Question
1. Freedom Foods Group Limited (hereafter known as Freedom) ordinary shares are listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). According to the announcement made to
1. Freedom Foods Group Limited (hereafter known as "Freedom") ordinary shares are
listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). According to the announcement made to
the ASX on 22/03/2018 with the headline FNP - Retail Offer Booklet with Investor
Presentation (hereafter "Presentation") Freedom has invested over $300 million in recent
years and plans further capital expenditure to increase financial returns. The Presentation
states Freedom has undertaken a number of capital expenditure initiatives at Ingleburn and is
now planning to further increase its Ultra-High Temperature (UHT) milk processing capacity
by expanding the existing footprint. This short-term heating and cooling of milk prolongs the
shelf-life of milk from several days to approximately twelve months. Before Freedom
commits to the substantial capital expenditure (and other associated costs) of expanding its
Ingleburn facility a financial analysis is needed to determine if it will contribute to the goal of
creating wealth for its shareholders.
2. You are employed in Freedom's corporate finance department and have impressed
senior management with your aptitude for financial analysis. This talent was developed
through the practice-oriented assignments that you completed at University. The Chief
Financial Officer (CFO) has asked you to perform a financial analysis of the planned
Ingleburn factory expansion using a purpose-built preformatted EXCEL spreadsheet. The
CFO has suggested you liaise with company employees from a variety of different
departments to collect the information that is necessary to perform the analysis. You will also
search through public documents such as ASX announcements to identify some of the
information that will be required in your financial analysis, and to help answer questions
about Freedom's equity and the recent equity issue. Your analysis will be provided to the
Board of Directors who approve major capital expenditures such as the Ingleburn expansion.
3. The two substantial cash outflows associated with the expansion are the cost of the
building and the equipment. The directors are accountable to the shareholders and so a
rigorous financial analysis is necessary to be confident that the future cash flows justify
investing in the UHT expansion project. The following paragraphs contain a substantial
amount of information that has been gathered from across the business and it is your job to
determine which information is relevant to the analysis.
4. Predicting the future cash sales of UHT milk production at the Ingleburn facility is
based on the volume of milk production and the price per litre. Freedom's forecast of UHT
volume produced at the current Ingleburn facility for 2019 and 2020 is specified in the table
titled "UHT Sites - Installed Litres Capacity" contained in the Presentation. Current
predictions are for sales volume beyond 2020 to increase at an annual 1% rate. If Freedom
proceeds with the expansion then total UHT production at Ingleburn (in millions of litres) is
forecast to be 204 in 2019, 256 in 2020 and 257 in 2021. From 2021 total UHT production at
an expanded Ingleburn facility is assumed to increase at 1% per annum relative to the
forecast in 2021. Freedom achieved a sales price per litre of UHT milk in 2018 of $1.41 and
is budgeting to achieve this price for the next two years. Competition is expected to cause this
price to decrease by 2% p.a. each year for the subsequent eight years.
25300 AUTUMN 2018 Group Assignment Page 2
5. The cost per litre of raw milk required to produce UHT milk is based on the NSW
farm gate milk as reported by Dairy Australia. Your estimate of the cost per litre for milk
each year from 2019 to 2028 is assumed to be the same as the figure for 2016/17. No milk is
wasted in the production of UHT milk. Therefore, the same quantity of raw milk purchased
each year (as specified in paragraph 4) is transformed into the same quantity of UHT milk.
6. Freedom already owns a block of land adjacent to the existing factory at Ingleburn on
which they plan to construct the new building. In 2001 when Freedom constructed the
original $7 million Ingleburn facility they leased the land to a dairy farmer for $140,000 each
year. At that time Freedom also purchased milking equipment at a cost of $300,000. At that
time the milking equipment was determined to have a twenty-year life for taxation purposes
and an assumed zero salvage value for depreciation calculations. Before the expansion can
proceed Freedom must terminate the lease agreement with the dairy farmer and sell the
milking equipment. The equipment has a scrap value today of $80,000. This year's financial
statements show the equipment is being depreciated at $15,000 per year and the balance sheet
indicates a carrying value of $45,000. Because the $300,000 cash outflow relating to the
equipment has already occurred the accountant suggests it be treated as a sunk cost in the
analysis. Freedom will continue to lease the land if the UHT facility is not constructed.
7. In addition to the cost of milk, another substantial operating cost associated with the
expansion is wages. You expect that the annual wages expense directly associated with the
Ingleburn expansion will remain at $2.8 million each year for the foreseeable future.
8. The Presentation discloses that when Freedom closed its Taren Point factory it
incurred $4.8 million associated with discontinuing operations. This cost was expensed in the
half-year accounts ending 31 December 2017.
