• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Free ACCA & CIMA online courses from OpenTuition

Free ACCA & CIMA online courses from OpenTuition

Free Notes, Lectures, Tests and Forums for ACCA and CIMA exams

  • ACCA
  • CIMA
  • FIA
  • OBU
  • Books
  • Forums
  • Ask AI
  • Search
  • Register
  • Login
  • ACCA Forums
  • Ask ACCA Tutor
  • CIMA Forums
  • Ask CIMA Tutor
  • FIA
  • OBU
  • Buy/Sell Books
  • All Forums
  • Latest Topics

20% off ACCA & CIMA Books

OpenTuition recommends the new interactive BPP books for March and June 2025 exams.
Get your discount code >>

IRR

Forums › FIA Forums › MA2 Managing Costs and Finance Forums › IRR

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 6 years ago by Ken Garrett.
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • August 27, 2018 at 1:39 am #469561
    aliahmed1994
    Member
    • Topics: 38
    • Replies: 51
    • ☆☆

    I learned this from a different book which says: where both first and second NPV are positive or negative then you use extrapolation and
    where NPV are in set of positive and negative whole numbers we use interpolation.
    Is this true? if so

    An investment project has net present values as follows:
    Discount rate 11% per annum: net present value $35,170 positive
    Discount rate 15% per annum: net present value $6,040 positive.
    What is the best estimate of the internal rate of return?
    A 14·5%
    B 15·8%
    C 19·5%
    D 19·8%

    In Bpp book it is solved by doing Interpolation method giving 15.8% (C). While it should have been done by Extrapolation giving 6.2% because both rates have + NPV.

    Please help thanks.

    August 27, 2018 at 5:38 pm #469667
    Ken Garrett
    Keymaster
    • Topics: 10
    • Replies: 10589
    • ☆☆☆☆☆

    True, but that is a technical difference. The standard formula for estimation IRR works whether both are + or both – or one of each.

    Both NPVs are positive and are reducing as discount rate increases. At 15% we have not yet gone negative so IRR must be above 15%.

    IRR = 11 + 35,170 X (15 – 11)/ (35,170 – 6,040) = 15.8 (B)

    Covered on P139 of our notes.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Log In

Primary Sidebar

Donate
If you have benefited from our materials, please donate

ACCA News:

ACCA My Exam Performance for non-variant

Applied Skills exams is available NOW

ACCA Options:  “Read the Mind of the Marker” articles

Subscribe to ACCA’s Student Accountant Direct

ACCA CBE 2025 Exams

How was your exam, and what was the exam result?

BT CBE exam was.. | MA CBE exam was..
FA CBE exam was.. | LW CBE exam was..

Donate

If you have benefited from OpenTuition please donate.

PQ Magazine

Latest Comments

  • kadamova.f@gmail.com on Associates (IAS 28) – PUPs – ACCA Financial Reporting (FR)
  • kadamova.f@gmail.com on Associates (IAS 28) – PUPs – ACCA Financial Reporting (FR)
  • bpop on Risk and uncertainty (part 2) – ACCA (AFM) lectures
  • kamo7293 on Financial performance – Example 2 – ACCA Financial Reporting (FR)
  • nevertoolate on CIMA BA2 – Regression analysis

Copyright © 2025 · Support · Contact · Advertising · OpenLicense · About · Sitemap · Comments · Log in