4 • 1
CHAPTER
4
FOREIGN INVESTMENT ANALYSIS
David K. Eiteman
University of California, Los Angeles
CONTENTS
4.1 Introduction 1
4.2 General Methodology for One-
Country Capital Budgeting 2
(a) Project Cash Outflows (Costs) 2
(b) Project Cash Inflows 3
(c) Cost of Capital 5
(d) Combining Cash Outflows,
Cash Inflows, and the Cost
of Capital 5
4.3 International Complexities 6
(a) Project versus Parent Cash
Flows 6
(b) Parent Cash Flows Tied to
Financing 6
(c) Foreign Exchange Forecasts
Needed 7
(d) Long-Range Inflation Must Be
Considered 7
(e) Subsidized Financing Must Be
Explicitly Treated 7
(f) Political Risk Must Be
Considered 7
4.4 Accounting Implications for the
Methodology 8
(a) Asset Cost Allocation to
Income Periods 8
(i) Fixed Asset Depreciation 8
(ii) Inventory Costing 8
(iii) Amortization of Purchased
Goodwill 8
(iv) Asset Revaluation 8
(b) Nonallocation of Current
Operating Costs 8
(i) Charges of Expenses to
Reserves 8
(ii) Deferred Taxes Shown as
a Liability 9
(iii) Flow Through of
Translation Gains 9
(iv) Severance Pay If the
Foreign Affiliate Is Closed 9
(c) Debt Changes Not Matched by
Cash Payments 9
(i) Foreign Exchange
Translation Gains or
Losses on Long-Term Debt 9
(ii) Noncapitalization of
Financial Leases 9
(d) Other 10
(i) Changes in Accounting
Principles and Methods
Without Prior Year
Change 10
(ii) Treatment of
Unconsolidated
Subsidiaries 10
(iii) Blocked Funds 10
4.5 Summary 10
APPENDIX A: ILLUSTRATIVE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL
BUDGETING EXAMPLE 11
4.1 INTRODUCTION. Foreign investment analysis is the procedure for analyzing
expected cash flows for a proposed direct foreign investment to determine if the po-
tential investment is worth undertaking. In finance literature, foreign investment
analysis is also called capital budgeting. Foreign investment analysis is concerned