Discounted Cash Flow Valuation

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Discounted Cash Flow Valuation

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Title: Discounted Cash Flow Valuation


1
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
  • Chapter 5

2
Topics
  • Be able to compute the future value of multiple
    cash flows
  • Be able to compute the present value of multiple
    cash flows
  • Understand how interest rates are quoted
  • Be able to compute loan payments
  • Be able to find the interest rate on a loan
  • Understand how loans are amortized or paid off

3
Page 113
  • Students who learn this material well will find
    that life is much easier down the road
  • Getting it straight now will save you a lot of
    headaches later

4
Annuities
  • Annuity Definition
  • A level steam of cash flows for a fixed period of
    time
  • Each payment is for the same amount
  • The time between payments is always the same
  • Timing for annuities
  • Ordinary Annuity (Mortgage contracts)
  • Payments are made at the end of each period
  • The day you sign the contract, you do not make a
    payment
  • Annuity due (Lease contracts)
  • Payments are made at the beginning of each period

5
Annuities
  • Types of annuities
  • Savings plan
  • If I put 50 in the bank each month for 35 years,
    how much will I have when I retire? What is the
    future value?
  • Future value of future cash flows valuation
  • If I want to be a millionaire, how much do I have
    to put in the bank each period. What is the
    PMTFV?
  • Loan (DEBT) periodic payment
  • If I take out a loan, what is the periodic
    repayment amount? What is the PMTPV?
  • Present value of future cash flows valuation
  • If I know the asset will give me 50 at the end
    of each month for the next 25 years, what should
    I pay for this asset today? What is the present
    value?

6
Annuities (Math)
  • All the cash flow associated with an annuity
    represent a geometric sequences
  • Geometric sequences
  • A geometric sequence is one in which each
    successive term of the sequence is the same
    nonzero constant multiple of the preceding term
  • Constant multiple (successive term)/(preceding
    term)
  • Every two successive terms have a common ratio
  • The total value of an annuity represents a finite
    geometric series
  • Geometric series
  • The sum of the terms in a geometric sequence

7
How To Determine The Present Value Of Investments
With Multiple Future Cash Flows
8
Annuity Sweepstakes Example
  • Suppose you win the Publishers Clearinghouse 10
    million sweepstakes. The money is paid in equal
    annual installments of 333,333.33 over 30 years.
    If the appropriate discount rate is 5, how much
    is the sweepstakes actually worth today?
  • PV 333,333.331 1/1.0530 / .05 5,124,150.29

9
Buying a House
  • You are ready to buy a house and you have 20,000
    for a down payment and closing costs. Closing
    costs are estimated to be 4 of the loan value.
    You have an annual salary of 36,000 and the bank
    is willing to allow your monthly mortgage payment
    to be equal to 28 of your monthly income. The
    interest rate on the loan is 6 per year with
    monthly compounding (.5 per month) for a 30-year
    fixed rate loan. How much money will the bank
    loan you? How much can you offer for the house?

10
Buying a House - Continued
  • Bank loan
  • Monthly income 36,000 / 12 3,000
  • Maximum payment .28(3,000) 840
  • PV 8401 1/1.005360 / .005 140,105
  • Total Price
  • Closing costs .04(140,105) 5,604
  • Down payment 20,000 5604 14,396
  • Total Price 140,105 14,396 154,501

11
Quick Quiz Part 2
  • You know the payment amount for a loan and you
    want to know how much was borrowed. Do you
    compute a present value or a future value?
  • You want to receive 5000 per month in retirement.
    If you can earn .75 per month and you expect to
    need the income for 25 years, how much do you
    need to have in your account at retirement?

12
Finding the Rate
  • Suppose you borrow 10,000 from your parents to
    buy a car. You agree to pay 207.58 per month
    for 60 months. What is the monthly interest
    rate?
  • Sign convention matters!!!
  • 60 N
  • 10,000 PV
  • -207.58 PMT
  • In EXCEL use the RATE function

13
How To Determine The Future Value Of Investments
With Multiple Future Cash Flows
14
Future Values for Annuities
  • Suppose you begin saving for your retirement by
    depositing 2000 per year in an IRA. If the
    interest rate is 7.5, how much will you have in
    40 years?
  • FV 2000(1.07540 1)/.075 454,513.04

15
Annuity Due
  • You are saving for a new house and you put
    10,000 per year in an account paying 8,
    compounded yearly. The first payment is made
    today. How much will you have at the end of 3
    years?
  • FV 10,000(1.083 1) / .08(1.08) 35,061.12
  • Annuity Due trick Annuity due value Ordinary
    annuity value(1i/n)
  • PV Annuity Due trick Subtract one period, then
    add one payment to PV

