“…Then, both-Rappaport's way of calculating "ordinary" (net) present values, for example, by discounting expected cash flows with exogenous interest rates (even if adjusted to uncertainty), as well as the often considered alternative of (real) option values-become inadequate for the financial valuation of investments. Instead, in imperfect markets, discount rates are endogenous to the investment program (Hax, 1964;Hering, 2004Hering, , 2022Hirshleifer, 1958;Klingelhöfer, 1999Klingelhöfer, , 2006Klingelhöfer, , 2009Klingelhöfer, , 2010Klingelhöfer, , 2017Weingartner, 1963), and the (net) present values, in most cases, have to be corrected for restricted capacities (Klingelhöfer, 2009(Klingelhöfer, , 2017. This fundamental result implies that there is no theoretical foundation for employing the (risk-adjusted) weighted cost of capital to discount cash flows, as proposed by Rappaport, when referring to employing DCFs.…”