FIN 202 Chapter 2 Time Value of Money
FIN 202 Chapter 2 Time Value of Money
Learning Objectives
You will be able to:
• Understand the concept of time value of money;
• Compute the time value of money in various
situations;
• Solve problems using the time value of money
• Explain the importance of the time value of
money in the decision-making process, and
• Enumerate the other areas in financial
management where the time value of money is
applied
In summary:
Future value
Present value
Rates of return
Amortization
Time lines show timing of cash flows (CF).
0 1 2 3
i%
CF0 CF1 CF2 CF3
Tick marks at ends of periods, so Time 0 is today; Time 1 is the end of Period
1; or the beginning of Period 2.
Time line for a ₱100 lump sum due
at the end of Year 2.
0 1 2 Year
i%
100
Time line for an ordinary annuity of
₱100 for 3 years.
0 1 2 3
i%
0 1 2 3
i%
-50 100 75 50
What’s the FV of an initial ₱100
after 3 years if i = 10%?
0 1 2 3
10%
100 FV = ?
After 2 years:
In general,
INPUTS 3 10 -100 0
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 133.10
0 1 2 3
10%
PV = ? 100
Solve FVn = PV(1 + i )n for PV:
( )
n
FVn 1
PV = = FVn
(1 + i)n 1+i
( ) = ₱100(PVIF
3
1
PV = ₱100 1.10 i,n)
= ₱100(0.7513) = ₱75.13.
Financial Calculator Solution
INPUTS 3 10 0 100
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT -75.13
Solve for n:
Graphical Illustration:
FV
2
3.8
1
0 Year
1 2 3 4
What’s the difference between an ordinary annuity and
an annuity due?
Ordinary Annuity
0 1 2 3
i%
0 1 2 3
10%
100 100 100
110
121
FV = 331
Financial Calculator Solution
INPUTS 3 10 0 -100
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 331.00
0 1 2 3
10%
90.91
82.64
75.13
248.68 = PV
INPUTS 3 10 100 0
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT -248.69
0 1 2 3
10%
INPUTS 3 10 100 0
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT -273.55
90.91
247.93
225.39
-34.15
530.08 = PV
• Input in “CFLO” register:
CF0 = 0
CF1 = 100
CF2 = 300
CF3 = 300
CF4 = -50
• Enter I = 10, then press NPV button to get NPV
= ₱530.09. (Here NPV = PV.)
What interest rate would cause
₱100 to grow to ₱125.97 in 3 years?
₱100 (1 + i )3 = ₱125.97.
INPUTS 45 12 0 -1095
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 1,487,261.89
INPUTS 25 12 0 -1095
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 146,000.59
Waiting until 45, the investor will only have ₱146,000.59, which is over
₱1.3 million less than if saving began at 20. So it pays to get started
early.
How much would the 45-year old
investor need to save to accumulate
as much as the 20-year old?
INPUTS 25 12 0 1487261.89
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT -11,154.42
100 133.10
Annually: FV3 = ₱100(1.10)3 = ₱133.10.
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
5%
100 134.01
Semiannually: FV6 = ₱100(1.05)6 = ₱134.01.
We will deal with 3 different
rates:
EAR= EFF% =
effective annual
.
rate
• iNom is stated in contracts. Periods per year
(m) must also be given.
• Examples:
8%; Quarterly
8%, Daily interest (365 days)
• Periodic rate = iPer = iNom/m, where m is
number of compounding periods per year. m
= 4 for quarterly, 12 for monthly, and 360 or
365 for daily compounding.
• Examples:
8% quarterly: iPer = 8%/4 = 2%.
8% daily (365): iPer = 8%/365 =
0.021918%.
• Effective Annual Rate (EAR = EFF%):
The annual rate that causes PV to grow to the
same FV as under multi-period compounding.
Example: EFF% for 10%, semiannual:
FV = (1 + iNom/m)m
= (1.05)2 = 1.1025.
EFF% = 10.25% because
(1.1025)1 = 1.1025.
Any PV would grow to same FV at 10.25%
annually or 10% semiannually.
• An investment with monthly payments is
different from one with quarterly payments.
Must put on EFF% basis to compare rates of
return. Use EFF% only for comparisons.
• Banks say “interest paid daily.” Same as
compounded daily.
How do we find EFF% for a nominal rate
of 10%, compounded
semiannually?
( ) –1
m
EFF = 1 + iNom
m
=(1 + )2
0.10 – 1.0
2
= (1.05)2 – 1.0
= 0.1025 = 10.25%.
Or use a financial calculator.
EAR = EFF% of 10%
EARAnnual = 10%.
1 iNom mn
FV = PV +
n
m
0.10 2x3
FV = ₱100 1 +
3S 2
= ₱100(1.05)6 = ₱134.01.
FV3Q = ₱100(1.025)12 = ₱134.49.
What’s the value at the end of Year 3
of the following CF stream if the quoted
interest rate is 10%, compounded
semiannually?
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
6-mos.
5% periods
5%
100 100 100.00
110.25
121.55
331.80
2
EAR = (1 + 0.10 ) – 1 = 10.25%.
2
Or, to find EAR with a calculator:
NOM% = 10.
P/YR = 2.
EFF% = 10.25.
b. The cash flow stream is an annual
annuity. Find kNom (annual) whose
EFF% = 10.25%. In calculator,
EFF% = 10.25
P/YR = 1
NOM% = 10.25
c.
5%
100 100 100
90.70
82.27
74.62
247.59
Amortization
10%
-1,000 PMT PMT PMT
INPUTS 3 10 -1000 0
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 402.11
Step 2: Find the interest paid in
Year 1.
INTt = Beg balt (i)
INT1 = ₱1,000(0.10) = ₱100.
302.11
Principal Payments
0 1 2 3
Level payments. Interest declines because
outstanding balance declines. Lender earns
10% on loan outstanding, which is falling.
• Amortization tables are widely used--for home
mortgages, auto loans, business loans,
retirement plans, etc. They are very
important!