Time Value of Money

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Time Value of Money

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Time Value of Money FIL 404 Prepared by Keldon Bauer Cash Flow Time Lines You win a contest, and you have the option of taking $1.4 million now or $250,000 per year ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Time Value of Money


1
Time Value of Money
  • FIL 404
  • Prepared by Keldon Bauer

2
Cash Flow Time Lines
  • You win a contest, and you have the option of
    taking 1.4 million now or 250,000 per year for
    five years.
  • Which should you take?
  • The answer comes through taking into
    consideration the time value of money.

3
Cash Flow Time Lines
  • The first step is visualizing the cash flows by
    drawing a cash flow time line.
  • Time lines show when cash flows occur.
  • Time 0 is now.

4
Cash Flow Time Lines
  • Outflows are listed as negatives.
  • Inflows are positive.
  • State the appropriate interest rate, which
    represents your opportunity costs

5
Future Value
  • Future value is higher than today, because if I
    had the money I would put it to work, it would
    earn interest.
  • The interest could then earn interest.
  • Compounding allowing interest to earn interest
    on itself.

6
Future Value - Example
  • If you invest 1,000 today at 8 interest per
    year, how much should you have in five years (in
    thousands).

7
Future Value
  • For one year, the future value can be defined as

8
Future Value
  • The second year, the future value can be stated
    as follows

9
Future Value
  • Therefore, the general solution to the future
    value problem is
  • The Excel formula is
  • FV(Interest, Term, Payments, Present Value,
    Type)

10
Future Value - Excel
11
Future Value
  • Interest can be seen as the opportunity growth
    rate of money.

12
Present Value
  • Present value is the value in todays dollars of
    a future cash flow.
  • If we are interested in the present value of 500
    delivered in 5 years

13
Present Value
  • The general solution to this problem follows from
    the solution to the future value problem

14
Present Value - Excel
  • The Excel formula is
  • PV(Interest, Term, Payments, Future Value,
    Type)

15
Present Value - Excel
16
Present Value
  • Since the discount rate is the opportunity cost,
    the present value represents what I would have to
    give up now to get the future value specified.

17
Interest Rates
  • If we know the amount we need at time n and the
    amount we can invest at time zero, then we must
    only solve for the interest rate.

18
Interest Rates
  • Solving for interest rates algebraically

19
Interest Rates - Example
In Excel RATE(Term, Payment, Present Value,
Future Value, Type, Guess)
20
Interest Rate - Excel
21
Time Periods
  • If the present value, future value and interest
    rate are known, but the number of time periods is
    not. Then n can be found algebraically

22
Time Periods - Example
  • If we use the last example of investing 100, we
    want 500 in future, and the current market
    interest is 8, n can be found

In Excel NPER(Interest, Payment, Present
Value, Future Value, Type)
23
Time Periods - Excel
24
Annuities
  • Definition A series of equal payments at a
    fixed interval.
  • Two types
  • Ordinary annuity Payments occur at the end of
    each period. (Default in Excel)
  • Annuity due Payments occur at the beginning of
    each period. (Set the type 1 in Excel)
  • In Excel, use the same formulas introduced so
    far, just specify payment and type.

25
Ordinary Annuity
  • Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
    years earning 8 interest.

26
Ordinary Annuity Future Value
  • The future value of an ordinary annuity can be
    found as follows

27
Ordinary Annuity - Example
28
Ordinary Annuity - Example
29
Annuity Due
  • Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
    years earning 8 interest.

30
Annuity Due Future Value
  • The future value of an annuity due can be found
    by noticing that the annuity due is the same as
    an ordinary annuity, with one more compounding
    period

31
Annuity Due - Example
32
Annuity Due - Excel
33
Ordinary Annuity - Present Value
  • Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
    years earning 8 interest.

34
Ordinary Annuity - Present Value
  • The present value of an ordinary annuity can be
    found as follows

35
Ordinary Annuity - Example
36
Ordinary Annuity - Excel
37
Annuity Due - Present Value
  • Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
    years earning 8 interest.

