Time Value of Money
Time Value of Money
The
The Time
Time Value
Value
of
of Money
Money
3.1 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
After studying Chapter 3,
you should be able to:
1. Understand what is meant by "the time value of money."
2. Understand the relationship between present and future value.
3. Describe how the interest rate can be used to adjust the value of
cash flows – both forward and backward – to a single point in
time.
4. Calculate both the future and present value of: (a) an amount
invested today; (b) a stream of equal cash flows (an annuity);
and (c) a stream of mixed cash flows.
5. Distinguish between an “ordinary annuity” and an “annuity due.”
6. Use interest factor tables and understand how they provide a
shortcut to calculating present and future values.
7. Use interest factor tables to find an unknown interest rate or
growth rate when the number of time periods and future and
present values are known.
8. Build an “amortization schedule” for an installment-style loan.
3.2 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
The Time Value of Money
• The Interest Rate
• Simple Interest
• Compound Interest
• Amortizing a Loan
• Compounding More Than
Once per Year
3.3 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
The Interest Rate
3.4 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Why TIME?
3.5 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Types of Interest
• Simple Interest
Interest paid (earned) on only the original
amount, or principal, borrowed (lent).
• Compound Interest
Interest paid (earned) on any previous
interest earned, as well as on the
principal borrowed (lent).
3.6 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Simple Interest Formula
Formula SI = P0(i)(n)
SI: Simple Interest
P0: Deposit today (t=0)
i: Interest Rate per Period
n: Number of Time Periods
3.7 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Simple Interest Example
• Assume that you deposit $1,000 in an
account earning 7% simple interest for
2 years. What is the accumulated
interest at the end of the 2nd year?
• SI = P0(i)(n)
= $1,000(0.07)(2)
= $140
3.8 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Simple Interest (FV)
• What is the Future Value (FV) of the
deposit?
FV = P0 + SI
= $1,000 + $140
= $1,140
• Future Value is the value at some future
time of a present amount of money, or a
series of payments, evaluated at a given
interest rate.
3.9 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Simple Interest (PV)
• What is the Present Value (PV) of the
previous problem?
The Present Value is simply the
$1,000 you originally deposited.
That is the value today!
• Present Value is the current value of a
future amount of money, or a series of
payments, evaluated at a given interest
rate.
3.10 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Why Compound Interest?
Future Value of a Single $1,000 Deposit
Future Value (U.S. Dollars)
20000
10% Simple
15000 Interest
10000 7% Compound
Interest
5000 10% Compound
Interest
0
1st Year 10th 20th 30th
Year Year Year
3.11 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Future Value
Single Deposit (Graphic)
Assume that you deposit $1,000 at
a compound interest rate of 7% for
2 years.
0 1 2
7%
$1,000
FV2
3.12 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Future Value
Single Deposit (Formula)
FV1 = P0 (1 + i)1 = $1,000 (1.07)
= $1,070
Compound Interest
You earned $70 interest on your $1,000
deposit over the first year.
This is the same amount of interest you
would earn under simple interest.
3.13 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Future Value
Single Deposit (Formula)
FV1 = P0 (1 + i)1 = $1,000
(1.07)
= $1,070
FV2 = FV1 (1 + i)1
= P0 (1 + i)(1 + i) = $1,000(1.07)(1.07)
= P0 (1 + i)2 =
3.14
$1,000(1.07)2
Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
General Future
Value Formula
FV1 = P0(1 + i)1
FV2 = P0(1 + i)2
etc.
3.18 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Using The TI BAII+ Calculator
Inputs
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute
3.20 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the FV Problem
Inputs 2 7 –1,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 1,144.90
N: 2 Periods (enter as 2)
I/Y: 7% interest rate per period (enter as 7 NOT
0.07)
PV: $1,000 (enter as negative as you have “less”)
PMT: Not relevant in this situation (enter as 0)
FV: Compute (Resulting answer is positive)
3.21 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Story Problem Example
Julie Miller wants to know how large her deposit
of $10,000 today will become at a compound
annual interest rate of 10% for 5 years.
