1 / 24

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management. Instructor: Rogério Mazali Lecture 03: 09/16/2011. FINE 3010-01 Instructor: Rogério Mazali. Chapter 5 : The Time Value of Money. Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Sixth Edition Richard A. Brealey Stewart C. Myers Alan J. Marcus McGraw Hill/Irwin.

macy
Download Presentation

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FINE 3010-01Financial Management Instructor: RogérioMazali Lecture 03: 09/16/2011

  2. FINE 3010-01Instructor: RogérioMazali Chapter 5: The Time Value of Money Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Sixth Edition Richard A. Brealey Stewart C. Myers Alan J. Marcus McGraw Hill/Irwin

  3. Agenda • Future Values and Present Value • The One-Period Case • The Multi-Period Case • Compounding Periods • Perpetuities • Annuities • Inflation

  4. BASIC QUESTION • Is a dollar today worth more or less than a dollar in the future? • Why?

  5. Future Values: One-Period Case • Interest • Definition: Amount that your investment earns • Future Value (FV) • Definition: Amount to which an investment will grow after earning interest

  6. Future Values: One-Period Case • Let’s assume: • you have $100 in a bank account (defined as Initial Investment or C0) • current interest rate 6% per year • Question: • How much will you have in one year? Year 0 Year 1 $100 FV???

  7. Future Values: One-Period Case • Interest: Interest = Initial Investment * Int. Rate Interest = $100 * 0.06 = $6 • Future Value (FV): FV1 = Initial Investment + Interest = $100 + $6 = $100 + $100 * 0.06 = 100 * (1+ 0.06) = $106

  8. Future Values: One-Period Case • General formula (1-period):

  9. Present Values: One-Period Case • Suppose you need to buy a new computer that costs $1,060 one year from today. • Suppose you will have no income next year • How much money do you need to have today in order to be able to purchase the computer? Year 0 Year 1 PV??? $1,060

  10. Present Values: One-Period Case Discount Factor Present value of a $1 future payment. Present Value (PV) Value today of a future cash flow. Discount Rate Interest rate used to compute present values of future cash flows.

  11. Present Values: One-Period Case

  12. Present Values: One-Period Case

  13. Example • What is the value today of $1 dollars in one year? • r=10% • r=5% • r=15% • What is the value today of $400 dollars in one year if we know DF = 0.85?

  14. Note on Discount Rates • The discount rate to be used is the opportunity cost of capital – the rate of return offered by comparable investment opportunities. • The discount rate should take into account: • Time value of money • Riskiness of cash flow

  15. Future Values: Multi-Period Case • Let’s assume: • you have $100 in a bank account (defined as Initial Investment or C0) • current interest rate 6% per year • Question: • How much will you have in two years? Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 $100 FV???

  16. Simple Interest • Interest earned on initial investment ONLY • Equivalently: FV1 = PV0 × (1 + r) FV2 = PV1 + PV0 × r = PV0 × (1 + 2r) Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Interest 1 = 0.06 × $100 = $6 Interest 2 = 0.06 × $100 = $6 $100 FV??? Interest = $ 6 Principal = $100 Total = $106 Interest = $ 6 Principal = $106 Total = $112

  17. Compound Interest • Interest earned on initial inv. AND on interest • Equivalently: FV1 = PV0 × (1 + r) FV2 = PV1 + PV1 × r = PV0 × (1 + r)2 Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Interest 1 = 0.06 × $100 = $6 Interest 2 = 0.06 × $106 = $6.36 $100 FV??? Interest = $ 6 Principal = $100 Total = $106 Interest = $ 6.36 Principal = $106.00 Total = $112.36

  18. Compound vs. Simple Interest • Compound Interest: • Simple Interest: • We will use the Compound Rule as long as it is not noted.

  19. Future Values and Compound Interest • Example: Manhattan Island Sale: • Peter Minuit bought Manhattan Island for $24 in 1626. Was this a good deal? • To answer, determine $24 is worth in the year 2008, compounded at 8% (how to choose the right interest rate will be seen in later chapters). The value of Manhattan Island land is well below this figure.

  20. Valuing Long-Lived Assets • You cannot compare cash flows at two different points in time, let’s say, t=2 and t=1!! Compare them at Today, or compare them at t=1! t = 0 t = 1 t = 2 $100/(1+r)2 $100 t = 0 t = 1 $100/(1+r) $100

  21. Examples • What is the value today of $15,000 in 5 years at r=10% • What is $100 today worth in 3 years at r=10%?

  22. General Formulae • Future Value: • Present Value: • Given any three, you can solve for the fourth • Present value PV • Future value FV (or future cash flow Ct) • Time period t • Discount rate r

  23. Examples • How much must you deposit today to have $1 million in 25 years? (r=12%) PV? • If a $58,823.31 investment yields $1 million in 25 years, what is the rate of interest? r? • How many years will it take $58,823.31 to grow to $1 million if r=12%? t? • What will $58,823.31 grow to after 25 years if r=12%? FV?

  24. Example • Puerto Rico Borrows Some Cash • In 2007, Puerto Rico needed to borrow about $2.6 billion for up to 47 years. It did so by selling IOUs (bonds), each of which simply promised to pay the holder $1,000 at the end of that time. The market interest rate at the time was 5.15%. How much would have been prepared to pay for one of these IOUs?

More Related