38
Annuity Due - Present Value
  • The future value of an annuity due can be found
    as follows

39
Annuity Due - Example
40
Annuity Due - Excel
41
Annuities - Finding Interest Rate
  • Interest rates cannot be solved directly.
  • Calculators and computers search for the correct
    answer (there is only one correct answer).
  • It guesses and then iteratively goes higher or
    lower.

42
Perpetuities
  • What would you have to pay to be paid 2,000 per
    year forever (given a market rate of 8)?

43
Uneven Cash Flow Streams
  • If payments are irregular or come at irregular
    intervals, we can still find the PV (or FV).
  • Take the present value (or future value) of
    individual payments and sum them together.

44
Uneven Cash Flows - Example
1,136.51 Present Value
45
Uneven Cash Flows - Excel
  • Excel can do this in one argument
  • NPV(Interest, Array of Payments starting with
    payment for time 1).
  • If you want to include a payment in time zero,
    add it to the above argument separately.

46
Uneven Cash Flows - Excel
47
Uneven Cash Flow - Example
Future Value 1,669.91
48
Uneven Cash Flows - Excel
49
Finding Interest Rate
  • As with annuities, interest rates for uneven cash
    flow streams cannot be solved directly.
  • Calculators search for the correct answer, called
    an IRR (there may be more than one correct
    answer).
  • It guesses and then iteratively goes higher or
    lower.

50
Compounding
  • The more often one compounds interest, the faster
    it grows.

Annual
Semi-Annual
51
Compounding
  • Why is there a difference in future value?
  • Because interest is earned on itself faster!
  • How would you adjust to compound monthly?
  • How would you make an adjustment in annuities?

52
Effective Annual Rate
  • To convert the other compounding periods to an
    effective annual compounding rate (EAR) use the
    following formula

53
Effective Annual Rate - Example
  • 8 monthly compounding loan is equal to what in
    effective annual rate?

54
Fractional Time Periods
  • If you invest 100 for nine months at an EAR of
    8, how does one calculate the future value?
  • The same way one did before.

55
Amortized Loans
  • A loan with equal payments over the life of the
    loan is called an amortized loan.
  • Loan mathematics are the same as an annuity.
  • Loan amounts are the present value.
  • Periodic loan payments are the payments.

56
Amortized Loans
  • The present value of a monthly loan uses the
    annuity formula adjusted for monthly payments

57
Amortized Loans
  • Payments on a given loan can be found by solving
    for PMT in the previous equation

58
Amortized Loans - Example
  • What is the payment on a 30 year loan of 150,000?

59
Amortized Loans - Excel
60
Amortization Schedules
  • Amortization schedules show how much of each
    payment goes toward principal and how much toward
    interest.
  • The easiest way of calculating one by hand is by
    calculating the outstanding loan balance
    month-by-month, and then taking the difference in
    loan balance from month to month as the principal
    portion of the payment.

61
Amortization Schedules
  • The portion in the amortized loan formula that
    says nm can be interpreted as months remaining.
  • So to find the part of the first 1,100.65 that
    is paid toward the principal one would realize
    that at the beginning one had all 150,000
    outstanding.
  • I have posted an Excel example on the web.

62
Amortization Schedules
  • After the first month, one has 359 payments left.
    Therefore the loan principal outstanding is

63
Amortization Schedules
  • The difference in principal outstanding is the
    part of the payment that went toward principal.
    In this instance, 150,000-149,899.35100.65
  • The rest of the payment went toward interest. In
    this instance that would be 1,100.65-100.651,000
    .

64
Amortization Schedules
65
Different Types of Interest
  • Simple Interest (i or isimple) - The rate we have
    used thus far to calculate interest.
  • Periodic Interest (i or iperiodic) - The interest
    paid over a certain period.

66
Different Types of Interest
  • Effective Annual Rate (EAR) Described earlier
    as the rate that would be charged to get the same
    compounded annual rate.
  • Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
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