16
Perpetuity (Consol)
  • An annuity in which the cash flow continues
    forever
  • Equal cash flow goes on forever (like most
    preferred stock pays dividend)
  • Preferred Stock is a Perpetuity
  • Capitalization of Income

17
Perpetuity
  • If you buy preferred stock that pays out a
    contractual yearly dividend of 5.50 and the
    appropriate discount rate is 12, what is the
    stock worth? (What is the present value of this
    perpetuity?)
  • 5.5/.12 45.83
  • If RAD Corp. wants to sell preferred stock for
    125 per share with a contractual quarterly
    dividend, and a similar company that pays a
    quarterly dividend of 2 and has a stock price of
    150, what should the RAD Corp.s dividend be if
    it wants to sell its stock?
  • PMT/(i/n) PV ? 2/(i/n) 150 ?2/150 .1333
  • Thus RAD Corp.s quarterly dividend must be
    1.33, or .01333125 1.67

18
How Interest Rates Are Quoted (And Misquoted)
  • Interest Rates
  • Periodic Rate
  • Annual Percentage Rate
  • Effective Annual Rate (EAR)

19
Periodic Rate
  • Interest rate per period

20
Annual Percentage Rate
  • Stated Interest Rates
  • The interest rate expressed in terms of the
    interest payment made each period. Also Quoted
    Interest Rate.
  • Usually listed as
  • APR (Annual Percentage Rate)
  • 10, compounded quarterly
  • Annual Percentage Rate
  • The interest rate charged per period multiplied
    by the number of periods per year
  • Truth-in-Lending Act Requires

21
Computing APRs
  • What is the APR if the monthly rate is .5?
  • .5(12) 6
  • What is the APR if the semiannual rate is .5?
  • .5(2) 1
  • What is the monthly rate if the APR is 12 with
    monthly compounding?
  • 12 / 12 1
  • Can you divide the above APR by 2 to get the
    semiannual rate? NO!!! You need an APR based on
    semiannual compounding to find the semiannual
    rate.

22
Things to Remember
  • You ALWAYS need to make sure that the interest
    rate and the time period match.
  • If you are looking at annual periods, you need an
    annual rate.
  • If you are looking at monthly periods, you need a
    monthly rate.
  • If you have an APR based on monthly compounding,
    you have to use monthly periods for lump sums, or
    adjust the interest rate appropriately if you
    have payments other than monthly

23
Computing EARs - Example
  • Suppose you can earn 1 per month on 1 invested
    today.
  • What is the APR? 1(12) 12
  • How much are you effectively earning?
  • FV 1(1.01)12 1.1268
  • Rate (1.1268 1) / 1 .1268 12.68
  • Suppose if you put it in another account, you
    earn 3 per quarter.
  • What is the APR? 3(4) 12
  • How much are you effectively earning?
  • FV 1(1.03)4 1.1255
  • Rate (1.1255 1) / 1 .1255 12.55

24
Effective Annual Rate (EAR)
  • The interest rate expressed as if it were
    compounded once
  • You should NEVER divide the effective rate by the
    number of periods per year it will NOT give you
    the period rate

25
Effective Annual Rate (EAR)
  • One compounding period per year
  • APR EAR
  • When number of compounding periods per year goes
    up, EAR goes up, but up to a limit
  • 365 periods per year is near the limit
  • Limit of EAR ei
  • EAR (1.12/365)365 -1 .127474614
  • e.12 .127496852
  • e ? 2.718281828

26
Effective Annual Rate (EAR)
  • If you want to compare two alternative
    investments with different compounding periods
    you need to compute the EAR and use that for
    comparison.

27
Decisions, Decisions II
  • You are looking at two savings accounts. One pays
    5.25, with daily compounding. The other pays
    5.3 with semiannual compounding. Which account
    should you use?
  • First account
  • EAR (1 .0525/365)365 1 5.39
  • Second account
  • EAR (1 .053/2)2 1 5.37
  • Which account should you choose and why?

28
Decisions, Decisions II Continued
  • Lets verify the choice. Suppose you invest 100
    in each account. How much will you have in each
    account in one year?
  • First Account
  • Daily rate .0525 / 365 .00014383562
  • FV 100(1.00014383562)365 105.39
  • Second Account
  • Semiannual rate .0539 / 2 .0265
  • FV 100(1.0265)2 105.37
  • You have more money in the first account.