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$10,000
FV5
3.22 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Story Problem Solution
• Calculation based on general formula:
FVn = P0 (1 + i)n
FV5 = $10,000 (1 + 0.10)5
= $16,105.10
• Calculation based on Table I:
FV5 = $10,000 (FVIF10%, 5)
= $10,000 (1.611)
= $16,110 [Due to
Rounding]
3.23 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Entering the FV Problem
Press:
2nd CLR TVM
5 N
10 I/Y
–10000 PV
0 PMT
CPT FV
Source: Courtesy of Texas Instruments
3.24 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the FV Problem
Inputs 5 10 –10,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 16,105.10
3.26 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
The “Rule-of-72”
72 / 12% = 6 Years
[Actual Time is 6.12 Years]
3.27 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the Period Problem
Inputs 12 –1,000 0 +2,000
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 6.12 years
0 1 2
7%
$1,000
PV0
3.30 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
General Present
Value Formula
PV0 = FV1 / (1 + i)1
PV0 = FV2 / (1 + i)2
etc.
N: 2 Periods (enter as 2)
I/Y: 7% interest rate per period (enter as 7 NOT 0.07)
PV: Compute (Resulting answer is negative
“deposit”)
PMT: Not relevant in this situation (enter as 0)
FV: $1,000 (enter as positive as you “receive $”)
3.34 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Story Problem Example
Julie Miller wants to know how large of a
deposit to make so that the money will
grow to $10,000 in 5 years at a discount
rate of 10%.
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$10,000
PV0
3.35 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Story Problem Solution
• Calculation based on general formula:
PV0 = FVn / (1 + i)n
PV0 = $10,000 / (1 + 0.10)5
= $6,209.21
• Calculation based on Table I:
PV0 = $10,000 (PVIF10%, 5)
= $10,000 (0.621)
= $6,210.00 [Due to Rounding]
3.36 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the PV Problem
Inputs 5 10 0 +10,000
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute –6,209.21
3.38 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Examples of Annuities
3.39 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Parts of an Annuity
(Ordinary Annuity)
End of End of End of
Period 1 Period 2 Period 3
0 1 2 3
(Annuity Due)
Beginning of Beginning of Beginning of
Period 1 Period 2 Period 3
0 1 2 3
FVAn
FVAn = R(1 + i) + R(1 + n-1
R = Periodic
Cash Flow
PVAn
PVAn = R/(1 + i)1 + R/(1
+ i)2
3.51
+ ... + R/(1 + i)n
Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Example of an
Ordinary Annuity – PVA
Cash flows occur at the end of the period
0 1 2 3 4
7%
$1,000/(1.07)3
= $934.58 + $873.44 + $816.30
3.52
= $2,624.32
Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Hint on Annuity Valuation
The present value of an ordinary
annuity can be viewed as
occurring at the beginning of the
first cash flow period, whereas
the future value of an annuity
due can be viewed as occurring
at the end of the first cash flow
period.
3.53 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Valuation Using Table IV
PVAn = R (PVIFAi%,n)
PVA3 = $1,000 (PVIFA7%,3)
= $1,000 (2.624)
=Period
$2,624 6% 7% 8%
1 0.943 0.935 0.926
2 1.833 1.808 1.783
3 2.673 2.624 2.577
4 3.465 3.387 3.312
5 4.212 4.100 3.993
3.54 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the PVA Problem
Inputs 3 7 –1,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 2,624.32
R: Periodic
PVADn Cash Flow
PVADn = $1,000/(1.07)0 +
$1,000/(1.07)1 +
2
3.57 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Valuation Using Table IV
PVADn = R (PVIFAi%,n)(1 + i)
PVAD3 = $1,000 (PVIFA7%,3)(1.07)
= $1,000 (2.624)(1.07) =
Period
$2,808 6% 7% 8%
1 0.943 0.935 0.926
2 1.833 1.808 1.783
3 2.673 2.624 2.577
4 3.465 3.387 3.312
5 4.212 4.100 3.993
3.58 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the PVAD Problem
Inputs 3 7 –1,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 2,808.02
Complete the problem the same as an “ordinary annuity”
problem, except you must change the calculator setting
to “BGN” first. Don’t forget to change back!
