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Cash-Flow Inputs, Asset Adjustments, and Costs

Asset, cost, discount, and adjustment terms that affect cash-flow valuation inputs.

Cash-Flow Inputs, Asset Adjustments, and Costs covers asset, cost, discount, and adjustment terms that affect cash-flow valuation inputs.

Use these pages when timing, risk, reinvestment, discount rates, or forecast cash flows change the value conclusion. It sits inside Discounting and Cash Flow, so readers can move up when the broader valuation context matters.

Use the table below to choose the narrower valuation branch before relying on a model input, market multiple, forecast, risk premium, price signal, or recommendation.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Economic InterestRight to receive economic benefits such as cash flows, profits, distributions, or appreciation from an asset or entity.
Net CostCost after deducting discounts, allowances, recoveries, tax benefits, or other offsetting amounts.
RebateCash-back, fee reduction, or price adjustment that changes net cost, realized proceeds, or investment economics.
Trade DiscountReduction from list price that changes reported revenue, purchase cost, margin, and cash-flow assumptions.

What to Check

  • Forecast period, free cash flow definition, terminal value method, discount rate, reinvestment assumption, and valuation date.
  • Nominal versus real inputs, pre-tax versus after-tax cash flows, currency, inflation, and timing convention.
  • NPV, IRR, MIRR, payback, annuity, perpetuity, present value, and compounding formula inputs.
  • Scenario, sensitivity, hurdle rate, risk premium, risk-free rate, beta, and cost-of-capital support.
  • Effect on capital budgeting, deal economics, impairment analysis, project approval, or intrinsic value.

Common Mistakes

  • Mixing nominal discount rates with real cash flows.
  • Using accounting earnings when the model requires cash flow.
  • Treating IRR as superior without checking scale, timing, and reinvestment assumptions.
  • Ignoring terminal value sensitivity and forecast uncertainty.

Discounting and cash-flow content is educational and does not provide investment, tax, accounting, project-approval, appraisal, or valuation advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Economic Interest

Economic Interest is a cash-flow or valuation concept used to estimate present value, investment economics, or financial performance.

Net Cost

Cost after deducting discounts, allowances, recoveries, tax benefits, or other offsetting amounts.

Rebate

Rebate is a cash-flow or valuation concept used to estimate present value, investment economics, or financial performance.

Trade Discount

Trade Discount is a cash-flow or valuation concept used to estimate present value, investment economics, or financial performance.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026