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Download Healthcare Finance Chapters 11 & 12 Answer

Dec 14th, 2017
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  1.  
  2. Download: https://solutionzip.com/downloads/healthcare-finance-chapters-11-12/
  3. Problems in Chapters 11 & 12
  4. Complete the following problems in Chapters 11 and 12 in your textbook, Understanding Healthcare Financial Management.
  5. • Chapter 11: Problems 1, 3, 5, & 7
  6. • Chapter 12: Problems 3, 5, & 10
  7.  
  8. Show your calculations used to derive your answers. If the problems require narrative answers as well as calculations, you must format those answers using APA style.
  9.  
  10.  
  11. Chapter 11 Problem 1
  12. Winston Clinic is evaluating a project that costs $52,125 and has expected net cash flows of $12,000 per year for eight years. The first inflow occurs one year after the cost outflow, and the project has a cost of capital of 12 percent.
  13.  
  14. a. What is the project's payback?
  15. b. What is the project's NPV? Its IRR?
  16. c. Is the project financially acceptable? Explain your answer.
  17.  
  18.  
  19. Chapter 11 Problem 3
  20. Capitol Health Plans, Inc., is evaluating two different methods for providing home health services to its members. Both methods involve contracting out for services, and the health outcomes and revenues are not affected by the method chosen. Therefore, the incremental cash flows for the decision are all outflows.
  21.  
  22. Here are the projected flows:
  23.  
  24. Year Method A Method B
  25. 0 -$300,000 -$120,000
  26. 1 -$66,000 -$96,000
  27. 2 -$66,000 -$96,000
  28. 3 -$66,000 -$96,000
  29. 4 -$66,000 -$96,000
  30. 5 -$66,000 -$96,000
  31.  
  32. a. What is each alternative's IRR?
  33. b. If the cost of capital for both methods is 9 percent, which method should be chosen? Why?
  34.  
  35.  
  36. Chapter 11 Problem 5
  37. Assume that you are the CFO at Porter Memorial Hospital. The CEO has asked you to analyze two proposed capital investments: Project X and Project Y. Each project requires a net investment outlay of $10,000, and the cost of capital for each project is 12 percent. The project's expected net cash flows are as follows:
  38.  
  39. Year Project X Project Y
  40. 0 -$10,000 -$10,000
  41. 1 $6,500 $3,000
  42. 2 $3,000 $3,000
  43. 3 $3,000 $3,000
  44. 4 $1,000 $3,000
  45.  
  46. a. Calculate each project's payback period, net present value (NPV), and internal rate of return (IRR).
  47. b. Which project (or projects) is financially acceptable? Explain your answer.
  48.  
  49.  
  50. Chapter 11 Problem 7
  51. California Health Center, a for-profit hospital, is evaluating the purchase of new diagnostic equipment. The equipment, which costs $600,000, has an expected life of five years and an estimated pretax salvage value of $200,000 at that time. The equipment is expected to be used 15 times a day for 250 days a year for each year of the project's life. On average, each procedure is expected to generate $80 in collections, which is net of bad debt losses and contractual allowances, in its first year of use. Thus, net revenues for Year 1 are estimated at 15 X 250 X $80 = $300,000.
  52.  
  53. Labor and maintenance costs are expected to be $100,000 during the first year of operation, while utilities will cost another $10,000 and cash overhead will increase by $5,000 in Year 1. The cost for expendable supplies is expected to average $5 per procedure during the first year. All costs and revenues, except depreciation, are expected to increase at a 5 percent inflation rate after the first year.
  54.  
  55. The equipment falls into the MACRS five-year class for tax depreciation and hence is subject to the following depreciation allowances:
  56.  
  57. Year Allowance
  58. 1 0.2
  59. 2 0.32
  60. 3 0.19
  61. 4 0.12
  62. 5 0.11
  63. 6 0.06
  64.  
