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Time Value of Money

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to time value of money, including future value, present value, annuities, perpetuities, and comparing interest rates. It defines these terms and provides examples of calculating future value and present value for lump sums, ordinary annuities, and annuities due using arithmetic methods and tables. It also discusses other compounding periods and effective annual rates.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views

Time Value of Money

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to time value of money, including future value, present value, annuities, perpetuities, and comparing interest rates. It defines these terms and provides examples of calculating future value and present value for lump sums, ordinary annuities, and annuities due using arithmetic methods and tables. It also discusses other compounding periods and effective annual rates.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 5

Time Value of Money

5-1
6-1
CHAPTER 5
Time Value of Money
■ Future value
■ Present value
■ Annuities
■ Perpetuities
■ Other Compounding Periods
■ Comparing Interest Rates

5-2
6-2
Example
• Suppose you invest $15000 today on some investment
that will produce $17000 over the next 5 years.
• Is this a wise investment?

6-3
Time Value Of Money
• The idea that money available at the present time
is worth more than the same amount in the
future due to it’s potential earning capacity.
• The basis for this idea is that no rational entity
keeps money idle.
• Thus, provided if money can earn interest, any
amount of money is worth more the sooner it is
received.

6-4
Time lines

0 1 2 3
i%

CF0 CF1 CF2 CF3

⚫ First step is to construct a timeline which helps to


visualize what is happening.
⚫ Show the timing of cash flows.
⚫ Tick marks occur at the end of periods, so Time 0 is
today; Time 1 is the end of the first period (year,
month, etc.) or the beginning of the second period
6-5
Future Value and Present Value
⚫ Future Value is the amount to which a cash flow or
series of cash flows will grow over a period of time
when compounded at a given interest rate.
⚫ Present Value is the value today of a future cash
flow or series of cash flows.
⚫ Compounding is the arithmetic process of
determining the future value of a series of cash flow
when compound interest is applied
⚫ Discounting is the opposite process of
compounding

6-6
Basic Patterns of Cash flow
• Single Amount
– A lump-sum amount either currently held or
expected at some future date. e.g. $1000 today or
$650 to be received at the end of 10 years
• Annuity
– A level periodic stream of cash flow
• Mixed Stream
– A stream of cash flow that is not annuity. A stream
of unequal periodic cashflow

6-7
What is the future value (FV) of an initial $100
after 3 years, if I/YR = 10%?

• Compound Interest is when interest is earned on


prior periods’ interest amount.
• FV can be solved by using the arithmetic, financial
calculator, and spreadsheet methods.

0 1 2 3
10%

100 FV = ?
6-8
Solving for FV:
The arithmetic method
⚫ After 1 year:
◦ FV1 = PV ( 1 + i ) = $100 (1.10)
= $110.00
⚫ After 2 years:
◦ FV2 = PV ( 1 + i )2 = [$100(1.10)] (1.10)
= $100 (1.10)2 =$121.00
⚫ After 3 years:
◦ FV3 = PV ( 1 + i )3
= [$100(1.10)(1.10)] (1.10)
= $100 (1.10)3
= $133.10
⚫ After n years (general case):
◦ FVn = PV ( 1 + i )n

6-9
Using the FV table

6-10
What is the present value (PV) of $100 due in 3
years, if I/YR = 10%?

• Finding the PV of a cash flow or series of cash


flows when compound interest is applied is called
discounting (the reverse of compounding).
• The PV shows the value of cash flows in terms of
today’s purchasing power.

0 1 2 3
10%

PV = ? 100
6-11
Solving for PV:
The arithmetic method
• Solve the general FV equation for PV:
– PV = FVn / ( 1 + i )n

– PV = FV3 / ( 1 + i )3
= $100 / ( 1.10 )3
= $75.13

6-12
Using the PV table

6-13
Annuities

⚫ So far the discussion is based on a one-time


lump sum payment that increases or
decreases due to compound interest.
⚫ However a lot of assets provide fixed
periodic payments. These are called annuities.
⚫ Thus annuities are a series of equal payments
at fixed intervals for a specified number of
periods

6-14
Ordinary Annuity and Annuity Due
• An annuity whose payments occur at the end of
each period is called ordinary annuity

Ordinary Annuity
0 1 2 3
i%

PMT PMT PMT

6-15
Ordinary Annuity and Annuity Due

• An annuity whose payments occur at the


beginning of each period is called annuity
due.
Annuity Due
0 1 2 3
i%

PMT PMT PMT

6-16
What is the difference between an ordinary annuity
and an annuity due?

Ordinary Annuity
0 1 2 3
i%

PMT PMT PMT


Annuity Due
0 1 2 3
i%

PMT PMT PMT


6-17
Future Value of Ordinary Annuity
• What is the future value of an investment
agreement where you will be given $100 at the
end of each year for a 3 year period?
• It is always assumed in annuities that after each
payment is received it is invested at the current
interest rate.

6-18
Future Value of Ordinary Annuity

0 1 2 3
10%

100 100 100


100 (1.10)
100 (1.10)(1.10)
Total = $331.00
6-19
Future Value of Ordinary Annuity

• FVA = 100[(1.103 – 1)/1]


= $331.00

6-20
Using the FVA Table

6-21
Future Value of Annuity Due
0 1 2 3
10%

100 100 100


100 (1.10)
100 (1.10)(1.10)
100 (1.10)(1.10)(1.10)
Total = $364.1

• FVAdue = $331 (1.10)


= 364.1
6-22
Using the FVAdue Table

6-23
Present Value of Ordinary Annuity
• What is an investment agreement that pays $100
at the end of each year for a 3 year period worth
now?
• It is the sum of the present values of all the
individual cash flows.

6-24
Present Value of Ordinary Annuity

0 1 2 3
10%

100 100 100


$100/(1.10)
$100/(1.10)(1.10)
$100/(1.10)(1.10)(1.10)
Total = $248.69

6-25
Present Value of Ordinary Annuity

• PVA = $100 [(1-(1/1.103))/1]


= $248.69

6-26
Using the PVA table

6-27
Present Value of Annuity Due

0 1 2 3
10%

100 100 100


$100/(1.10)
$100/(1.10)(1.10)
Total = $273.55

• PVAdue = PVAordinary (1+I)


• PVAdue = $248.69 (1.10) = $273.55
6-28
Using PVAdue Table

6-29
Perpetuities
• Perpetuities are annuities that continue forever.
• A stream of equal payments at fixed intervals
expected to continue forever.
• PV of Perpetuity = PMT/i

6-30
Uneven Cash Flows

6-31
Other Compounding Periods
• So far assumption was annual compounding.
This is the arithmetic process of determining
final value of a cash flow or series of cash flows
when interest is added once a year.
• Sometimes interest can be added more than
once a year, like semiannual or quarterly
compounding.

6-32
Other Compounding Periods
• Same methods or formula can be applied but
with new rate and period.

6-33
Comparing Interest Rates
• Nominal Interest Rates are the quoted interest rates often at
Annual Percentage Rate.
• Effective Annual Rate is the annual interest rate actually being
earned as opposed to the quoted rate when compounding is done
non-annually.
– Also known as “Equivalent Annual Rate”
– It is the rate that would produce the same future value under annual
compounding as would frequent compounding at a given nominal rate.

– M = number of payments per year


– INOM = Annual Percentage Rate or Nominal rate

6-34

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