Title: ECO 120 Macroeconomics Week 5
1ECO 120 MacroeconomicsWeek 5
Investment and Savings Lecturer Dr. Rod Duncan
2Topics
- A firms investment decision
- Present value of 1
- Net present value in the investment decision
- Investment demand
3Why are we studying investment?
- Investment (I) is a component of aggregate
expenditure - AE C I G NX
- Changes in I will cause changes in AE.
- But any changes in the AE curve, will cause a
shift in the aggregate demand (AD) curve. - So any changes in I will lead to a shift in the
AD curve.
4Investment
- Investment can refer to the purchase of new goods
that are used for future production. Investment
can come in the form of machines, buildings,
roads or bridges. This is called physical
capital. - Another type of investment is called human
capital. This is investment in education,
training and job skills. - Usually when we talk about investment, we mean
investment in physical capital, but investment
should include all forms of capital.
5Investment decision-making
- What determines investment?
- Businesses or individuals make an investment if
they expect the investment to be profitable. - Imagine we have a small business owner who is
faced with an investment decision. - The small business owner will make the investment
as long as the investment is profitable. - How to determine profitability of investment?
6Profitability of an investment
- Example
- An investment involves the current cost of
investment (I). - The investment will pay off with some flow of
expected future profits. - The future stream of profits is R1 in one years
time, R2 in two years time, up to Rn at the
nth year when the investment ends. - Imagine you are the business owner. How do we
decide whether to make the investment? Can we
simply add up the benefits (profits) and subtract
the costs (investment)? - Profits today R1 R2 Rn I?
- What is wrong with this calculation?
7Present value concept
- Imagine our rule about future values was simply
to add future costs and benefits to costs and
benefits today. - Scenario A friend offers you a deal
- Give me 10 today, and I promise to give you 20
in 1 years time. - If we subtract costs (10) from benefits (20),
we get a positive value of 10. Does this seem
like a sensible decision? - Scenario A friend offers you a deal
- Give me 10 today, and I promise to give you 20
in 100 years time. - If we subtract costs (10) from benefits (20),
we get a positive value of 10. Does this seem
like a sensible decision?
8Present value concept
- Not really. The problem is that a 1 today is
not the same as a 1 in a years time or 100
years time. - We can not directly add these 1s together since
they are not the same things. We are adding
apples and oranges. - We need a way of translating future 1s into 1s
today, so that we can add the benefits and costs
together. - The conversion is called present value.
- In making the decision about our friends deal,
we would compare 10 today to the present value
of the 20 in a year or 100 years.
9Present value concept
- An investment is about giving up something today
in order to get back something in the future. - So an investment decision will always involve
comparing 1s today to 1s in the future. - Investment decisions will always involve present
values. If we subtract the present value of
future profits from costs today, we get net
present value. - Net Present Value (NPV) Present Value of Future
Profits (PV) Investment (I)
10Net present value
- The investment rule will be to invest if and only
if - NPV 0
- Or
- Present Value of Future Profits (PV) Investment
(I) 0
11Interest rates
- To measure present value we will have to use
interest rates. - Interest rates are a general term for the
percentage return on a dollar for a year - that you earn from banks for saving
- that you pay banks for borrowing or investing
- For example, the interest rate might be 10, so
if you put 1 in the bank this year, it will
become (1i) in one years time. - Or if you borrow 100 today, you will have to
repay (1i)100 next year.
12Interest Rates
13Discounting future values
- What is the PV of 1 in a year? How do we place
a value today on 1 in t years time? - This is called discounting the future value.
One way to think about this question is to ask - How much would we have to put in the bank now to
have 1 in t years time? - Money in the bank earns interest at the rate at
the rate i, igt0. If I put 1 in the bank today,
it will grow according to the rate of interest. - We can construct a chart of our bank account over
time.
14Bank account
Year Value i.10
0 1 1
1 1(1i) 1.10
2 1(1i)(1i) 1.21
3 1(1i)3 1.33
n 1(1i)n (1.1)n
- If we start with 1 in our bank account, what
happens to our bank account over time?
