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Chap 03-Time Value of Money

The document discusses concepts related to time value of money including future value, present value, compound interest, discounting, and calculating the future and present values of cash flows including mixed streams, annuities, and perpetuities.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views

Chap 03-Time Value of Money

The document discusses concepts related to time value of money including future value, present value, compound interest, discounting, and calculating the future and present values of cash flows including mixed streams, annuities, and perpetuities.

Uploaded by

flair patindol
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 25

The Time Value Of

Money
Chapter 3

© 2009 Cengage Learning/South-Western


Time Value of Money

Financial managers compare the marginal benefits


and marginal cost of investment projects.

Projects usually have a long-term horizon: timing of


benefits and costs matters.

Time-value of money: A dollar received today is


worth more than a dollar received in the future.
2
Future Value
Future Value: The value of an investment made
today measured at a specific future date using
compound interest.

FVn = PV x (1+r)n

Interest rate
Future Value
Number of periods
depends on:
Compounding interval
3
Future Value of $200
4 years, 7% interest

FV
FV44 == $262.16
$262.16
FV
FV33 == $245.01
$245.01

FV
FV22 == $228.98
$228.98

FV
FV11 == $214
$214

PV = $200

0 1 2 3 4
End of Year

Compound interest: Interest earned both on the


principal amount and on the interest earned in
4
previous periods.
Compounding
Year 1: • Earns 7% interest on initial $200
FV1 = $214 • FV1 = $200+$14 = $214

• Earn $14 interest again on $200 principal


Year 2: • Earns $0.98 on previous year’s interest of
FV2 = $228.98 $14: $14 x 7% = $0.98
• FV2 = $214+$14+$0.98 = $228.98
• Earn $14 interest again on $200 principal
Year 3: • Earns $2.03 on previous years’ interest of
FV3 = $245.01 $28.98: $28.98 x 7% = $2.03
• FV3 = $228.98+$14+$2.03 = $245.01
• Earn $14 interest again on $200 principal
Year 4: • Earns $3.15 on previous years’ interest of
FV4 = $262.16 $45.01: $45.01 x 7% = $3.15
5 • FV4 = $245.01+$14+$3.15 = $262.16
The Power of Compound Interest

41

20%
36

31

26

21

15%
16

11

10%
6
5%
1
0%
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25

6 Periods
Present Value
Present value: The value today of a cash flow to be
received at a specific date in the future, assuming
an opportunity to earn interest at a specified rate.

FVn  PV  1  r 
n

FVn
PV 
7
(1  r ) n
Present Value of $200
4 Years, 7% Interest
Discounting

0 1 2 3 4
FV
FV11 == $200
$200 FV
FV22 == $200
$200 FV
FV33 == $200
$200 FV
FV44 == $200
$200
End of Year
PV
PV == $186.92
$186.92

PV
PV == $174.69
$174.69

PV
PV == $163.26
$163.26

PV
PV == $152.58
$152.58

Discounting: The process of calculating present


8
values.
The Power of Discounting
Present Value of One Dollar ($)

1.00 0%

0.75

0.5
5%

0.25 10%
15%
20%
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
Periods
9
Future Value of Cash Flow Streams

Mixed • A series of unequal cash flows


stream reflecting no particular pattern.

• A stream of equal periodic cash


Annuity
flows.

n
FV   CFt  1  r 
n t

t 1

1
0
Future and Present Values
of An Ordinary Annuity
Compounding

Future
Future
Value
Value

$1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

0 1 2 3 4 5
End of Year

Present
Present
Value
Value

1 Discounting
1
Future Value of An Ordinary Annuity
5 Years, 5.5% Interest
$1,238.82
$1,174.24
$1,113.02
$1,055.00
$1,000.00

