Title: PRINCIPLES OF MONEY-TIME RELATIONSHIPS
1CHAPTER 3
- PRINCIPLES OF MONEY-TIME RELATIONSHIPS
2Objectives Of This Chapter
- Describe the return to capital in the form of
interest - Illustrate how basic equivalence calculation are
made with respect to the time value of capital in
Engineering Economy
3Capital
- Capital refers to wealth in the form of money or
property that can be used to produce more wealth - Types of Capital
- Equity capital is that owned by individuals who
have invested their money or property in a
business project or venture in the hope of
receiving a profit. - Debt capital, often called borrowed capital, is
obtained from lenders (e.g., through the sale of
bonds) for investment.
4Exchange money for shares of stock as proof of
partial ownership
5Time Value of Money
- Time Value of Money
- Money can make money if Invested
- The change in the amount of money over a given
time period is called the time value of money - The most important concept in engineering economy
6Interest Rate
- INTEREST - THE AMOUNT PAID TO USE MONEY.
- INVESTMENT
- INTEREST VALUE NOW - ORIGINAL AMOUNT
- LOAN
- INTEREST TOTAL OWED NOW - ORIGINAL AMOUNT
- INTEREST RATE - INTEREST PER TIME UNIT
RENTAL FEE PAID FOR THE USE OF SOMEONE ELSES MONEY
7Determination of Interest Rate
Interest Rate
Money Supply
MS1
ie
Money Demand
Quantity of Money
8Simple and Compound Interest
- Two types of interest calculations
- Simple Interest
- Compound Interest
- Compound Interest is more common worldwide and
applies to most analysis situations
9Simple Interest
- Simple Interest is calculated on the principal
amount only - Easy (simple) to calculate
- Simple Interest is
- (principal)(interest rate)(time) I (P)(i)(n)
- Borrow 1000 for 3 years at 5 per year
- Let P the principal sum
- i the interest rate (5/year)
- Let N number of years (3)
- Total Interest over 3 Years...
10Compound Interest
- Compound Interest is much different
- Compound means to stop and compute
- In this application, compounding means to compute
the interest owed at the end of the period and
then add it to the unpaid balance of the loan - Interest then earns interest
11Compound Interest An Example
- Investing 1000 for 3 year at 5 per year
- P0 1000, I1 1,000(0.05) 50.00
- P1 1,000 50 1,050
- New Principal sum at end of t 1 1,050.00
- I2 1,050(0.05) 52.50
- P21050 52.50 1102.50
- I3 1102.50(0.05) 55.125 55.13
- At end of year 3 1102.50 55.13 1157.63
12Parameters and Cash Flows
- Parameters
- First cost (investment amounts)
- Estimates of useful or project life
- Estimated future cash flows (revenues and
expenses and salvage values) - Interest rate
- Cash Flows
- Estimate flows of money coming into the firm
revenues salvage values, etc. (magnitude and
timing) positive cash flows--cash inflows - Estimates of investment costs, operating costs,
taxes paid negative cash flows -- cash outflows
13Cash Flow Diagramming
- Engineering Economy has developed a graphical
technique for presenting a problem dealing with
cash flows and their timing. - Called a CASH FLOW DIAGRAM
- Similar to a free-body diagram in statics
- First, some important TERMS . . . .
14Terminology and Symbols
- P value or amount of money at a time
designated as the present or time 0. - F value or amount of money at some future time.
- A series of consecutive, equal, end-of-period
amounts of money. - n number of interest periods years
- i interest rate or rate of return per time
period percent per year, percent per month - t time, stated in periods years, months,
days, etc
15The Cash Flow Diagram CFD
- Extremely valuable analysis tool
- Graphical Representation on a time scale
- Does not have to be drawn to exact scale
- But, should be neat and properly labeled
- Assume a 5-year problem
16END OF PERIOD Convention
- A NET CASH FLOW is
- Cash Inflows Cash Outflows (for a given time
period) - We normally assume that all cash flows occur
- At the END of a given time period
- End-of-Period Assumption
17EQUIVALENCE
- You travel at 68 miles per hour
- Equivalent to 110 kilometers per hour
- Thus
- 68 mph is equivalent to 110 kph
- Using two measuring scales
- Is 68 equal to 110?
