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Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money

Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money. Some Important Concepts. Topics Covered. Future Values and Compound Interest Present Values Multiple Cash Flows Perpetuities and Annuities Effective Annual Interest Rates. Inflation. Future Values.

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Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money

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  1. Chapter 5The Time Value of Money Some Important Concepts

  2. Topics Covered • Future Values and Compound Interest • Present Values • Multiple Cash Flows • Perpetuities and Annuities • Effective Annual Interest Rates. • Inflation

  3. Future Values Future Value - Amount to which an investment will grow after earning interest. Compound Interest - Interest earned on interest. Simple Interest - Interest earned only on the original investment.

  4. Future Values Example - Simple Interest Interest earned at a rate of 6% for five years on a principal balance of $100. Today Future Years 012345 Interest Earned Value 100 6 106 6 112 6 118 6 124 6 130 Value at the end of Year 5 = $130

  5. Future Values Example - Compound Interest Interest earned at a rate of 6% for five years on the previous year’s balance. Today Future Years 012345 Interest Earned Value 100 6 106 6.36 112.36 6.74 119.10 7.15 126.25 7.57 133.82 Value at the end of Year 5 = $133.82

  6. Future Values Future Value of $100 = FV

  7. Future Values

  8. Future Values 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 2006, compounded at 8%. Financial calculator: n=380, i=8, PV=-24, PMT=0  FV= $120.57 trillion

  9. Set up the Texas instrument • 2nd, “FORMAT”, set “DEC=9”, ENTER • 2nd, “FORMAT”, move “↓” several times, make sure you see “AOS”, not “Chn”. • 2nd, “P/Y”, set to “P/Y=1” • 2nd, “BGN”, set to “END” • P/Y=periods per year, • END=cashflow happens end of periods

  10. Present Values • If the interest rate is at 6 percent per year, how much do we need to invest now in order to produce $106 at the end of the year? • How much would we need to invest now to produce $112.36 after two years?

  11. Present Values • Discount Factor (DF) = PV of $1 • Discount Factors can be used to compute the present value of any cash flow. PV: Discounted Cash-Flow (DCF) r: Discount Rate

  12. Present Values Interest Rates

  13. Present Values Example In 2007, Puerto Rico needed to borrow about $2.6 billion for up to 47 years. It did so by selling IOUs, 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 you have been prepared to pay for one of these IOUs?

  14. Present Values Example Kangaroo Autos is offering free credit on a $20,000 car. You pay $8,000 down and then the balance at the end of 2 years. Turtle Motors next door does not offer free credit but will give you $1,000 off the list price. If the interest rate is 10%, which company is offering the better deal?

  15. Present Values $12,000 $8,000 PV at Time=0 0 1 2 $8,000 $9,917.36 Total $17,917.36

  16. Present Values Example – Finding the Interest Rate Each Puerto Rico IOU promised to pay holder $1,000 at the end of 47 years. It is sold for $94.4. What is the interest rate? Financial calculator: n=47, FV=1,000 PV=-94.4, PMT=0  i=5.15

  17. Present Values Example – Double your money Suppose your investment advisor promises to double your money in 8 years. What interest rate is implicitly being promised? Financial calculator: n=8, FV=2 PV=-1, PMT=0  i=9.05

  18. Present Value of Multiple Cash Flows Example Your auto dealer gives you the choice to pay $15,500 cash now, or make three payments: $8,000 now and $4,000 at the end of the following two years. If your cost of money is 8%, which do you prefer?

  19. 4 0 1 2 3 10% 100 300 300 -50 90.91 247.93 225.39 -34.15 530.08 = PV What is the PV of this uneven cash flow stream?

  20. Detailed steps (Texas Instrument calculator) • To clear historical data: • CF, 2nd ,CE/C • To get PV: • CF ,↓,100 , Enter , ↓,↓ ,300 , Enter, ↓,2, Enter, ↓, 50, +/-,Enter, ↓,NPV,10,Enter, ↓,CPT • “NPV=530.0867427”

  21. Future Value of Multiple Cash Flows Example You plan to save some amount of money each year. You put $1,200 in the bank now, another $1,400 at the end of the first year, and a third deposit of $1,000 at the end of the second year. If the interest rate is 8% per year, how much will be available to spend at the end of the 3 year?

  22. Future Value of Multiple Cash Flows $1,400 $1,200 $1,000 Year FV in year 3 0 1 2 3 $1,080.00 $1,632.96 $1,511.65 $4,224.61

  23. Perpetuities and Annuities • Annuity • Equally spaced level stream of cash flows for a limited period of time. • Perpetuity • A stream of level cash payments that never ends.

