is the initial investment for the Velo Rapid Revolutions
project?
A) $1,500,000
B) €1,600,000
C) $1,600,000
D) €1,500,000
8) Refer to Instruction 18.1. What are the annual after-tax cash flows for the Velo Rapid
Revolutions project?
A) €400,000
B) €240,000
C) €120,000
D) €360,000
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9) Refer to Instruction 18.1. What is the NPV of the European expansion if Velo Rapid
Revolutions first computes the NPV in euros and then converts that figure to dollars using the
current spot rate?
A) $1,520,000
B) $1,684,210
C) -$75,310
D) -$71,544
10) Refer to Instruction 18.1. In euros, what is the NPV of the Velo Rapid Revolutions
expansion?
A) €1,524,690
B) $1,611,317
C) -€75,310
D) -€111,317
11) Refer to Instruction 18.1. What is the IRR of the Velo Rapid Revolutions expansion?
A) 14.4%
B) 10.3%
C) 12.0%
D) 8.6%
12) If a firm undertakes a project with ordinary cash flows and estimates that the firm has a
positive NPV, then the IRR will be:
A) less than the cost of capital.
B) greater than the cost of capital.
C) greater than the cost of the project.
D) cannot be determined from this information
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13) When estimating a firm's cost of equity capital using the CAPM, you need to estimate:
A) the risk-free rate of return.
B) the expected return on the market portfolio.
C) the firm's beta.
D) all of the above
14) ________ is the risk that a foreign government will place restrictions such as limiting the
amount of funds that can be remitted to the parent firm, or even expropriation of cash flows
earned in that country.
A) Exchange risk
B) Foreign risk
C) Political risk
D) Unnecessary risk
15) Generally speaking, a firm wants to receive cash flows from a currency that is ________
relative to their own, and pay out in currencies that are ________ relative to their home currency.
A) appreciating; depreciating
B) depreciating; depreciating
C) appreciating; appreciating
D) depreciating; appreciating
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16) When assessing the additional risk that can occur from investing abroad firms may choose to
account for risk via:
A) adjusting the cash flows.
B) adjusting the discount rates.
C) adjusting both cash flows and discount rates.
D) adjusting all of the above.
17) When a multinational firm invests abroad, it is common to develop two capital budgets: one
from the project viewpoint, and one from the parent viewpoint.
18) When estimating a capital budget, it is common to separate cash flows into: 1) the initial
investment, 2) incremental cash flows over the life of the project, and 3) a terminal value.
19) Because international capital budgeting is so difficult, time consuming, expensive, and
uncertain, firms generally forego any type of additional sensitivity analysis after completing a
base-case scenario.
20) A criticism of adjusting the discount rate to account for political risk is that adjusting the
discount rate for political risk penalizes early cash flows too heavily while not penalizing distant
cash flows enough.
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21) When dealing with international capital budgeting projects, the value of the project is NOT
sensitive to the firm's cost of capital.
22) Explain how political risk and exchange rate risk increase the uncertainty of international
projects for the purpose of capital budgeting.
1) Real option analysis allows managers to analyze all of the following EXCEPT:
A) the option to defer
B) the option to abandon
C) the option to alter capacity
D) All of the above may be analyzed using real option analysis.
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2) Real option analysis treats cash flows in terms of future value in a positive sense, whereas
DCF treats future cash flows negatively.
3) Real option analysis is a particularly powerful device when addressing potential investment
projects with extremely long life spans or investments that do not commence until future dates.
4) What is real option analysis? How is it a better method of making investment decisions than
using traditional capital budgeting analysis?
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18.4 Project Financing
1) Which of the following is NOT a factor critical to the success of project financing?
A) separability of the project from its investors
B) long-lived and capital intensive singular projects
C) cash flow predictability from third part commitments
D) All of the above are critical factors for project financing.
2) Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of international long-term capital project
financing?
A) The projects are large in scale.
B) The projects are long in life.
C) The projects are generally high in risk.
D) The projects may be all of the above.
3) The predictability of the project's revenue stream is essential in securing project financing.
Which of the following is NOT a typical contract provisions that are intended to assure adequate
cash flow?
A) quantity and quality of the project's output
B) a pricing formula
C) circumstances that permit changes in the contract
D) fronting loan
4) Project financing is the arrangement of financing for very large individual long-term capital
projects.
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5) Debt is usually a large component of project financing.
6) The level of debt places an enormous burden on cash flow for debt service and requires a
number of additional levels of risk reduction.
7) In project finance, retained earnings and the reinvestment of earnings are the most important
decisions to guarantee the long term growth of the project's value.
1) Which of the following is NOT a reason given for international mergers and acquisitions?
A) gaining access to strategic proprietary assets
B) gaining market power and dominance
C) diversifying and spreading their risks wider
D) All of the above are commonly cited reasons for international mergers and acquisitions.
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2) Which of the following changes does NOT create business opportunities for select firms to
both enhance and defend their competitive positions in global markets?
A) Changes in technology
B) Changes in regulation
C) Changes in capital markets
D) Changes in management
3) The process of acquiring an enterprise anywhere in the world has three common elements
EXCEPT:
A) identification and valuation of the target
B) execution of the acquisition offer and purchasethe tender
C) management of the post-acquisition transition
D) All of the above are common elements in acquiring an enterprise anywhere in the world.
4) Which of the following is NOT an advantage of cross-border acquisitions over greenfield
investments?
A) quicker
B) cost-effective
C) target firms to be undervalued
D) melding corporate cultures
5) Which of the following is NOT a typical pitfall of cross-border acquisitions?
A) paying too much
B) excessive financing costs
C) melding corporate cultures
D) all of the above are pitfalls
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6) Currency risk is a concern for any international merger and acquisition activity. For instance,
the initial bid, if denominated in a foreign currency, creates a contingent foreign currency
exposure for the bidder.
7) Currency risk is a concern for any international merger and acquisition activity. For instance,
once the bidder has successfully won the acquisition, the exposure evolves from a transaction
exposure to a contingent exposure.
8) The drivers of international merger and acquisitions are only MACRO in scope.
9) As opposed to greenfield investment, a cross-border acquisition is typically quicker.

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