- No, not in terms of absolute numbers
- But they are equivalent in terms of the two
measuring scales
18ECONOMIC EQUIVALENCE
- Economic Equivalence
- Two sums of money at two different points in time
can be made economically equivalent if - We consider an interest rate and,
- No. of Time periods between the two sums
Equality in terms of Economic Value
19More on Economic Equivalence Concept
- Five plans are shown that will pay off a loan of
5,000 over 5 years with interest at 8 per year. - Plan1. Simple Interest, pay all at the end
- Plan 2. Compound Interest, pay all at the end
- Plan 3. Simple interest, pay interest at end of
each year. Pay the principal at the end of N 5 - Plan 4. Compound Interest and part of the
principal each year (pay 20 of the Prin. Amt.) - Plan 5. Equal Payments of the compound interest
and principal reduction over 5 years with end of
year payments
20Plan 1 _at_ 8 Simple Interest
- Simple Interest Pay all at end on 5,000 Loan
21Plan 2 Compound Interest 8/yr
- Pay all at the End of 5 Years
22 Plan 3 Simple Interest Paid Annually
- Principal Paid at the End (balloon Note)
23Plan 4 Compound Interest
- 20 of Principal Paid back annually
24Plan 5 Equal Repayment Plan
- Equal Annual Payments (Part Principal and Part
Interest
25Conclusion
- The difference in the total amounts repaid can be
explained (1) by the time value of money, (2) by
simple or compound interest, and (3) by the
partial repayment of principal prior to year 5.
26Finding Equivalent Values of Cash Flows- Six
Scenarios
- Given a
- Present sum of money
- Future sum of money
- Uniform end-of-period series
- Present sum of money
- Uniform end-of-period series
- Future sum of money
- Find its
- Equivalent future value
- Equivalent present value
- Equivalent present value
- Equivalent uniform end-of-period series
- Equivalent future value
- Equivalent uniform end-of-period series
27Derivation by Recursion F/P factor
- F1 P(1i)
- F2 F1(1i)..but
- F2 P(1i)(1i) P(1i)2
- F3 F2(1i) P(1i)2 (1i)
- P(1i)3
- In general
- FN P(1i)n
- FN P(F/P,i,n)
28Present Worth Factor from F/P
- Since FN P(1i)n
- We solve for P in terms of FN
- P F1/ (1i)n F(1i)-n
- Thus
- P F(P/F,i,n) where
- (P/F,i,n) (1i)-n
29An Example
- How much would you have to deposit now into an
account paying 10 interest per year in order to
have 1,000,000 in 40 years? - Assumptions constant interest rate no
additional deposits or withdrawals - Solution
- P 1000,000 (P/F, 10, 40)...
30Uniform Series Present Worth and Capital Recovery
Factors
A per period
31Uniform Series Present Worth and Capital Recovery
Factors
- Write a Present worth expression
1
2
32Uniform Series Present Worth and Capital Recovery
Factors
- Setting up the subtraction
2
-
1
3
33Uniform Series Present Worth and Capital Recovery
Factors
- Simplifying Eq. 3 further
The present worth point of an annuity cash flow
is always one period to the left of the first A
amount
A/P,i,n factor
34Section 3.9 Lotto Example
- If you win 5,000,000 in the California lottery,
how much will you be paid each year? How much
money must the lottery commission have on hand at
the time of the award? Assume interest 3/year. - Given Jackpot 5,000,000, N 19 years (1st
payment immediate), and i 3 year - Solution A 5,000,000/20 payments
250,000/payment (This is the lotterys
calculation of A - P 250,000 250,000(P A, 3, 19)
- P 250,000 3,580,950 3,830,950
35Sinking Fund and Series Compound amount factors
(A/F and F/A)
Find A given the Future amt. - F
A per period
0
36Example - Uniform Series Capital Recovery Factor
- Suppose you finance a 10,000 car over 60 months
at an interest rate of 1 per month. How much is
your monthly car payment? - Solution
- A 10,000 (A P, 1, 60) 222 per month
37Example Uniform Series Compound Amount Factor
- Assume you make 10 equal annual deposits of
2,000 into an account paying 5 per year. How
much is in the account just after the 10th
deposit? 12.5779 - Solution
- F 2,000 (FA, 5, 10) 25,156
- Again, due to compounding, FgtNxA when igt0.
