Project Chapter 5
Project Chapter 5
Financial Analysis
5.1.Objectives of Financial Analysis
• A market is any place where the sellers can meet with the buyers
where there is a potential for a transaction to take place.
In order to get a feel for the relationship between the product and
its market.
The project analyst may talk to consumers, competitors, middlemen,
What price will the consumers be willing to pay for the product?
In this case, a decision must be made about the price in the seasonal cycle at
which to choose the price to be used for the analysis.
A good starting point is the farm-gate price at the peak of the harvest season.
• Is predictoing what the future prices of inputs and outputs may be.
The best starting point is to see the trend of these prices over the past few
years.
Having this data, the project analyst can forecast the price with certain
degree of precision.
5.3.2.Change in prices
Change in prices could be :-
This is when relative price of inputs or outputs are variable over time,
For example, the price of agricultural products to price of inputs may rise
over time.
This would have a real effect on the net benefit of the firm.
General change in price (Inflation)
Inflation is common for every country although the magnitude may vary
between countries.
However, the approach most often taken is to work the project analysis in
constant price.
It is assumed that inflation will affect most prices to the same extent so that
prices retain their same general relations.
The analyst then need only adjust future price estimates for anticipated
relative changes, not for any change in the general
price level.
5.3.3. Financial export and import parity price
The project may use imported inputs and export its output to foreign
markets.
If there are domestic markets for these inputs and outputs, and if the firm is
free to sell or buy at the domestic or world market, we take the domestic
price with appropriate adjustment to reflect the price at the projectsite.
If commodities of the project are produced only for foreign market or if the
domestic demand cannot absorb the firm’s output, we will take export-parity
and import parity prices ever in financial analysis.
• Parity prices are used to compare prices of a commodity in two different
locations, when the two locations are in different countries.
Export or import parity prices are the estimated prices at the farm gate or
project boundary, which are derived by adjusting the c.i.f. (cost, insurance,
and freight) or f.o.b (Free on Board).
Cost, insurance, and freight (CIF) is an international shipping
agreement, which represents the charges paid by a seller to cover the costs,
insurance, freight.
Suppose a project exports coffee to Canada, we start with c.i.f. price at
Canada port.
Add - subsidy
Deduct - local storage, transport & marketing costs (if not part of project
cost)
• Large commercial farms & plantation how ever are more like other
business enterprises than they are like small, family – operated farms.
• The basic difference between small farm family and the business firm is on
their fundamental objective.
•
• The effectiveness of the proposed new technology on small farms must be realistically
assessed, and the technological assumptions must be checked to ensure that they reflect
on-farm conditions and not those of an experiment station.
• The analyst must form a judgment about how rapidly farmers will be willing to adopt new
practices.
• The analyst must test the effect of risk on family income by undertaking sensitivity
analysis.
• He must ask such questions as what will happen to their income, if price fall below
expectation.
• If the expected output is not realized, if input requirement, if farmers face bad weather
condition etc.
Principal elements of farm investment analysis farm resource use.
Land use – allocation of each piece of land (cultivated area and crop type pasture,
forest houseplant, etc.).
• Land use calendar when will the piece of land be used for what purpose?
Labor use
Off-farm labor