These questions are based on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation videos that accompany the textbook. In addition to whatever in-class use your instructor may have given them, they're available on this website for online viewing. If directed to do so by your instructor, you can answer the discussion questions online and email the results. These videos are intended only for students using the 4th Canadian Edition of Fundamentals of Corporate Finance. To view the video, you'll require a password. Refer to page 472 in your textbook and use the first word appearing in the main text column as both 'username' and 'password.' Use of the word is case-sensitive. The free RealPlayer plug-in is required in order to view the videos. If needed, the plug-in can be downloaded from Real.
E-CommerceFashionable Expansion: The end of the 1990s witnessed Canada and America's big retail business racing to go online. E-Commerce suddenly became the hot new game in town and corporate Web sites sprung at a truly amazing rate. Everyone rushed to join the bandwagon, some without even thinking twice about the worthiness of such an enterprise. The joyful concurrence of the Internet and big chain retailing has produced yet another buzzword to reverberate into the new millennium: E-tailing. Corporations and consumers alike have endeavored to worship this new contraption while attempting to discover its true virtues and hidden pitfalls. This video segment exemplifies the trials and tribulations of online retail expansion projects. Two of Canada most renowned retailersChapters and Danier Leatherare poised to become Internet players and are already undertaking new and bold steps that will ultimately ensure the selling of their products with a simple click of the computer mouse. Chapterswith a very cavalier approachhas already spent about $22 million in establishing its presence in cyberspace, while Danier has asked IBM for help. As exotic and outlandish as it may sound, E-commerce is just another enterprise. Like any other investment project, it is expected that it will eventually generate enough cash flow to make the whole effort worthwhile. The particularity of this type of project, however, is that it requires a large initial investment, a high degree of operating leverage, and that it is unusually difficult to forecast when and how much cash flow it will generate. Nobody really knows how the consumers will react, for there are not very many precedents to give us precious hints. In spite of all the animated graphics and brightly coloured Web pages, analyzing an Internet expansion project entails asking the same questions that any capital budgeting process is supposed to ask. And like any investment decision, going online should occur only if we are confident that E-tailing represents a positive NPV project.
Additional Resources:Danier LeatherChapters OnlineCapital Budgeting at TeachMeFinance.com
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