29
Loans
  • Interest Only Loans
  • Amortized Loans
  • Pure Discount Loans
  • Principal Amount lent by lender Amount
    received by borrower
  • Interest Only Loans ? Principal stays the same
    until the end of the loan, then principal is paid
    back
  • Amortized Loans ? A small amount of the principal
    is paid off each period and principal amount gets
    smaller as payments are made
  • Periodic Interest PrincipalPeriodic Rate

30
Loans
  • Each type of loan has different combinations of
    payments of cash flows
  • Amounts
  • Timing
  • Interest payments
  • Principal payments
  • Sign

31
Loans
  • How Loan Payments Are Calculated And How To Find
    The Interest Rate On A Loan
  • How Loans Are Amortized Or Paid Off

32
Interest Only Loans (Coupon)
  • Pay fixed interest amount each period
  • Principal Periodic Rate
  • Pay the principal back (all at once) at the end
    of the loan period (plus the last fixed interest
    amount)
  • Example Bonds

33
Interest Only Loans(Coupon)
34
Amortized Loans - Repay Part Interest And Part
Principal Each Period
  • Medium-term business loans
  • Period payments
  • Interest amount paid changes each period
  • Principal amount paid is fixed
  • Consumer/mortgage loans
  • Period payments
  • Interest amount paid changes each period
  • Principal amount paid changes each period
  • Ordinary annuity

35
Amortized Loans - Medium-term Business Loans
  • Periodic Interest Amount
  • Principal Periodic Rate
  • Pay changing interest amount each period (amount
    gets smaller each period)
  • Principal amount paid
  • Fixed Amount
  • Total Periodic payment gets smaller each period

36
Amortized LoansMedium-termBusiness Loans
37
Amortized Loans - Consumer/mortgage loans
Effective Interest Rate Method for Bonds
  • Periodic Interest Amount
  • Principal Periodic Rate
  • Pay changing interest amount each period (amount
    gets smaller each period)
  • Principal amount paid
  • Periodic Payment - Periodic Interest Amount
  • Total Periodic payment stays the same each period
  • Ordinary Annuity Solve for PMT

38
Amortized Loans Consumer/mortgage loans
39
Pay Off Loan Early (Balloon Payment)
  • The present value of all remaining future cash
    flows will give you the amount to pay off

40
Pure Discount Loans (Zero Coupon)
  • Borrow an amount today, then pay back principal
    and all interest at the end of the loan period
  • Example US Government Treasury Bills, or T-bills
    (government loans lt 1year)

41
Pure Discount Loans (Zero Coupon)
42
Multiple Cash Flows FV Example 1
  • Suppose you invest 500 in a mutual fund today
    and 600 in one year. If the fund pays 9
    annually, how much will you have in two years?
  • FV 500(1.09)2 600(1.09) 1248.05

43
Example 1 Continued
  • How much will you have in 5 years if you make no
    further deposits?
  • First way
  • FV 500(1.09)5 600(1.09)4 1616.26
  • Second way use value at year 2
  • FV 1248.05(1.09)3 1616.26

44
Multiple Cash Flows Present Value Example 2
  • Find the PV of each cash flow and add them
  • Year 1 CF 200 / (1.12)1 178.57
  • Year 2 CF 400 / (1.12)2 318.88
  • Year 3 CF 600 / (1.12)3 427.07
  • Year 4 CF 800 / (1.12)4 508.41
  • Total PV 178.57 318.88 427.07 508.41
    1432.93

45
Example 2 Timeline
46
Multiple Cash Flows PV Another Example
  • You are considering an investment that will pay
    you 1000 in one year, 2000 in two years and
    3000 in three years. If you want to earn 10 on
    your money, how much would you be willing to pay?
  • PV 1000 / (1.1)1 909.09
  • PV 2000 / (1.1)2 1652.89
  • PV 3000 / (1.1)3 2253.94
  • PV 909.09 1652.89 2253.94 4815.93

47
Decisions, Decisions
  • Your broker calls you and tells you that he has
    this great investment opportunity. If you invest
    100 today, you will receive 40 in one year and
    75 in two years. If you require a 15 return on
    investments of this risk, should you take the
    investment?

48
Saving For Retirement
  • You are offered the opportunity to put some money
    away for retirement. You will receive five annual
    payments of 25,000 each beginning in 40 years.
    How much would you be willing to invest today if
    you desire an interest rate of 12?

49
Summary Slide
  • Annuities
  • How To Determine The Present Value Of Investments
    With Multiple Future Cash Flows
  • Finding the Rate
  • How To Determine The Future Value Of Investments
    With Multiple Future Cash Flows
  • Annuity Due (BEGIN mode)
  • Perpetuity (Consol)
  • How Interest Rates Are Quoted (And Misquoted)
  • Loans
  • Multiple Cash Flows
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