By how much did the change in the WACC affect the project’s forecasted NPV?

Last month, Lloyd’s Systems analyzed the project whose cash flows are shown below. However, before the decision to accept or reject the project, the Federal Reserve took actions that changed interest rates and therefore the firm’s WACC. The Fed’s action did not affect the forecasted cash flows. By how much did the change in the WACC affect the project’s forecasted NPV? Note that a project’s projected NPV can be negative, in which case it should be rejected.
Old WACC: 10.00% New WACC 13.50%
Year 0 1 2 3
Cash flows -$1,000 $410 $410 $410
-$64.47
-$46.56
-$59.70
-$61.49
-$54.32
5 points
Tesar Chemicals is considering Projects S and L, whose cash flows are shown below. These projects are mutually exclusive, equally risky, and not repeatable. The CEO believes the IRR is the best selection criterion, while the CFO advocates the NPV. If the decision is made by choosing the project with the higher IRR rather than the one with the higher NPV, how much, if any, value will be forgone, i.e., what’s the chosen NPV versus the maximum possible NPV? Note that (1) “true value” is measured by NPV, and (2) under some conditions the choice of IRR vs. NPV will have no effect on the value gained or lost.
WACC 8.50%
0 1 2 3 4
CFS -$1,100 $550 $600 $100 $100
CFL -$2,700 $650 $725 $800 $1,400

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