Chapter 4 Interest Rates - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 4 Interest Rates

Description:

... Loans and Monthly Amortization Schedules. Nominal and Real ... Amortization ... Monthly amortization schedule for car loan of $25,000 for 72 months at 8 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:105
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: broo81
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 4 Interest Rates


1
Chapter 4 Interest Rates
  • Annual and Periodic Rates
  • Impact on TVM
  • Consumer Loans and Monthly Amortization Schedules
  • Nominal and Real Interest Rates
  • Risk-free Rate and Premiums
  • Default, Maturity, Liquidity
  • Brief History of Interest Rates

2
Annual and Periodic Rates
  • Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
  • The standard way to quote interest rate
  • Actual rate may be different
  • Period Rate
  • The rate for the period
  • Quarterly, Monthly, Daily, etc.
  • Annual Percentage Rate divided by Compounding
    periods per year
  • Effective Annual Rate (EAR) is the periodic rate
    compounded for the year

3
Annual and Periodic Rates
  • Periodic Rates with 5.0 APR
  • Semi-Annual Rate (compounds twice a year)
  • 5.0 / 2 2.5
  • Monthly Rate (compounds twelve times a year)
  • 5.0 / 12 0.04167
  • Effective Annual Rates
  • Semi-Annual Rate of 2.5, EAR 5.0625
  • Monthly Rate of 0.04167, EAR 5.1162

4
Annual and Periodic Rates
  • Effective Annual Rate is the rate that you earn
    with your investment and it increases with the
    number of compounding periods per year (C/Y)
  • Maximum compounding is continuous compounding and
  • EAR eAPR -1
  • EAR e0.05 -1 5.12711

5
Impact on TVM
  • The r in the TVM equations is the periodic rate
  • It is the APR when compounding is annually
  • The n in the TVM equation matches r and is the
    number of periods (compounding periods per year
    times number of years)
  • Changing calculator mode for P/Y and C/Y

6
Impact on TVM
  • Increasing the number of compounding periods
    changes results (changes effective interest rate)
  • Example 4.1 Annual compounding versus Monthly
    compounding
  • 2,000,000 retirement goal at 6 APR
  • 40 years to retirement
  • Deposit today with annual compounding,
    194,444.38
  • Deposit today with monthly compounding,
    182,524.16
  • EAR difference, Annual is 6, Monthly is 6.1678

7
Consumer Loans and Monthly Amortization Schedule
  • Most Consumer Loans are annuity stream fixed
    payments with interest accruing at end of month
  • Payment is for monthly interest expense and
    remainder if for principal reduction
  • Use TVM equations with monthly interest rate and
    number of periods to find payment (equation 4.5)
  • PV is the amount of the loan

8
Consumer Loans and Monthly Amortization Schedule
  • Monthly amortization schedule for car loan of
    25,000 for 72 months at 8 APR (Table 4.3)

9
Nominal and Real Interest Rates
  • APR and Periodic Rates are nominal rates
  • Nominal Rates have two components
  • Real Rate
  • Expected Inflation Rate
  • Nominal Real Rate Expected Inflation
  • Real Rate is reward for saving
  • Example 4.3 21 books next year versus 20 books
    now
  • Real Rate 21/20 1 5
  • Expected Inflation is the rising price of a good

10
Nominal and Real Interest Rates
  • Fisher Effect
  • Relationship between real rate, expected
    inflation, and nominal rate
  • (1r) (1r) x (1h)
  • r is the nominal rate
  • r is the real rate
  • h is expected inflation
  • r r h (r x h)
  • r is the same the world round

11
Risk-free Rate and Premiums
  • Risk-free rate (a nominal or real rate) with a
    guaranteed return
  • Nominal risk-free rate such as Treasury Bill
  • Real risk-free rate (excludes inflation)
  • Premiums impact the interest rates on different
    types of investments
  • Default Risk
  • Maturity
  • Liquidity

12
Risk-free Rate and Premiums
  • Default Risk
  • Different Investments have different default risk
    based on the issuers ability to meet future
    promised payments
  • Low risk U.S. Government
  • High risk New Start-up Company
  • Maturity Premium Investors demand more
    compensation for waiting longer
  • Liquidity Premium Different investments can be
    converted back to cash at different speeds and
    ease

13
Risk-free Rate and Premiums
  • Summary of Interest Rates
  • TVM equation uses a period nominal interest rate
  • The nominal interest rate is made up of two
    components, the real rate and inflation
  • Different investments have different nominal
    rates due to potential default (dp), maturity
    (mp), and liquidity (lp)
  • r rf inflation dp mp lp

14
Brief History of Interest Rates
  • Four Different Investments over 50 Years
  • 3-Month Treasury Bill (risk-free rate)
  • Range 1 to 15
  • Inflation in United States
  • Range -0.5 to 13
  • Long-Term Treasury Bonds
  • Range -9 to 32
  • Large U.S. Company Stocks
  • Range -27 to 52

15
Problems
  • Problem 3 Effective Annual Rate
  • Problem 5 PV with Periodic Rates
  • Problem 7 FV with Periodic Rates
  • Problem 9 Payments with Periodic Rates
  • Problem 11 Amortization Schedule
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com