9. The capital cost of the Ingleburn building is budgeted to be $4.8 million today.
Freedom proposes to use $2 million of the $3,573,000 cash on its balance sheet to pay for the
building to reduce the cash cost to just $2.8 million. For taxation purposes the new building
has a twenty-year life. However, Freedom will perform the financial analysis of the Ingleburn
expansion over a ten-year time period. The Ingleburn expansion will also require $2 million
worth of refrigeration equipment today. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) confirms that
refrigeration equipment has an eight-year tax life. In Freedom's experience, if refrigeration
equipment is maintained properly it be operated effectively for ten years before requiring
replacement. Freedom's management accountants depreciate all assets over ten years to
match the lifespan of the factory expansion.
10. Throughout 2017 Freedom incurred $260,000 of expenses on external architectural
plans relating to an enlarged Ingleburn facility. To ensure this expense is not wasted the
directors plan to include it in the analysis as a cash outflow in 2018. This approach will
ensure that historical business expenses can be recovered and allow it to generate the required
return.
11. To maintain a strong credit rating, Freedom will borrow $1.2 million today to finance
the Ingleburn facility's expansion. The ten-year principal-and-interest loan has annual interest
repayments of $147,949 (assuming a 4% p.a. rate). Freedom's accountant confirms that
interest is classified as a business expense and is tax deductible.
25300 AUTUMN 2018 Group Assignment Page 3
12. There is an anticipated expense of $180,000 to install the equipment associated with
the Ingleburn expansion, and a $50,000 cost to upgrade the electricity supply required to
commence operations. According to the ATO both of these items are classified as a business
expense. The manager of the Ingleburn facility would prefer to classify these expenses as
assets and therefore depreciate them over the ten-year project life to give the appearance of
higher profitability for the 2018 financial year. The manager is budgeting to achieve a net
profit for 2018 of $1.22 million and increasing it by $150,000 for 2019.
13. You assume that the Ingleburn building can be sold for $1.9 million in the year 2028,
and at any point in time the equipment will have a resale value of $650,000. In ten years'
time Freedom assumes that it will have cash holdings of $12 million. You note the ATO
regulation that all non-current assets be depreciated to zero.
14. Substantial amounts of capital have been invested at the Ingleburn site in recent years,
including $1.75 million on packaging machinery. Ingleburn's existing repairs and
maintenance expenses are budgeted at $400,000 for each of the next five years, increasing to
$500,000 for the following five years. If Ingleburn does expand operations then a $1,500,000
expense will be incurred in five years' time for repairs and maintenance of the equipment and
building.
15. Freedom's existing Shepparton UHT facility has annual sales of $2.5 million. If
Ingleburn expands then management believes that due to the national attention on highquality
UHT milk that Shepparton will experience ongoing higher sales of $250,000 p.a.
16. Freedom currently has $3.5 million of inventory and $570,000 of this amount is
situated at the existing Ingleburn facility. Accounts receivable at the moment are $2.3
million. If the Board of Directors approve the Ingleburn UHT facility expansion you
anticipate that accounts receivable will be $2.3 million and an additional $1.1 million of
inventory will be necessary. Accounts payable will increase by $600,000 to $4.4 million.
17. The Presentation reveals that Veritas Securities Limited and UBS, AG Australia
Branch are the lead managers and underwriters of Freedom's $200 million equity raising.
Section 4.30 of the Presentation states the management and underwriting fee. You spend
many hours explaining to Freedom's upper management the relevance of the equity raising
fee in the capital budgeting analysis of expanding Ingleburn's UHT milk production capacity.
18. Freedom's remuneration committee is planning to increase annual Directors' fees by
$200,000 whether the Ingleburn expansion occurs or not. If the expansion proceeds the
general manager (GM) of the existing Ingleburn facility will receive a $50,000 salary
increase for the increased responsibilities associated with managing a larger facility. The GM
current annual salary is $225,000.
19. Freedom's required return is 9%. Assume the company tax rate will remain at 30%.
REQUIREMENTS Your team must answer the following eight questions. All answers must be entered into the preformatted EXCEL spreadsheet available on UTSOnline. Questions 1 to 4 require information relating to the capital budgeting decision of the proposed Ingleburn expansion. Questions 5 to 8 require you to analyse Freedom's equity, and the recent equity issue. Capital Budgeting Information (14 Marks) Present an itemised breakdown (and the total) for each of the following: 1. The cash flows at the start. 2. The cash flows over the life. 3. The cash flows at the end. 4. What is
My questions is
What is the percentage return on Freedom shares for the year 2017? Your return calculation must use the share price for the first and last ASX trading day for 2017, and include all dividends paid per share during 2017.
Could you tell me the formal or give me some example for get this question answer? I think this question do not need to use the data from information but need to use data from other questions. Thanks
Step by Step Solution
There are 3 Steps involved in it
Step: 1
Get Instant Access to Expert-Tailored Solutions
See step-by-step solutions with expert insights and AI powered tools for academic success
Step: 2
Step: 3
Ace Your Homework with AI
Get the answers you need in no time with our AI-driven, step-by-step assistance
Get Started