Valuation methods in Project Portfolio Optimization - Focus on Real Options

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The core principle is similar to the principle of financial options: holding a decision which is to be made is equivalent to have an option, which can be valued. The only difference is the materiality of the option (‘real’), as opposed to the abstract nature of a financial option.
 
The core principle is similar to the principle of financial options: holding a decision which is to be made is equivalent to have an option, which can be valued. The only difference is the materiality of the option (‘real’), as opposed to the abstract nature of a financial option.
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The real option valuation is based on a mixed set of input data, balanced between the expected return, the expected consumed resources and the different risk factors.

Revision as of 22:58, 11 September 2016

Abstract

Valuation methods are critical supporting tools for any decision in Project Portfolio Management, so as to optimize the project portfolio in terms of expected return for the different values (e.g. money, knowledge, strategic alignment). This article quickly presents general valuation techniques for generic portfolio management (NPV, DCF, see below), but might be more relevant as applied to R&D portfolio selection and optimization.

A project portfolio is optimized by evaluating a multi-objective ranking based on (1) the expected return, (2) the uncertainty, and (3) the strategic fit, while optimizing several budgets allocation:

  • Financial budget,
  • Technological or knowledge-based budget,
  • Budget based on the market uncertainty
  • Critical resources allocation budget

R&D portfolios optimization is based on project valuation, and an alternative to classical methods such as NPV (Net Present Valuation) and DCF (Discounted Cash Flow) is the real options valuation.

The core principle is similar to the principle of financial options: holding a decision which is to be made is equivalent to have an option, which can be valued. The only difference is the materiality of the option (‘real’), as opposed to the abstract nature of a financial option.

The real option valuation is based on a mixed set of input data, balanced between the expected return, the expected consumed resources and the different risk factors.

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