Lesson: Internal Rate of Return

Instructor: Nick Palazzolo
Cite this lesson

In this lesson, Nick Palazzolo, CPA, takes a deep dive into the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) and its relationship to the required return as part of the capital budgeting process. He elaborates on the concept of the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC), discussing its role as a benchmark for evaluating the cost-effectiveness of capital projects based on a company's existing capital structure. Nick simplifies these terms and illustrates their relevance by equating WACC with the minimum return necessary for a project to break even, which is also the IRR. With vivid examples, he clarifies that a project is worth pursuing if its IRR exceeds the WACC, considering both the pre-tax and post-tax implications. By the end of the lesson, the break-even analysis is demystified, making the theoretical aspects of IRR tangible and applicable for real-world financial decision-making.

Updated: May 31, 2022 Create an account

In this lesson, Nick Palazzolo, CPA, takes a deep dive into the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) and its relationship to the required return as part of the capital budgeting process. He elaborates on the concept of the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC), discussing its role as a benchmark for evaluating the cost-effectiveness of capital projects based on a company's existing capital structure. Nick simplifies these terms and illustrates their relevance by equating WACC with the minimum return necessary for a project to break even, which is also the IRR. With vivid examples, he clarifies that a project is worth pursuing if its IRR exceeds the WACC, considering both the pre-tax and post-tax implications. By the end of the lesson, the break-even analysis is demystified, making the theoretical aspects of IRR tangible and applicable for real-world financial decision-making.

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Conceptual Framework and Standard-setting for Business and Nonbusiness Entities
Module: 4 Concepts, 43 Lessons
Form 10-K
1:29