DennyO
Industrial
- Jun 8, 2002
- 4
I have a big "selling" job to do, to justify an approximate $8 million dollar investment for a sorter in a distribution firm. I have a very good rate of return, 22% after tax, if I use a 15 year time horizon, which is very much in keeping with the equipment capability and our own past practices with such equipment.
In fact the project would involve replacing an aging 24 year old piece of equipment mnow used to sort the items in question.
However, our corporate finance people insist that such equipment investment projects use strictly a 5 year horizon, and in this short term light, the return is actually negative.![[mad] [mad] [mad]](/data/assets/smilies/mad.gif)
Does anyone know of references in the literature I could research to get our financial "wizzes" to budge on this?
I have tried appealing to their common sense, even gave a comparison to an electric utility I am familiar with which uses 18 and 20 year time horizons, but to no avail, I am guessing they do not possess any common sense, but have locked themselves into a mental strait jacket on this..
![[pipe] [pipe] [pipe]](/data/assets/smilies/pipe.gif)
However, our corporate finance people insist that such equipment investment projects use strictly a 5 year horizon, and in this short term light, the return is actually negative.
![[mad] [mad] [mad]](/data/assets/smilies/mad.gif)
Does anyone know of references in the literature I could research to get our financial "wizzes" to budge on this?
I have tried appealing to their common sense, even gave a comparison to an electric utility I am familiar with which uses 18 and 20 year time horizons, but to no avail, I am guessing they do not possess any common sense, but have locked themselves into a mental strait jacket on this..