M T R E: Oney-Ime Elationship and Quivalence
M T R E: Oney-Ime Elationship and Quivalence
and Equivalence
By: vkis-caingles
money has a time value
It has been said that often the riskiest thing a
person can do with money is nothing!
Pay no interest
until next year!
Interest is the difference between the amount of money lent and the
amount of money later repaid. It is the compensation for giving up
the use of the money for the duration of the loan. If the difference is
zero or negative, there is no interest.
Interest
1 period
Example:
An employee at LaserKinetics.com borrows $10,000 on May 1, 2020 and must repay a total of
$10,700 exactly 1 year later. Determine the interest amount and the interest rate paid.
Solution
Determine the interest paid:
Interest = amount owed now - principal
Example:
Stereophonics, Inc., plans to borrow $20,000 from a bank for 1 year at 9% interest for new
recording equipment. Compute the interest and the total amount due after 1 year.
Solution
Compute the total interest accrued
Interest = $20,000(0.09) = $1,800
Example:
(a) Calculate the amount deposited 1 year ago to have $1000 now at an interest rate of 5% per year.
(b) Calculate the amount of interest earned during this time period.
Solution
(a) The total amount accrued ($1000) is the sum of the original deposit and the earned interest.
If X is the original deposit,
Inflation represents a decrease in the value of a given currency. Inflation means that cost and
revenue cash flow estimates increase over time. This increase is due to the changing value of
money that is forced upon a country’s currency by inflation, thus making a unit of currency (such
as the dollar) worth less relative to its value at a previous time
In simple terms, interest rates reflect two things: a so-called real rate of return plus the expected
inflation rate. The real rate of return allows the investor to purchase more than he or she could
have purchased before the investment, while inflation raises the real rate to the market rate
that we use on a daily basis.
Solution
(a) The repayment schedule requires an (b) Repayment requires a single future
equivalent annual amount A , which is amount F, which is unknown.
unknown. P = $5000
P = $5000 i = 7% per year
i = 5% per year n = 3 years
n = 5 years F=?
A=?
Terminology and Symbols
Example:
Last year Jane’s grandmother offered to put enough money into a savings account to generate $5000 in
interest this year to help pay Jane’s expenses at college. ( a ) Identify the symbols, and ( b ) calculate the
amount that had to be deposited exactly 1 year ago to earn $5000 in interest now, if the rate of return is
6% per year.
Solution
(a) Symbols P (last year is 1) (b) Let F total amount now and P original amount. We know
and F (this year) are needed. that F – P = $5000 is accrued interest. Now we can determine P
P=? . F = P + Pi
i = 6% per year
n = 1 year The $5000 interest can be expressed as
Interest = F – P
F = P + interest = ( P + Pi ) – P
= ? + $5000 = Pi
$5000 = P (0.06)
P = 83,333.33
CASHFLOW
: CASHFLOW
Cash inflows are the receipts, revenues, incomes, and savings generated by project and business
activity. A plus sign indicates a cash inflow.
Cash outflows are costs, disbursements, expenses, and taxes caused by projects and business
activity. A negative or minus sign indicates a cash outflow. When a project involves only costs,
the minus sign may be omitted for some techniques, such as benefit/cost analysis.
Once all cash inflows and outflows are estimated (or determined for a completed project),
the net cash flow for each time period is calculated.
The end-of-period convention means that all cash inflows and all cash outflows are assumed to
take place at the end of the interest period in which they actually occur. When several inflows
and outflows occur within the same period, the net cash flow is assumed to occur at the end of
the period.
Range estimate – Minimum and maximum values that estimate the cash flow
Example: Cash outflow: Cost is between $2.5 M and $3.2 M
: CASHFLOW
A cash flow diagram presents the flow of cash as arrows on a time line scaled to the
magnitude of the cash flow, where expenses are down arrows and receipts are up arrows. It is
a graphical representation of cash flows drawn on the y axis with a time scale on the x axis.
The diagram includes what is known, what is estimated, and what is needed.
1 The horizontal line is a time scale, with progression of time moving from left to right. The period (e.g., year,
quarter, month) labels can be applied to intervals of time rather than to points on the time scale.
: CASHFLOW
The cash-flow diagram employs several conventions
The arrows signify cash flows and are placed at the end of the period. If a distinction needs to be made,
2 downward arrows represent expenses (negative cash flows or cash outflows) and upward arrows
represent receipts (positive cash flows or cash inflows).
: CASHFLOW
The cash-flow diagram employs several conventions
The cash-flow diagram is dependent on the point of view. For example, the Figure below is based on
3 cash flow as seen by the lender (the credit card company). If the directions of all arrows had been
reversed, the problem would have been diagrammed from the borrower’s viewpoint.
: CASHFLOW
Example
Before evaluating the economic merits of a proposed investment, the XYZ Corporation insists that its
engineers develop a cash-flow diagram of the proposal. An investment of $10,000 can be made that will
produce uniform annual revenue of $5,310 for five years and then have a market (recovery) value of $2,000 at
the end of year (EOY) five. Annual expenses will be $3,000 at the end of each year for operating and
maintaining the project. Draw a cash-flow diagram for the five-year life of the project. Use the corporation’s
viewpoint.
