Adams Products, Inc., manufactures a product it sells for $25. Adams sells all of the 24,000 units per year it is capable of producing at the current time, and a marketing study indicates that it could sell 14,000 more units per year. To increase its capacity, Adams must buy a machine that has the capacity to produce 50,000 units of its product annually. The existing equipment can produce the product at a unit cost of $16. Today it has a book value of $80,000 and a market value of $60,000. The new equipment could produce 50,000 units at a unit cost of $12. The new equipment would cost $500,000 and would be depreciated uniformly over its five-year life. If the new machine is purchased, fixed operating costs will decrease by $20,000 per year. If Adams's cost of capital is 18 percent and its tax rate is 30 percent, should Adams buy the new machine? Why?