  24. Perpetuities and Annuities

  25. Perpetuities and Annuities Example - Perpetuity In order to create an endowment, which pays $100,000 per year, forever, how much money must be set aside today in the rate of interest is 10%?

  26. Perpetuities and Annuities Example - continued If the first perpetuity payment will not be received until three years from today, how much money needs to be set aside today?

  27. Perpetuities and Annuities Cash Flow Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 …Present Value 1. Perpetuity A $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 … 2. Perpetuity B $1 $1 $1 … 3. Three-year annuity $1 $1 $1

  28. Perpetuities and Annuities C = cash payment r = interest rate t = Number of years cash payment is received

  29. Perpetuities and Annuities PV Annuity Factor (PVAF) - The present value of $1 a year for each of t years.

  30. Perpetuities and Annuities Example – Lottery Suppose you bought lottery tickets and won $295.7 million. This sum was scheduled to be paid in 25 equal annual installments of $11.828 million each. Assuming that the first payment occurred at the end of 1 year, what was the present value of the prize? The interest rate was 5.9 percent. Financial calculator: n=25, i=5.9, PMT=11.828, FV=0,  PV=-152.6

  31. Perpetuities and Annuities • Annuity Due • Level stream of cash flows starting immediately.

  32. Perpetuities and Annuities Example – Lottery (Continued) What is the value of the prize if you receive the first installment of $11.828 million up front and the remaining payments over the following 24 years?

  33. Perpetuities and Annuities • Future Value of annual payments

  34. Perpetuities and Annuities Example - Future Value of annual payments You plan to save $4,000 every year for 20 years and then retire. Given a 10% rate of interest, what will be the FV of your retirement account? Financial calculator: n=20, i=10, PMT=-4,000, PV=0,  FV=229,100

  35. Effective Annual Interest Rate Effective Annual Interest Rate - Interest rate that is annualized using compound interest. Annual Percentage Rate (APR) - Interest rate that is annualized using simple interest.

  36. Effective Annual Interest Rate Example Given a monthly rate of 1%, what is the Effective Annual Rate(EAR)? What is the Annual Percentage Rate (APR)?

  37. Classifications of interest rates • 1. Nominal rate (iNOM) – also called the APR,quoted rate, or stated rate. An annual rate that ignores compounding effects. Periods must also be given, e.g. 8% Quarterly. • 2. Periodic rate (iPER) – amount of interest charged each period, e.g. monthly or quarterly. • iPER = iNOM / m, where m is the number of compounding periods per year. e.g., m = 12 for monthly compounding.

  38. Classifications of interest rates • 3. Effective (or equivalent) annual rate (EAR, also called EFF, APY) : the annual rate of interest actually being earned, taking into account compounding. • If the interest rate is compounded m times in a year, the effective annual interest rate is

  39. Example, EAR for 10% semiannual investment • EAR= ( 1 + 0.10 / 2 )2 – 1 = 10.25% • An investor would be indifferent between an investment offering a 10.25% annual return, and one offering a 10% return compounded semiannually.

  40. keys: description: Sets 2 payments per year [↑] [C/Y=] 2 [ENTER] [2nd] [ICONV] Opens interest rate conversion menu [↓][NOM=] 10 [ENTER] Sets 10 APR. [↓] [EFF=] [CPT] 10.25 EAR on a Financial Calculator Texas Instruments BAII Plus

  41. Why is it important to consider effective rates of return? • An investment with monthly payments is different from one with quarterly payments. • Must use EAR for comparisons. • If iNOM=10%, then EAR for different compounding frequency: Annual 10.00% Quarterly 10.38% Monthly 10.47% Daily 10.52%

  42. 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 5% 100 100 100 What’s the FV of a 3-year $100 annuity, if the quoted interest rate is 10%, compounded semiannually? • Payments occur annually, but compounding occurs every 6 months. • Cannot use normal annuity valuation techniques.

  43. 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 5% 100 100 100 110.25 121.55 331.80 Method 1:Compound each cash flow FV3 = $100(1.05)4 + $100(1.05)2 + $100 FV3 = $331.80

  44. Method 2:Financial calculator • Find the EAR and treat as an annuity. • EAR = ( 1 + 0.10 / 2 )2 – 1 = 10.25%. 3 10.25 0 -100 INPUTS N I/YR PV PMT FV OUTPUT 331.80

  45. When is periodic rate used? • iPER is often useful if cash flows occur several times in a year.

  46. Inflation Inflation - Rate at which prices as a whole are increasing. Nominal Interest Rate - Rate at which money invested grows. Real Interest Rate - Rate at which the purchasing power of an investment increases.

  47. Inflation approximation formula

  48. Inflation Example If the interest rate on one year govt. bonds is 5.0% and the inflation rate is 2.2%, what is the real interest rate?

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