Title: Time Value of Money
1Time Value of Money
- FIL 404
- Prepared by Keldon Bauer
2Cash 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.
3Cash 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.
4Cash Flow Time Lines
- Outflows are listed as negatives.
- Inflows are positive.
- State the appropriate interest rate, which
represents your opportunity costs
5Future 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.
6Future Value - Example
- If you invest 1,000 today at 8 interest per
year, how much should you have in five years (in
thousands).
7Future Value
- For one year, the future value can be defined as
8Future Value
- The second year, the future value can be stated
as follows
9Future Value
- Therefore, the general solution to the future
value problem is - The Excel formula is
- FV(Interest, Term, Payments, Present Value,
Type)
10Future Value - Excel
11Future Value
- Interest can be seen as the opportunity growth
rate of money.
12Present 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
13Present Value
- The general solution to this problem follows from
the solution to the future value problem
14Present Value - Excel
- The Excel formula is
- PV(Interest, Term, Payments, Future Value,
Type)
15Present Value - Excel
16Present 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.
17Interest 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.
18Interest Rates
- Solving for interest rates algebraically
19Interest Rates - Example
In Excel RATE(Term, Payment, Present Value,
Future Value, Type, Guess)
20Interest Rate - Excel
21Time 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
22Time 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)
23Time Periods - Excel
24Annuities
- 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.
25Ordinary Annuity
- Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
years earning 8 interest.
26Ordinary Annuity Future Value
- The future value of an ordinary annuity can be
found as follows
27Ordinary Annuity - Example
28Ordinary Annuity - Example
29Annuity Due
- Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
years earning 8 interest.
30Annuity 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
31Annuity Due - Example
32Annuity Due - Excel
33Ordinary Annuity - Present Value
- Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
years earning 8 interest.
34Ordinary Annuity - Present Value
- The present value of an ordinary annuity can be
found as follows
35Ordinary Annuity - Example
36Ordinary Annuity - Excel
37Annuity Due - Present Value
- Example is a regular payment of 100 for five
years earning 8 interest.
38Annuity Due - Present Value
- The future value of an annuity due can be found
as follows
39Annuity Due - Example
40Annuity Due - Excel
41Annuities - 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.
42Perpetuities
- What would you have to pay to be paid 2,000 per
year forever (given a market rate of 8)?
43Uneven 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.
44Uneven Cash Flows - Example
1,136.51 Present Value
45Uneven 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.
46Uneven Cash Flows - Excel
47Uneven Cash Flow - Example
Future Value 1,669.91
48Uneven Cash Flows - Excel
49Finding 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.
50Compounding
- The more often one compounds interest, the faster
it grows.
Annual
Semi-Annual
51Compounding
- 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?
52Effective Annual Rate
- To convert the other compounding periods to an
effective annual compounding rate (EAR) use the
following formula
53Effective Annual Rate - Example
- 8 monthly compounding loan is equal to what in
effective annual rate?
54Fractional 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.
55Amortized 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.
56Amortized Loans
- The present value of a monthly loan uses the
annuity formula adjusted for monthly payments
57Amortized Loans
- Payments on a given loan can be found by solving
for PMT in the previous equation
58Amortized Loans - Example
- What is the payment on a 30 year loan of 150,000?
59Amortized Loans - Excel
60Amortization 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.
61Amortization 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.
62Amortization Schedules
- After the first month, one has 359 payments left.
Therefore the loan principal outstanding is
63Amortization 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
.
64Amortization Schedules
65Different 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.
66Different 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)