  65. The hospital's tax rate is 40 percent, and its corporate cost of capital is 10 percent.
  66.  
  67. a. Estimate the project's net cash flows over its five-year estimated life.
  68. b. What are the project's NPV and IRR? (Assume that the project has average risk.)
  69.  
  70. (Hint: Use the following format as a guide.)
  71.  
  72. Year
  73. 0 1 2 3 4 5
  74. Equipment cost
  75. Net revenues
  76. Less: Labor/maintenance costs
  77. Utilities costs
  78. Supplies
  79. Incremental overhead
  80. Depreciation
  81. Operating income
  82. Taxes
  83. Net operating income
  84. Plus: Depreciation
  85. Plus: After-tax equipment salvage value*
  86. Net cash flow
  87.  
  88. *
  89. Pretax equipment salvage value
  90. MACRS equipment salvage value
  91. Difference
  92. Taxes
  93. After-tax equipment salvage value
  94.  
  95.  
  96. Chapter 12 Problem 3
  97. Consider the project contained in Problem 7 in Chapter 11 (California Health Center).
  98.  
  99. a. Perform a sensitivity analysis to see how NPV is affected by changes in the number of procedures per day, average collection amount, and salvage value. Remember supplies vary with number of procedures.
  100. b. Conduct a scenario analysis. Suppose that the hospital's staff concluded that the three most uncertain variables were number of procedures per day, average collection amount, and the equipment's salvage value. Furthermore, the following data were developed:
  101.  
  102. Equipment
  103. Number of Average Salvage
  104. Scenario Probability Procedures Collection Value
  105. Worst 0.25 10 $60 $100,000
  106. Most likely 0.50 15 $80 $200,000
  107. Best 0.25 20 $100 $300,000
  108.  
  109. c. Finally, assume that California Health Center's average project has a coefficient of variation of NPV in the range of 1.0 - 2.0. (Hint: Coefficient of variation is defined as the standard deviation of NPV divided by the expected NPV.) The hospital adjusts for risk by adding or subtracting 3 percentage points to its 10 percent corporate cost of capital. After adjusting for differential risk, is the project still profitable?
  110. d. What type of risk was measured and accounted for in Parts b. and c.? Should this be of concern to the hospital's managers?
  111.  
  112.  
  113. Chapter 12 Problem 5
  114. Allied Managed Care Company is evaluating two different computer systems for handling provider claims. There are no incremental revenues attached to the projects, so the decision will be made on the basis of the present value of costs. Allied's corporate cost of capital is 10 percent. Here are the net cash flow estimates in thousands of dollars:
  115.  
  116. Year System X System Y
  117. 0 -$500 -$1,000
  118. 1 -$500 -$300
  119. 2 -$500 -$300
  120. 3 -$500 -$300
  121.  
  122. a. Assume initially that the systems both have average risk. Which one should be chosen?
  123. b. Assume that System X is judged to have high risk. Allied accounts for differential risk by adjusting its corporate cost of capital up or down by 2 percentage points. Which system should be chosen?
  124.  
  125. Chapter 12 Problem 10
  126. Michigan Home Health is considering opening an office in a new market. The organization has identified the number of home visits, revenue per home visit, and the level of fixed costs of the new office as being the major sources of uncertainty in the investment decision. To get a better understanding of the sensitivity of the new office NPV to these variables, the following data have been assembled:
  127.  
  128. Change NPV
  129. from Number Revenue Level of
  130. base of home per home fixed
  131. case visits visit costs
  132. -30% -$814 -$57 $82
  133. -20% -$515 -$11 $82
  134. -10% -$216 $36 $82
  135. 0% $82 $82 $82
  136. 10% $381 $129 $82
  137. 20% $680 $176 $82
  138. 30% $979 $222 $82
  139.  
  140. Construct a graph to show the sensitivity of the new office NPV to each variable.
  141.  
  142. Download: https://solutionzip.com/downloads/healthcare-finance-chapters-11-12/
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