38An Example
- Recall that you would need to deposit 22,100
today into an account paying 10 per year in
order to have 1,000,000 40 years from now.
Instead of the single deposit, what uniform
annual deposit for 40 years would also make you a
millionaire? - Solution
- A 1,000,000 (A F, 10, 40)
39Basic Setup for Interpolation
- Work with the following basic relationships
40Estimating for i 7.3
- Form the following relationships
41Interest Rates that vary over time
- In practice interest rates do not stay the same
over time unless by contractual obligation. - There can exist variation of interest rates
over time quite normal! - If required, how do you handle that situation?
42Section 3.12 Multiple Interest Factors
- Some situations include multiple unrelated sums
or series, requiring the problem be broken into
components that can be individually solved and
then re-integrated. See page 93. - Example Problem 3-95
- What is the value of the following CFD?
43Problem 3-95 Solution
- F1 -1,000(F/P,15,1) - 1,000 -2,150
- F2 F 1 (F/P,15,1) 3,000 527.50
- F4 F 2 (F/P,10,1)(F/P,6,1) 615.07
44Arithmetic Gradient Factors
- An arithmetic (linear) Gradient is a cash flow
series that either increases or decreases by a
contestant amount over n time periods. - A linear gradient is always comprised of TWO
components - The Gradient component
- The base annuity component
- The objective is to find a closed form expression
for the Present Worth of an arithmetic gradient
45Linear Gradient Example
This represents a positive, increasing arithmetic
gradient
46Present Worth Gradient Component
- General CF Diagram Gradient Part Only
47To Begin- Derivation of P/G,i,n
Multiply both sides by (1i)
48Subtracting 1 from 2..
2
1
49The A/G Factor
- Convert G to an equivalent A
A/G,i,n
50Gradient Example
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
- PW(10)Base Annuity 379.08
- PW(10)Gradient Component 686.18
- Total PW(10) 379.08 686.18
- Equals 1065.26
51Geometric Gradients
- An arithmetic (linear) gradient changes by a
fixed dollar amount each time period. - A GEOMETRIC gradient changes by a fixed
percentage each time period. - We define a UNIFORM RATE OF CHANGE () for each
time period - Define g as the constant rate of change in
decimal form by which amounts increase or
decrease from one period to the next
52Geometric Gradients Increasing
- Typical Geometric Gradient Profile
- Let A1 the first cash flow in the series
A1
A1(1g)
A1(1g)2
A1(1g)3
A1(1g)n-1
53Geometric Gradients Starting
- Pg The Ajs time the respective (P/F,i,j)
factor - Write a general present worth relationship to
find Pg.
Now, factor out the A1 value and rewrite as..
54Geometric Gradients
Subtract (1) from (2) and the result is..
55Geometric Gradients
For the case i g
56Geometric Gradient Example
- Assume maintenance costs for a particular
activity will be 1700 one year from now. - Assume an annual increase of 11 per year over a
6-year time period. - If the interest rate is 8 per year, determine
the present worth of the future expenses at time
t 0. - First, draw a cash flow diagram to represent the
model.
57Geometric Gradient Example (g)
- g 11 per period A1 1700 i 8/yr
58Example i unknown
- Assume on can invest 3000 now in a venture in
anticipation of gaining 5,000 in five (5) years. - If these amounts are accurate, what interest rate
equates these two cash flows?
5,000
- F P(1i)n
- (1i)5 5,000/3000 1.6667
- (1i) 1.66670.20
- i 1.1076 1 0.1076 10.76
3,000
59Unknown Number of Years
- Some problems require knowing the number of time
periods required given the other parameters - Example
- How long will it take for 1,000 to double in
value if the discount rate is 5 per year? - Draw the cash flow diagram as.
i 5/year n is unknown!
