🎉 Share Your 2025 Year-End Summary & Win $10,000 Sharing Rewards!
Reflect on your year with Gate and share your report on Square for a chance to win $10,000!
👇 How to Join:
1️⃣ Click to check your Year-End Summary: https://www.gate.com/competition/your-year-in-review-2025
2️⃣ After viewing, share it on social media or Gate Square using the "Share" button
3️⃣ Invite friends to like, comment, and share. More interactions, higher chances of winning!
🎁 Generous Prizes:
1️⃣ Daily Lucky Winner: 1 winner per day gets $30 GT, a branded hoodie, and a Gate × Red Bull tumbler
2️⃣ Lucky Share Draw: 10
VAN vs TIR: Master the calculations and key differences to make better investment decisions
Introduction: Why Every Investor Must Understand These Two Metrics
Deciding to invest requires more than intuition. Net Present Value (VAN) and Internal Rate of Return (TIR) are the pillars of financial analysis that distinguish profitable investments from those that generate losses. The challenge is that these two metrics often provide contradictory signals: a project may look attractive due to its VAN but show a lower TIR than another. That’s why it is essential to thoroughly understand how VAN and TIR are calculated, their real-world applications, and their limitations.
Understanding Net Present Value (VAN)
VAN answers a simple yet powerful question: how much is the money I will receive in the future worth today? It is the monetary measure of an investment’s net benefit, considering the value of money over time.
In practice, VAN takes all expected cash flows from an investment, discounts them to their present value using a discount rate, and subtracts the initial cost. A positive VAN means the investment will generate more money than initially invested. A negative VAN indicates the opposite: losses.
The formula and how VAN is calculated
The VAN equation is:
VAN = -Initial Investment + (Cash Flow 1 / ((1 + r)¹) + )Cash Flow 2 / ((1 + r)²( + … + )Cash Flow N / )(1 + r)ⁿ(
Where:
( Real cases: When VAN works
Scenario 1: Profitable project
A company invests $10,000 in a project that will generate $4,000 annually for 5 years. With a discount rate of 10%:
VAN = -10,000 + 15,162.49 = 5,162.49 dollars
With a positive VAN of $5,162, the project is viable. The investment will generate that additional value.
Scenario 2: Project with negative VAN
A certificate of deposit requires $5,000 today and will pay $6,000 in 3 years, with an 8% discount rate:
Present value = 6,000 / )1.08)³ = 4,774.84 dollars
VAN = 4,774.84 - 5,000 = -225.16 dollars
The negative VAN indicates that the present value of the money is greater than what will be received, making the investment unattractive.
Choosing the discount rate: The heart of VAN calculation
The accuracy of VAN depends directly on the selected discount rate. Three main approaches are:
Opportunity cost: What return would be foregone if invested here? If you can get 12% elsewhere on a similar investment, that is your minimum reference.
Risk-free rate: Treasury bonds offer a safe floor, typically between 3-5%. A risk premium is added based on the investment.
Comparative analysis: What rate does your industry use? Established companies in mature sectors use different rates than tech startups.
Investor intuition and experience also play a role, but they should be backed by solid data, not replaced by it.
Limitations of VAN you should know
VAN is powerful but imperfect:
Despite this, VAN remains the most used tool because it translates analysis into concrete monetary terms, easy to compare.
Understanding the Internal Rate of Return ###TIR(
If VAN answers “how much money will I earn?”, TIR answers “what percentage return does that correspond to?”. It is the discount rate that makes VAN exactly zero.
In other words, TIR is the percentage yield that the investment will generate over its useful life. It is expressed as a percentage and compared with reference rates )such as bond yields, cost of capital, etc.(. If TIR exceeds the reference rate, the project is profitable.
) How TIR is calculated
Calculating TIR is more mathematically complex than VAN because it requires solving an equation where VAN = 0. There is no simple closed-form formula; iterative numerical methods or financial software are typically used.
The logic is: find the r rate that satisfies:
0 = -Initial Investment + (Cash Flow 1 / )(1 + r)¹### + (Cash Flow 2 / ((1 + r)²) + …
A project with a 15% TIR is more attractive than one with 8%, assuming similar risks.
Limitations of TIR you should understand
When do VAN and TIR give different answers?
It is common for one project to have a higher VAN but a lower TIR than another. This mainly occurs due to:
Scale differences: A large project may have a higher VAN but a lower TIR because the invested capital is larger.
Timing of flows: If a project concentrates gains at the end vs. evenly distributed, their metrics diverge significantly.
Sensitivity to discount rate: If the discount rate is very high and future flows are volatile, VAN can turn negative while TIR remains positive.
Recommendation: In contradictory cases, review assumptions about cash flows and adjust the discount rate to better reflect the project’s actual risk.
Comparing VAN and TIR: Their fundamental differences
Both metrics are essential. VAN provides the “what”: how much value is created. TIR provides the “how”: at what rate that value is created.
Beyond VAN and TIR: Complementary indicators
Although VAN and TIR are fundamental, they should never be the sole metrics in investment decisions:
Practical guide to choosing between investments
When evaluating multiple projects: