Project finance flight simulator

Authors

  • Pedro B Agua CINAV, Portuguese Naval Academy Portugal
  • Pedro M Mendes University of Lisbon Portugal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19255/JMPM02504

Keywords:

Project Finance, Finance engineering, Cash flow management, Investment risk, simulation models

Abstract

Project Finance addresses the need to secure large-scale, capital-intensive investments in face of expenditure restraint. Efficiency and a more logical distribution of risk among stakeholders are major advantages. The high amounts involved and the usually high proportion of debt—millions, in any currency—call for detailed risk analysis and risk allocation. In Project Finance there is limited or no recourse over the sponsor's assets and so investors rely on future cash flows for profitability. Growth prospects are therefore preferred to absolute values at any given time. However, most investors still decide based on the Net Present Value (NPV) of an opportunity, and use risk-adjusted discount rates to cope with uncertainty. This additional mark-up can ultimately turn down an otherwise profitable venture. By making the continuous-time behaviour of cash flows visible, simulation models based on System Dynamics avoids these drawbacks and provides a method to assess and manage financial risks that takes growth into account.

Author Biographies

  • Pedro B Agua, CINAV, Portuguese Naval Academy Portugal

    Pedro B. Água is a Professor of General Management at the Portuguese Naval Academy, being responsible for the Project Management teaching, and a Senior Teaching Fellow at AESE Business School, Lisbon. He has authored several articles and book chapters, while continuing his research in the field of defence technology, industrialization, innovation and business policy. Professor Água has over twenty-five years of experience across high technology endeavours, from defence to telecommunications and oil and gas industry, combining his extensive professional and business background with teaching. Pedro holds an Executive MBA from IESE Business School and a Ph.D. in Management and Engineering awarded by the University of Lisbon.

  • Pedro M Mendes, University of Lisbon Portugal

    Dr. Mendes has a Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering, Management Systems Engineering concentration (VA Tech, 1990) and does research at University of Lisbon, Portugal, in risk analysis applied to maritime transportation and port service systems. He entered academia after more than 15 years of experience in software and Information Systems, having filled engineering and managerial positions in the civil service and in manufacturing and service companies. He lectured on Project Management for Engineers, helped launch the MBA program at Catholic University of Lisbon, and was a visiting faculty at UT Austin’s McCombs School of Business and Virginia Tech's Grado Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering

References

Dixit, A.K., Nalebuff, B. (1993). Thinking strategically: the competitive edge in business, politics, and everyday life. W. W. Norton & Co.

Faus, J. (1999). Finanzas operativas. IESE (In Spanish).

Faus, J. (2001). Politicas y Decisiones Financieras. IESE (In Spanish).

Fight, A. (2005). Introduction to project finance. Elsevier.

Finnerty, J.D. (2007). Project financing: asset-based financial engineering. Wiley.

Forrester, J.D. (1961). Industrial Dynamics. MIT.

Hawawini, G. & Viallet, C. (2002). Finance for executives: managing for value creation. South-Western.

Kennedy, M. (1997). Transforming spreadsheets into system dynamics models: some empirical findings. Proceedings of Fifteenth International System Dynamics Conference: "Systems Approach to Learning and Education into the 21st Century", Istanbul, Turkey, Bogazici University.

Patramanis, T. (2006). Structured finance for hybrid infrastructure models: the application of project finance into public-private partnerships for the construction and operation of infrastructure. MS Thesis in Technology and Policy, MIT.

Repenning, N.P. (2003). Selling system dynamics to (other) social scientists. System Dynamics Review 19: 303-327.

Sterman, J. (2000). Business dynamics: system thinking and modelling for a complex world. McGraw-Hill.

Downloads

Published

2022-05-20

How to Cite

Project finance flight simulator. (2022). The Journal of Modern Project Management, 8(3). https://doi.org/10.19255/JMPM02504

Similar Articles

1-10 of 462

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.