$1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

0 1 2 3 4 5
End of Year

(1  r )  1 n
FV  PMT   $5,581.08
r
Ordinary annuity: An annuity for which the payments occur
1
at the end of each period.
2
Future Value of An Annuity Due
5 Years, 5.5% Interest
$1,306.96
$1,238.82
$1,174.24
$1,113.02
$1,055.00

$1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

0 1 2 3 4 5
End of Year

(1  r ) n  1
FV  PMT   1  r   $5,888.04
r
Annuity due: An annuity for which the payments occur at
1 the beginning of each period.
3
Present Value of Cash Flow Streams

• Mixed streams
• Annuities
• Perpetuities: cash flow streams that continue
forever

n
1
PV   CFt 
t 1 1  r  t

1
4
Present Value of An Ordinary Annuity
5 Years, 5.5% Interest
0 1 2 3 4 5

$1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

End of Year

$947.87
$898.45

$851.61

$807.22

$765.13

PMT  1 
PV   1  n 
 $4,270.28
r  (1  r ) 
1
5
Present Value of An Annuity Due
5 Years, 5.5% Interest
0 1 2 3 4 5

$1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000

$1,000.00 End of Year

$947.87
$898.45

$851.61

$807.22

PMT  1 
PV   1  n 
 1  r   $4,505.15
r  (1  r ) 
1
6
Future and Present Values of A Mixed Steam
5 Years, 4% Interest
Compounding
- $12,166.5
$3,509.6
FV
FV
$5,624.3
$6,413.8
$6,413.8
$4,326.4
$3,120.0

-$10,000 $3,000 $5,000 $4,000 $3,000 $2,000.0

0 1 2 3 4 5

$2,884.6 End of Year


$4,622.8
PV
PV
$3,556.0 $5,271.7
$5,271.7
$2,564.4
$1,643.9
1 Discounting
7
Present Value of A Perpetuity

• For a constant stream of cash flows that


continues forever


1
PV  PMT  
t 1 (1  r )
t

1
 PMT 
r
PMT

r
1
8
Present Value of A Growing Perpetuity

CF1
PV0  rg
rg
0 1 2 3 4

$1,000 $1,000(1+0.02)1 $1,000(1+0.02)2 $1,000(1+0.02)3 …


$1,000 $1,020 $1,040.4 $1,061.2

Growing Perpetuity
CF1 = $1,000 $1,000
PV0   $20,000
r = 7% per year 0.07  0.02
g = 2% per year

1
9
Compounding More Frequently Than Annually

• m compounding periods
mn
 r
FVn  PV  1  
 m
• continuous compounding

FVn  PV  e  
r n

• The more frequent the compound period, the


larger the FV!
2
0
Compounding More Frequently Than Annually

FV at end of 2 years of $125,000 at 5% interest

• Semiannual compounding:
2 2
 0.05 
FV2  $125,000  1    $137,976.61
 2 
• Quarterly compounding:
4 2
 0.05 
FV2  $125,000  1    $138,060.76
 4 
• Continuous compounding:
0.05 2
FV2  $125,000  e  $138,146.365
2
1
Stated Versus Effective Annual Interest Rates

• The contractual annual rate of


Stated
interest charged by a lender or
annual rate
promised by a borrower.

• The annual rate of interest actually


Effective
paid or earned, reflecting the impact
annual rate
of compounding frequency.

m
 r 
EAR  1    1
 m
EARcontinuous compounding  e r  1
2
2
Stated Versus Effective Annual Interest Rates

Annual • The stated annual rate calculated by


percentage multiplying the periodic rate by the
rate (APR) number of periods in one year.

• The annual rate of interest actually


Annual
paid or earned, reflecting the impact
percentage
of compounding frequency. The
yield (APY) same as the effective annual rate.

2
3
Additional Applications of Time Value

• Deposits needed to accumulate a future sum


• Loan amortization
• Implied interest or growth rates
• Number of compounding periods

2
4
The Time Value of Money

• Much of finance involves finding future and


present values.
• The time value of money is central to all
financial valuation techniques.

2
5

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