15How much is a future 1?
- In order to have 1 next year, we would have to
put x in today - 1 (1 i) x
- x 1/(1i) lt 1
- 1 next year is worth 1/(1 i) today. Since
igt0, 1 next year is worth less than 1 today. - In order to have 1 in n years time, we would
have to put x in today - x 1/(1i)n (1i)-n
- 1 in n years time is worth 1/(1i)n lt 1 today.
16PV of 1
Year i0.01 i0.05 i0.10 i0.20
0 1 1 1 1
1 0.99 0.95 0.91 0.83
2 0.98 0.91 0.83 0.69
3 0.97 0.86 0.75 0.58
10 0.91 0.61 0.39 0.16
n (1.01)-n (1.05)-n (1.10)-n (1.20)-n
17Investment decision
- Imagine we are the small business owner we were
discussing before. We have a new project which
we might invest in - An investment involves the current cost of
investment (I). - The investment will pay off with some flow of
expected future profits. - The future stream of profits is R1 in one years
time, R2 in two years time, up to Rn at the
nth year when the investment ends.
18Investment decision
Year Benefit Cost PV
0 0 I -I
1 R1 0 R1/(1i)
2 R2 0 R2/(1i)2
3 R3 0 R3/(1i)3
n Rn 0 Rn/(1i)n
19Net present value
- The NPV of the investment is the sum of the
values in the far-right column- the PVs. - NPV R1/(1i) R2/(1 i)2 Rn/(1 i)n I
- If NPV 0, then go ahead and make the
investment. If NPV lt 0, then the investment is
not worthwhile. - Lets look at a more concrete example that we can
put some numbers to.
20Example of NPV
- Example A small business in Bathurst that owns
photo store is considering installing a
state-of-the-art developing machine for digital
photographs. - Cost 12,000 (after selling current machine)
- Future benefits 2,000 per year in extra
business every year for 10 year life-span of
machine (assume benefits start next year)
21Example of NPV
Year Benefit Cost PV
0 0 I -12,000
1 2,000 0 2,000/(1i)
2 2,000 0 2,000/(1i)2
3 2,000 0 2,000/(1i)3
10 2,000 0 2,000/(1i)10
22Example of NPV
- NPV -12,000 2,000/(1i) 2,000/(1i)2
2,000/(1i)3 2,000/(1i)10 - Our NPV then depends upon the interest rate, i,
facing the small business. - For a small business, the relevant interest rate
would be the rate that it cost raise the money,
say by taking out a bank loan. - So the interest rate would be the bank small
business loan rate.
23Example of NPV
- The NPV varies with the interest rate
- At i0.05, NPV 3,443, so go ahead with
investment. - At i0.08, NPV 1,420, so go ahead with
investment. - At i0.10, NPV 289, so go ahead with
investment. - At i0.12, NPV -700, so dont go ahead with
the investment. - Somewhere between a 10 and a 12 interest rate,
NPV 0. NPV lt 0 for all interest rates greater
than 12.
24Example of NPV
- Another way of thinking about this problem is to
ask Can I repay the loan and still make money? - The small business owner borrows 12,000 from the
bank and uses the 2,000 in extra business each
year to repay the loan. - Would the business owner repay the loan before
the machine needs to be replaced?
25Example of NPV- bank loan
Year 0.05 0.08 0.1 0.12
0 -12000 -12000 -12000 -12000
1 -10600 -10960 -11200 -11440
2 -9130 -9836.8 -10320 -10812.8
3 -7586.5 -8623.74 -9352 -10110.3
4 -5965.83 -7313.64 -8287.2 -9323.58
5 -4264.12 -5898.74 -7115.92 -8442.41
6 -2477.32 -4370.63 -5827.51 -7455.49
7 -601.19 -2720.28 -4410.26 -6350.15
8 1368.75 -937.91 -2851.29 -5112.17
9 3437.19 987.06 -1136.42 -3725.63
10 5609.05 3066.03 749.94 -2172.71
Present Value 3443.47 1420.16 289.13 -699.55
26Example of a NPV- bank loan
- So for interest rates of 10 and below, the bank
loan is repaid before the machine wears out, so
the investment is worthwhile. - For interest rates of 12 and above, the bank
loan is not repaid by the time the machine needs
to be replaced, so the investment is not
worthwhile. - The bottom line shows that the remainder in the
bank account at the end of 10 years is the NPV of
the investment decision. - So another way to think of NPV is as the money
left in an account at the end of a project.
