Title: Additional Solved Problems
1Additional Solved Problems
2The Problem
- You've received a 40,000 legal settlement. Your
great-uncle recommends investing it for
retirement in 27-years by rolling over one-year
certificates of deposit (CDs) - Your local bank has 3 1-year CDs
- How much will your investment be worth?
- Comment.
3Categorization
- Your capital gains will be reinvested. There is
no cash-flow from the settlement for 27 years, so
this is a lump sum problem. - There is some uncertainty in the cash flows
because interest rate are static for just the
first year, but we assume that it will be 3
until you retire - If you are unable to shelter your earnings, the
IRS will want their cut
4Data Extraction
- PV 40,000
- i 3 (or 3 (1- marginal tax rate)?)
- n 27-years
- FV ?
5Solution by Equation
6Calculator Solution
7Comments
- Your great uncle's a financial idiot
- Given a 27-year investment, you should either
- Invest the money more aggressively to accumulate
the money you need to survive, or
- Live! Blow the money on that red convertible!
83 Additional Solved Problems
9Problem 1
- If you have five years to increase your money
from 3,287 to 4,583, at what interest rate
should you invest?
10Algebraic Solution
11Problem 2
- An investment you made 12-years ago is today
worth its purchase price. It has never paid a
dividend. - Closer inspection reveals that the share price
has been highly periodic, moving from 150 when
purchased, to 300 in the next year, to 75 in
the next, back to 150, before repeating
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1312-Year and Average Returns
Compare with Average HPR
14Comments
- Here we have the average holding period return
being 41.67 per year, while the security has
returned you nothing over the whole period! - Averages seduce us with their intuitiveness
- The correct average to have used was the
geometric average of return factors, not the
arithmetic average of return rates
15Averages Must be Meaningful 1
- You walk 1 mile at 2 mph and another at 3 mph.
What was your average speed? (23)/2 2.5 mph. - NO!
- The first leg lasts 1/2 hour, and the second leg
lasts 1/3 hours, total 5/6 hours. - So average speed is 2/(5/6) 2.4 mph.
16Averages Must be Meaningful 2
- A little analysis shows that the correct mean for
the walker is the harmonic mean - The correct mean for the return problem may be
shown to be the geometric mean of the
(1return)s - The appropriate mean requires thought
17Problem 3
- In 1066 the First Duke of Oxbridge was awarded a
square mile of London for his services in
assisting the conquest the England. The 30th
Duke wished to live a faster paced life, and sold
his holding in 1966 for 5,000,000,000.
Examination of original projects cost showed
only the entry 1066 a.d. to repair armor, 5 - What was rate of capital appreciation ?
18Categorization
- We may assume that the Dukes lived quite well
from leasing land to their tenants, but we are
not interested in the revenue cash flows here,
just the capital cash flows - There is a present cash flow, a future cash flow,
and no annuity payments, so the problem is the
return on a lump-sum invested for a number of
periods
19Data Extraction
- PV 10
- FV 5,000,000,000
- n (1966 - 1066) 1900
- i ?
20Solution by Equation
21Solution by Calculator
22Comments
- Note that a capital gain of only 1.1 per year
results in a huge value over time - Time plus return is very potent
- The real issue here is what is missing, namely
the revenue streams
23Additional Solved Problems
- Lump Sum
- Number of periods
24The Problem
- How many years would it take for an investment of
9,284 to grow to 22,450 if the interest rate is
7 p.a. ? - p.a. per annum per year
25Categorization
- This is a lump sum problem asking for a solution
in terms of time. Most of these problems are
useful models of reality if expressed in real
terms, not nominal terms - In any nominal situation, the terminal 22,450
will not be a constant, but will depend on the
unknown time - We will assume that the numbers and rates are in
real terms
26Data Extraction
- PV 9,284
- FV 22,450
- i 7 p.a.
- n ?
27Solution by Equation
28Additional Solved Problems
29The Problem
- If investment rates are 1 per month, and you
have an investment that will produce 6,000 one
hundred months from now, how much is your
investment worth today?
30Categorization
- This is the most basic of financial situations,
and involves finding the present value of a
future payment given no periodic payments - The issue of risk is a little fuzzy. It is
assumed that the rate given is for the projects
risk category
31Data Extraction
- FV 6000
- PV ?