60Unknown Number of Years
- (1.05)x 2000/1000
- Xln(1.05) ln(2.000)
- X ln(1.05)/ln(2.000)
- X 0.6931/0.0488 14.2057 yrs
- With discrete compounding it will take 15 years
61Section 3.16. Nominal and Effective Interest
Rates
- Nominal interest (r) interest compounded more
than one interest period per year but quoted on
an annual basis. - Example 16, compounded quarterly
- Effective interest (i) actual interest rate
earned or charged for a specific time period. - Example 16/4 4 effective interest for each
of the four quarters during the year.
62Relationship
- Relation between nominal interest and effective
interest i(1r/M)M -1, where - i effective annual interest rate
- r nominal interest rate per year
- M number of compounding periods per year
- r/M interest rate per interest period
63Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Examples
- Find the effective interest rate per year at a
nominal rate of 18 compounded (1) quarterly, (2)
semiannually, and (3) monthly. - (1) Quarterly compounding i(10.18/4)4
-10.1925 or 19.25 - (2) Semiannual compounding i(10.18/2)2
-10.1881 or 18.81 - (3) Monthly compounding ...
64Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Example
- A credit card company advertises an A.P.R. of
16.9 compounded daily on unpaid balances. What
is the effective interest rate per year being
charged? r 16.9 M 365 - Solution
- ieff (10.169/365)365 -10.184 or 18.4 per year
65Nominal and Effective Interest Rates
- Two situations well deal with in Chapter 3
- (1) Cash flows are annual. Were given r per year
and M. Procedure find i/yr (1r/M)M-1 and
discount/compound annual cash flows at i/yr. - (2) Cash flows occur M times per year. Were
given r per year and M. Find the interest rate
that corresponds to M, which is r/M per time
period (e.g., quarter, month). Then
discount/compound the M cash flows per year at
r/M for the time period given.
66Example 12 Nominal
12 nominal for various compounding periods
67Interest Problems with Compounding more often
than once per Year Example A
- If you deposit 1,000 now, 3,000 four years from
now followed by five quarterly deposits
decreasing by 500 per quarter at an interest
rate of 12 per year compounded quarterly, how
much money will you have in you account 10 years
from now?
r/M 3 per quarter and year 3.75 15th
Quarter P _at_yr. 3.75 P qtr. 15 3000(P/A, 3,
6) - 500(P/G, 3, 6) 9713.60 F yr. 10 F qtr.
40 9713.60(F/P, 3, 25) 1000(F/P, 3, 40)
23,600.34
68Interest Problems with Compounding more often
than once per Year Example B
- If you deposit 1,000 now, 3,000 four years from
now, and 1,500 six years from now at an interest
rate of 12 per year compounded semiannually, how
much money will you have in your account 10 years
from now? - i per year (10.12/2)12-1 0.1236
- F 1,000(F/P, 12.36, 10) 3,000(F/P, 12.36,
6) 1,500(F/P, 12.36, 4) or r/M 6 per
half-year - F 1000(F/P, 6, 20) 3000(F/P, 6, 12)
1500(F/P, 6, 8) - 11,634.50
69Derivation of Continuous Compounding
- We can state, in general terms for the EAIR
Now, examine the impact of letting m approach
infinity.
70Derivation of Continuous Compounding
- We re-define the general form as
- From the calculus of limits there is an important
limit that is quite useful.
ieff. er 1
71Derivation of Continuous Compounding
- Example
- What is the true, effective annual interest rate
if the nominal rate is given as - r 18, compounded continuously
Solve e0.18 1 1.1972 1 19.72/year
The 19.72 represents the MAXIMUM effective
interest rate for 18 compounded anyway you
choose!
72Example
- An investor requires an effective return of at
least 15 per year. What is the minimum annual
nominal rate that is acceptable if interest on
his investment is compounded continuously? - Solution
- er 1 0.15
- er 1.15
- ln(er) ln(1.15)
- r ln(1.15) 0.1398 13.98