Invoice discounting and Project appraisal: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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A form of short term finance secured against trade accounts receivable.  
1.
Under invoice discounting, the customer which owes the trade debt need not be informed about the related finance arrangement. 


In this respect it differs from factoring, under which the customer is normally - though not always - made aware of the factoring arrangement.
The evaluation and selection of projects which are most likely to maximise shareholders' wealth, by the comparative analysis of their expected cashflows.
 
 
2.
 
Similar evaluation techniques taking account of additional factors and considerations - as well as the expected project cashflows - including for example the existence of real options.
 
 
''Also known as Project analysis.''
 
 
Note for both definitons above that projects are anything involving expenditures for which the benefits, or some of them, occur at a different time from that of the expenditure or some it.
 
As well as capital expenditure, included are, for example, acquisitions and disposals, marketing expenditure, advertising, staff training or buying a new coffee pot for a staff refreshment station.
 
It is only worthwile devoting time and effort in formal project appraisal for projects involving material expenditure.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Accounts receivable]]
* [[Real option]]
* [[Confidential invoice discounting]]
* [[Real options valuation]]
* [[Dynamic discounting]]
* [[Sunk costs]]
* [[Factoring]]
* [[Supply chain finance]]

Revision as of 11:51, 21 August 2013

1.

The evaluation and selection of projects which are most likely to maximise shareholders' wealth, by the comparative analysis of their expected cashflows.


2.

Similar evaluation techniques taking account of additional factors and considerations - as well as the expected project cashflows - including for example the existence of real options.


Also known as Project analysis.


Note for both definitons above that projects are anything involving expenditures for which the benefits, or some of them, occur at a different time from that of the expenditure or some it.

As well as capital expenditure, included are, for example, acquisitions and disposals, marketing expenditure, advertising, staff training or buying a new coffee pot for a staff refreshment station.

It is only worthwile devoting time and effort in formal project appraisal for projects involving material expenditure.


See also