Cash Outflows:
Cash Inflows:
: CASHFLOW
Example
An electrical engineer wants to deposit an amount P now such that she can withdraw an equal annual
amount of A1 $2000 per year for the fi rst 5 years, starting 1 year after the deposit, and a different annual
withdrawal of A2 $3000 per year for the following 3 years. How would the cash flow diagram appear if
i = 8.5% per year?
Cash Outflows:
Cash Inflows:
Economic
Equivalence
: Economic Equivalence
Illustration:
If the interest rate is 6% per year, Php100 today
(present time) is equivalent to Php106 one year
from today.
: Economic Equivalence
Interest Periods
I = (P)(n)(i)
where
Example:
Assume you borrow 10,000 for 10 years at 6% per year of simple interest. Compute the
amount you will pay after 10years.
Solution:
Given: P = 10,000 Cash flow:
n = 10 years 10,000
i = 6%
600
The interest for each year
yearly
Interest per year = P(i)
= (10,000)(0.06)
= 600 10,000
Total interest for 10 years is: Total amount due after 10 years
I = (P)(n)(i) F=P+I
I = (10,000)(10)(0.06) F = 10,000 + 6,000
I = 6,000 F = 16,000
: Economic Equivalence – SIMPLE INTEREST
Example:
On May 30, 2012, a businessman loans P15,000 in the bank for the expansion of his
restaurant. It was agreed that he will pay the amount with 6% rate of interest on August 10,
2012. What is the ordinary simple interest to be paid?
Solution:
Given: P = 15,000 Interest to be paid is:
i = 6% I = (P)(n)(i)
n = let us count the days I = (15,000)(1/5)(0.06)
May 31 = 1 day I = 180
June 1-30 = 30 days
July 1 - 31 = 31 days
August 1 - 10 = 10 days
Total = 72 days
1 year 1
n = 72 days x = year
360 days 5
: Economic Equivalence – SIMPLE INTEREST
Example:
Louie borrowed 1,800 from his aunt last December 25, 2010. He promised that he will pay
his aunt on February 14, 2011 at 8% interest. Find the exact simple interest to be paid by
Louie.
Solution:
Given: P = 1,800 Interest to be paid is:
i = 8% I = (P)(n)(i)
n = let us count the days I = (1,800)(51/365)(0.08)
December 26-31= 6 days I = 20.12
January 1-31 = 31 days
February 1 - 14 = 14 days
Total = 51 days
Ic = P(1 + i)n - P
where
Example:
Assume you borrow 1,000 for 3 years at 10% per year of compounded interest. Compute
the amount you will pay after 3 years.
Solution:
Total Interest for 3 years
Ic = P(1+i)n – P
Ic = 1,000(1+0.10)3 – 1,000
Ic = 331
: Economic Equivalence – COMPOUND INTEREST
Example:
Assume you borrow 5,000 for 5 years at 8% per year of compounded interest. Which of the
following payment scheme has the lowest amount paid?
Plan 1: Pay all at end. No interest or principal is paid until the end of year 5. Interest
accumulates each year on the total of principal and all accrued interest.
Plan 2: Pay interest annually, principal repaid at end. The accrued interest is paid each
year, and the entire principal is repaid at the end of year 5.
Plan 3: Pay interest and portion of principal annually. The accrued interest and one-fifth of
the principal (or $1000) are repaid each year. The outstanding loan balance decreases
each year, so the interest for each year decreases.
Plan 4: Pay equal amount of interest and principal. Equal payments are made each year
with a portion going toward principal repayment and the remainder covering the accrued
interest. Since the loan balance decreases at a rate slower than that in plan 3 due to the
equal end-of-year payments, the interest decreases, but at a slower rate.
: Economic Equivalence – COMPOUND INTEREST
Solution:
Solution:
Solution:
Solution:
Solution:
Summary
- is the annual interest rate (per year) for a certain compounding period.
Nominal interest rate can be applied to the advertised or stated interest rate on a
loan, without taking into account any fees or compounding of interest. The nominal
interest rate can be calculated using the formula:
r
is =
m
where:
r - the periodic interest rate
is - the nominal/stated rate
m - the number of compounding periods
: Economic Equivalence –
F = P(1 + is)m
where:
F - future amount
P - present amount
is - the nominal/stated rate
m - the number of compounding periods
: Economic Equivalence –
i = effective 10% per year compounded monthly i = effective 10% per year compounded monthly
i = effective 6% per quarter i = effective 6% per quarter compounded quarterly
i = effective 1% per month compounded daily i = effective 1% per month compounded daily
: Economic Equivalence –
Example:
What is the nominal rate of interest on a company that has a 7.77% rate of effective
interest annually?
Solution:
Given ie = 7.77% = 0.0777
m = 12months in a year
ie = (1 + is)m – 1
r 12
0.0777 = (1 + ) –1
12
r = 0.0751 = 7.51% compounded monthly per year
: Economic Equivalence –
Example:
A credit card company charges 21% interest per year, compounded monthly. What
effective annual interest rate does the company charge?
Solution:
Given r = 21% = 0.12
m = 12months in a year
ie = (1 + is)m – 1
0.12 12
ie = (1 + ) –1
12
ie = 0.2314 = 23.14% compounded annually per year
Thank you!