- n 100 months
- i 1
32Solution by Equation
33Calculator Solution
34Additional Solved Problems
- Lump Sum
- Special Case Doubling
- Rule of 72
35The Problem
- Consider the following simple example
- Sol Cooper Investments have offered you a deal.
Invest with them and they will double your
investment in 10 years. What interest rate are
they offering you? - We could solve this using
- but this is over-kill
36Data Extraction
37Some Algebra
38Solution by Equation
39The Secret Reveled
- Now you have seen the derivation of the rule of
72, you are now able to produce your own personal
rules. Example - The Rule of a Magnitude
- To increase your wealth by 10 times, the product
of interest and time is 240, that is about
(2.08/2)ln(10) - Example, how long will it take to increase your
money ten times, given interest rates of 10? - N 240/10 24 years, real answer is 24.16 years
40How good is the Rule of 72?
- We have derived a rule using approximation
methods, but have no idea how accurate it is - There are two tests we could apply
- we could take some range, and determine the
absolute maximum error of the rule in that range - we could simply graph the error
- Graphs are fun
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43Graph of Rule of 72 Error
- The high error in a part of the graph that does
not interest us is hiding the error in the part
that does. We have two choices - plot absolute error on a log scale
- truncate the graph and re-scale
- Truncation is fun
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45Another Example
- You are a stockbroker wishing to persuade a young
client to reconsider her 50,000 invested in
3-CDs. - Your client believes that stock mutual funds will
return about 12 for the foreseeable future, but
is averse to the volatility risks. Her money
will remain fully invested for the next 48 years.
46Step 1
- The first step requires the calculation of how
long is required to obtain a single doubling - CDs 72/3 24 years to double
- Mutual fund 72/12 6 years to double
47Step 2
- The second step requires the calculation of how
many doublings will occur during the lives of the
investments - CDs 48/24 2 doublings
- Mutual fund 48/6 8 doublings
48Step 3
- The third step calculates the value of the
investment in 48 years - CDs 2 doublings of 50,000
- 200,000
- Mutual fund 8 doubling of 50,000
- 256 50,000
- 12,800,000 in 48 years
49Conclusion
- We shall discover that her risk is smaller than
she imagines, but she will be about 64 times more
wealthy if she accepts that risk - Using the accurate method, her respective wealths
are 206,613 and 11,519,539, - The lesson is to start to invest early, and
accept some risk
50Growth at 3 and 12
- The following graph shows her wealth increases
over 10 years at a 3 and 12 - The graph was cut at 10 years because the 12
rate of growth is so large that it dwarfs the 3
growth, making the graph meaningless
51Growth of 50,000 for 10 Years _at_ 3 and 12
52Log Transformation of Y-Axis
- A common way to plot two such cash flows on the
same graph is to use a semi-log graph. This
prevents scale problems from hiding one of the
graphs - Note that the two graphs appear to be straight
lines, and this is in fact the case
53Growth of 50,000 at 3 and 12 for 48 Years (Log
Scale)
54What is the use of the Rule?
- A significant source of avoidable error in
financial calculations results from blindly
running the numbers without reviewing them for
empirical reasonableness - It is a good practice to estimate values before
computing them - The rule of 72 is one tool that sometimes gives
you numerical feel of a problem
55- Your reaction to learning the rule of 72 is
- Why bother, Ive got the latest and best HP
financial calculator. - In a business meeting, the unilateral drawing of
a financial calculator has a chilling effect on
your opponents flexibility in a negotiation - It is amazing how many real problems you can
solve in your head using the rule of 72
56Additional Solved Problems
- Irregular Cash Flows
- Backwards Method
57The Problem
- You have been offered a video business, and
estimate that video rental technology will be
obsolete in 8 years when cable bandwidths and
video compression will permit movie-on-demand.
You require a 20 return on this class of risk.