27Investment demand
- Instead of thinking about a single small
business, think of a whole economy of businesses
and individuals making investment decisions. - Some of these investment decisions will be very
good ones and some will be very poor ones. There
is a whole range. - As i rises, the PV of future profits will drop,
so the NPV will fall. If we imagine that there
are thousands of potential investments to be
made, as i rises, fewer of these potential
investments will be profitable, and so investment
will fall.
28Investment demand
- If we graphed the investment demand for goods and
services (I) against interest rates, it would be
downward-sloping in i. The higher is i, the
lower is investment demand. - What can shift the I curve? Factors that affect
current and expected future profitability of
projects - New technology
- Business expectations
- Business taxes and regulation
29Shifts in investment demand
- Example An increase in business
confidence/expectations raises the expected
future profits for businesses. - At the same interest rates as before, since the
Rs are higher, the NPVs of all investment
projects will be higher. - The investment demand curve is shifted to the
right. I is higher for all interest rates.
30Uses of PV concept
- Housing valuation We can use the PV concept to
estimate what house prices should be. - What do you have when you own a home? You have
the future housing services of that home plus the
right to sell the home. - Value of housing services should be the price
people pay to rent an equivalent home. Rent is
the price of a week of housing services. - Lets say your home rents for 250 per week.
31Housing valuation
- If you stayed in your home for 50 years, your
house is worth the PV of 50 years of 52 weekly
250 payments plus any sale value at 50 years.
How do we calculate the PV of such a long stream
of numbers? - Trick For very long streams, the sum
- PV (250 x 52) (250 x 52)/(1i)
- Is very close to
- PV (250 x 52) / i 13,000 / i
32Housing valuation
- So we get the house values
- At i0.02, PV House 650,000
- At i0.03, PV House 433,000
- At i0.05, PV House 260,000
- At i0.06, PV House 217,000
- At i0.07, PV House 186,000
- At a house price above this price, you are better
off selling your house and renting for 50 years.
At a house price below this price, you are better
off owning a house.
33Housing valuation
- You can also see how sensitive house prices are
to the interest rate. When i rose from 6 to 7,
the value of the house dropped 31,000. - You can see why home owners care so much about
the home loans rates. - But what about the resale price at 50 years?
- The PV of the house sale in 50 years time is
(Sale Price) / (1i)50, which for most values of
i is going to be a very small number- 8 of Sale
Price at 5 interest and 3 of Sale Price at 7
interest.
34Housing price bubbles
- Sometimes the price of housing can vary from this
PV of housing services price. Some analysts
argue that todays housing prices is one case-
these periods are called bubbles. - Example At 6 interest rates our house was
worth 217,000. Lets say Sam bought the house
for 300,000 in order to sell the house one year
from now. - In order to be able to repay the 300,000, Sam
has to gain 18,000 (6 of 300,000) by holding
the house for a year.
35Housing price bubbles
- Since Sam gets 13,000 worth of housing services
from the house, the value of the house has to
rise 5,000 to 305,000 in next years sale for a
total gain of 18,000. - Even though the house is unchanged, the
overpayment for the house has to rise- the
house is still only worth 217,000 in housing
services- but it now sells for 305,000. - So in a bubble, if people are overpaying for a
house, the overpayment has to keep rising.
Eventually people realize that the house only
generates 217,000 in services.
36Housing price bubbles
- Example In Holland in 1636, the price of some
rare and exotic tulip bulbs rose to the
equivalent of a price of an expensive house.
People paid that much in plans to resell at even
higher prices. - In 1637, prices for tulips crashed and by 1639,
tulip bulbs were selling for 1/200th of the peak
prices. - Bubbles tend to crash fast and dramatically.