History of the Investment
3000 B.C. |
In Sumer, Mesopotamia, task specialization and its variety of marketplace goods and services begins to replace nomadic hunting and gathering; early communities explore new ways to apply the economic concept of bartering (definition: bartering is an exchange-ratio economic transfer based on goods received for goods relinquished) |
1000 B.C. |
In Sumer, Mesopotamia, loans bearing interest calculations begin appearing. |
1500 A.D. |
Financial Statements are prepared using annual periods for the first time; previously, only time periods encompassing an entire investment endeavor was used. The pay-back valuation method begins using Financial Statements to value investments. |
1930 A.D. |
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and their attested financial statements start to coalesce as a response to the stock market crash. |
1960 A.D. |
Harold Bierman and Seymour Smidt publish “The Capital Budgeting Decision”. Their book opens the door for IRR and NPV’s discounted-cash-flow technique to become a mainstream alternative to the pay-back method’s long-dominant exchange-ratio evaluation technique. |
1980 A.D. |
Academia and corporate organizations widely prefer IRR and NPV's discounted-cash-flow technique over the pay-back method's exchange-ratio technique; leveraged corporate buy-outs introduce higher debt levels into investment opportunities; electronic spreadsheets become available. |
2000 A.D. |
The dot.com era ushers in acceptance of deferred profit investment opportunities; personal computer clock speeds exceed 1GHz – a two hundred-fold increase since the personal computer’s introduction. |
1980 A.D.
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Growing unease with IRR and NPV’s ability to evaluate higher leveraged and deferred profit investments leads to a re-emergence of the 500-year-old pay-back method. Re-branded as EBITDA asset valuation, the macroeconomic EBITDA pay-back method is aided by GAAP attested financial statements. Forty years after the introduction of electronic spreadsheets, former manual IRR, NPV, and pay-back techniques and their variants remain as dominant investment evaluation methods; IPO investment attractiveness begins to wane. |
2022 A.D. |
Full Picture Investment (FPI) asset valuations are introduced; FPI combines a multiple-period time-value EBITDA with unified IRR and NPV, the hybrid combination is made possible by better utilizing electronic spreadsheet capabilities; for the first time, compelling affirmation of investment valuations occur as the return calculated from the investment’s prospective financial statements now matches the investment’s return; FPI’s never before affirming financial statements, exhibiting their investment's return, set a new standard of excellence and invoke unprecedented validation and credibility in investment opportunities through advanced valuation outcomes. |