The cash flows, starting 1-year from now,are 90,
110, 140, 140, 130, 90, 70, 30 (thousands of s)
58A Faster Method of Discounting
- This is basically a present value of a lump sum
repeated 8-times - The most straightforward method would be to
crunch the answer or use an Excel worksheet - A good method to use on a calculator is the
following algorithm
59A Faster Method of Discounting (Continued)
- Input the last cash flow, and divide by the
interest factor to bring it to a year earlier - Iterate
- Add this discounted cash flow to the cash flow
that is already there, and discount the total for
another period by dividing by the interest
factor. Stop when you reach the current time - Doing this is a lot simpler than it sounds
60Data and Computation Backwards
61Equations
62Data and ComputationTraditional
63Equations
64Calculator Solution
- The computation a BAII calculator is
- 30/1.1 70/1.1 90/1.1 130/1.1 140/1.1
140/1.1 110/1.1 90/1.1 - The solution is 554.97
- Calculators differ in the way they string
computations, you may need to add after the
dollar amounts - See the savings on computational time!
65Comments
- It is particularly useful to know the backwards
method when the yield curve is not flat. (Use
the forward rates). The level of computation
savings are even greater in this case
66Additional Solved Problems
67The Problem
- Advertisement
- American Classic Cars! Finance Special! Sprite
Conversion! Now Only 15,000! Just 1,000 Down,
and 3-years to pay! Only 3 per year!
(Compounded monthly with your good credit.)
68The Problem (Continued)
- Classic Car News has an almost identical car
advertised for 9,000, but it needs 3,000 of
work to match the condition of the car offered by
ACC. - What implied rate of interest, (per year,
compounded yearly) would you be paying if you
purchased the car from ACC?
69Explanation
- When purchasing from Smart, you are buying a
bundle of financing and car - To un-bundle the package, you use the cost of
acquiring the competing car - Cash value of car 9,000 3,000 12,000
- Next, determine the cash flows associated with
the financed car
70Calculator
71Analysis Continued
- The equivalent value of each cash flow is
- (12,000-1,000)
- -407.14
-
- -407.14 (36 equal payments in all)
72Calculator (Continued)
73True Interest Rates
The true interest rate on this loan is much
higher than that in the advertisement An
enterprising lady sold jewelry in a factory where
she worked. The people she sold to were poor
credit risks. She gave them interest-free loans,
one third down. She marked up her prices to cost
200. No Risk!
74Series of Annuities
- The next problem evaluates a project that has a
sequence of annuities - The method of solution is to evaluate each
annuity to the date one year before its first
cash flow, and then to discount these lump sum
equivalent amounts to todays date - The cash flow feature of a financial calculator
may also be used
75The Problem
- Expected cash flows from a project requiring a
20 return - Years Cash Flow Each Year
- 0 (20,000,000)
- 1 to 5 3,000,000
- 6 to 30 2,000,000
- 31 to 49 1,000,000
- 50 (2,000,000)
76Present Values of Components
77Excel Equations
78Note
- A single lump sum is just a degenerate annuity.
The above equations made use of this fact - The project is not at all attractive at the given
rate - At what discount rate does the project become
attractive?
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80The Problem
- What is the present value of the following
project? The cash flow starts in year 1 - 20,000, 20,000, 20,000, 20,000, 20,000,
20,000, 20,000, 15,000, 20,000, 20,000,
20,000, 20,000, 20,000, 20,000, 20,000. - The discount rate is 12 p. a.
81Analysis
- This project is basically an annuity with a
hiccup. - Add 5,000 to the hiccup,
- Evaluate the annuity, and then
- Subtract the PV of the 5,000
82Algebraic Solution
83The Problem
- Mary will retire in 12-years, has 100,000 saved,
and will put 12,000 into an account (at the end
of every year) until she retires. - She will take a 20,000 cruse in year-5.
- She expects to live 8 years after she retires,
and will leave 30,000 to bury her. What will
be her retirement income? - The bank pays 3
84Key to Solution
- After Marys wake, there is no money left. The
future value of all her cash flows is the zero.
The present value of all cash flows must also be
zero - We will discount all flows to the current year
- You may prefer to use Marys retirement or death
day as the reference
85Solution Outline
- 0 100000
- 12000PVIFA(3, 12-years) -
- 20000PVIF(3, 5-years) -
- XPVIFA(3, 8-years)PVIF(3, 12-years)
- - 30000PVIF(3, 20-years)
86Solution by Equation
87Solution using Excel