Step 1: Press 2nd BGN keys
Step 2: Press 2nd SET keys
Step 3: Press 2nd QUIT keys
3.59 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Steps
Steps to
to Solve
Solve Time
Time Value
Value
of
of Money
Money Problems
Problems
1. Read problem thoroughly
2. Create a time line
3. Put cash flows and arrows on time line
4. Determine if it is a PV or FV problem
5. Determine if solution involves a single CF,
annuity stream(s), or mixed flow
6. Solve the problem
7. Check with financial calculator (optional)
3.60 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Mixed Flows Example
Julie Miller will receive the set of cash
flows below. What is the Present Value
at a discount rate of 10%.
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
PV0
3.61 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
How to Solve?
1. Solve a “piece-at-a-time” by
discounting each piece back to
t=0.
2. Solve a “group-at-a-time” by first
breaking problem into groups of
annuity streams and any single cash
flow groups. Then discount each
group back to t=0.
3.62 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
“Piece-At-A-Time”
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
$545.45
$495.87
$300.53
$273.21
$ 62.09
$1677.15 = PV0 of the Mixed Flow
3.63 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
“Group-At-A-Time” (#1)
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
$1,041.60
$ 573.57
$ 62.10
$1,677.27 = PV0 of Mixed Flow [Using Tables]
$600(PVIFA10%,2) = $600(1.736) = $1,041.60
$400(PVIFA10%,2)(PVIF10%,2) = $400(1.736)(0.826) = $573.57
$100 (PVIF10%,5) = $100 (0.621) = $62.10
3.64 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
“Group-At-A-Time” (#2)
0 1 2 3 4
3.68 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the Mixed Flows
Problem using CF Registry
Steps in the Process
Step 8: For C03 Press 100 Enter ↓ keys
Step 9: For F03 Press 1 Enter ↓ keys
Step 10: Press ↓ ↓ keys
Step 11: Press NPV key
Step 12: For I =, Enter 10 Enter ↓ keys
Step 13: Press CPT key
3.69 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Frequency of
Compounding
General Formula:
FVn = PV0(1 + [i/m])mn
n: Number of Years
m: Compounding Periods per
Year i: Annual Interest Rate
FVn,m: FV at the end of Year n
PV0: PV of the Cash Flow today
3.70 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Impact of Frequency
Julie Miller has $1,000 to invest for 2
Years at an annual interest rate of 12%.
Annual FV2 = 1,000(1 + [0.12/1])(1)(2)
= 1,254.40
Semi FV2 = 1,000(1 +
[0.12/2])(2)(2) = 1,262.48
3.71 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Impact of Frequency
Qrtly FV2 = 1,000(1 + [0.12/4])(4)(2)
= 1,266.77
Monthly FV2 = 1,000(1 + [0.12/12])(12)(2)
= 1,269.73
Daily FV2 = 1,000(1 + [0.12/365])(365)
(2)
= 1,271.20
3.72 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Solving the Frequency
Problem (Quarterly)
Inputs 2(4) 12/4 –1,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 1266.77
(1 + [ i / m ] )m – 1
3.77 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
BWs Effective
Annual Interest Rate
Basket Wonders (BW) has a $1,000 CD
at the bank. The interest rate is 6%
compounded quarterly for 1 year.
What is the Effective Annual Interest
Rate (EAR)?
EAR = ( 1 + 0.06 / 4 )4 – 1
= 1.0614 - 1 = 0.0614 or 6.14%!
3.78 Van Horne and Wachowicz, Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2009. Created by Gregory Kuhlemeyer.
Converting to an EAR
Press:
2nd I Conv
6 ENTER
↓ ↓
4 ENTER
↑ CPT
2nd QUIT