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One of the efficiency metrics of Financial Investment defined as:

(1) \mbox{PI} = 1 + \frac{\mbox{NPV}}{\mbox{I}_0} = \frac{\mbox{PV}[CF^+]}{I_0}

where

\mbox{NPV}

Net Present Value

\mbox{I}_0

Initial Investment

CF^+ = \{ CF^+_0, \ CF^+_1, \ CF^+_2, \ ... \}

Cash Inflows


The key difference with NPV is that PI shows a value of returns per unit cash invested.  

This particularly means that some Projects with higher NPV may be less attractive in PI terms than Projects with lesser NPV as they require a higher Initial Investment.

This allows a fair comparison of investment efficiency between two investment projects with different Initial Investment volumes.


The corporate investment policy usually dictates that:


The quantification of Project's is performed individually for each Project based on its nature.


Weighing the Project's risks against PI to include to or exclude from  Investment Package is based on the Corporate Investment Policy.


The formula  (1) assumes that the only cash outflow would be the initial investment I_0.

If this is not the case and the future cash flows include additional investments (for example additional paid in capital and/or CAPEX) then one need to give a preference to other methods of assessing the investment profitability, like Present Value Index (PVI)  and Modified Internal Rate of Return (MIRR).

See also


Economics / Investment / Financial Investment 

Net Present Value (NPV) ][ Present Value Index (PVI) ]




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