Lecture No. 2 Factors: How Time and Interest Affect Money 1. Single Payment Factors
Lecture No. 2 Factors: How Time and Interest Affect Money 1. Single Payment Factors
Lecture No. 2 Factors: How Time and Interest Affect Money 1. Single Payment Factors
2
Factors: How Time and Interest Affect Money
1. Single Payment Factors
A. F/P, P/F
The fundamental factor in engineering economy is the one that determines the amount of
money F accumulated after n periods from a single present worth, P, with interest
compounded one time per period.
For n =1
F1 = P + interest = P + Pin, for n=1
F1 = P + Pi
F1 = P(1 + i)1
For n =2
F2 = F1 + interest for F1
F2 = F1 + F1i
F2 = (P + Pi) + (P + Pi)i
F2 = P + Pi + Pi + Pi2
F2 = P(1 + 2i + i2)
F2 = P (1 + i)2
For n=3
F3 = F2 + interest for F2
F3 = P (1 + i)2 + P (1 + i)2i
F3 = P (1 + i)3
For n = n
Fn = P(1+i)n
(1+i)n
is called the single-payment compound amount factor, SPCAF or the F/P factor.
F = P (1 + i)n, F/P
Solving for P:
P = F[ ] , P/F
[ ] is called the single payment present worth factor, SPPWF, or the P/F factor.
Both factors are for single payments.
n-2
n-1
n
F=?
B. Standard Notation
Standard notation has been adopted for all factors, which includes: two cash flow
symbols, the interest rates and the number of symbols. It is always in the general form:
(X/Y, i, n)
X = what is sought
Y = what is given
i = interest rate, %
n = number of periods
Given: (F/P, 12%, 10)
Find: Translate the above, calculate F/P then check the table value, calculate P/F
F the future worth is what is being sought
P the present worth is that is known
12% is the interest rate
10 is the number of time periods
(F/P, 12%, 10) = (1+i)n = (1+.12)10 = 1.1210
(F/P, 12%, 10) = 3.105848
From T17, p.718
(F/P, 12%, 10) = 3.1058
P/F = 1/F/P = 1/3.105848
P/F = .3219732
Table T17, p.718
P/F = .3220
Given: A crankshaft company is trying to decide whether to upgrade now for $150,000 or in 3years at 12%
per annum
Find: How much will it cost them in 3 years?
F = P(F/P, 12%, 3) = 150,000(1.4049)
F = $210,735
Given: The carmaker Renault will have to pay $75M in 3 years at 15% per annum
Find: What is the $75M worth today.
P=?
i = given
n-2
n-1
A = given
Note that A, the annuity, begins in year 1 i.e. not year 0. P, the present worth, is
calculated in year 0.
P = A[ ] + A[ ] . A[ ]
P = A{[ ] + [ ] . [ ] } eq.2-4
Multiply each side by the P/F factor 1/1(+i)
= A{[ ] + [ ] . [ ] eq.2-5
Subtract the two expressions, eq. 2.5 minus eq. 2.4
A{[ ] + [ ] . [ - [ A{[ ] + [ ] . [ ] ]
P = A[-]
Multiply both sides by 1/
P = [- 1]
Find LCD
P = A [ ] i0, P/A
Examples:
Given: An amusement park intends to pays $55,000 per year for 5 years at 15% per annum interest.
Find: Using the same amount of money, how much is that today.
P = A(P/A, 15%, 5) = 55,000(3.3522)
P = $184,371
Given: You won the lottery, $1,000,000 payable over 20 years at 10% interest, $50,000 a year for 20 years.
Find: How much are you going to get now?
P = A(P/A, 10%, 20) = 50,000(8.5136)
P= $425,680.
i = given
n-2
n-1
A=?
F = A [ ], F/A
The term in brackets is called the uniform series compound amount factor,
USCAF, F/A. The future amount, F, occurs in the same period as the last A.
Summary of factors: T2-3, p.61
Given: (A/F, 12%, 10)
Find: Translate the above, calculate A/F, calculate F/A
A uniform series end of period payment
F the future worth is what is being sought
12% is the interest rate
10 is the number of time periods
(A/F, 12%, 10) = A = [ ] = = =
(A/F, 12%, 10) = .056984
From T17 p.718
(A/F, 12%, 10) = .05698
F/A = 1/F/A = 1/.05698
F/A = 17.5487
From T17 p.718
(F/A, 12%, 10) = 17.5487
Given: A moving company wants to buy a new truck for $250,000 in 4 years and interest rates are 10% per
year.
Find: How much should they set aside each year?
i = given
Base Amount
0
2
1G
3
2G
n-1
(n-2)G
(n-1)G
g = given
i = given
1
A1
2
A1(1+g)
n-1
A1(1+g)2
A1(1+g)n-1
As opposed to the previous analysis in which the gradient increased or decreased
by a constant amount, a geometric progression is one in which the increase or decrease is
a constant percentage i.e. a geometric increase as opposed to an arithmetic increase.
A new term, g, is in order: g = constant rate of change in decimal form, by which
amounts increase or decrease from one period to the next.
The derivation begins on p.71 and results in the following:
Pg = A1(P/A, g, i, n)
Note well: Unlike the arithmetic gradient in which the gradient and base
amount are calculated SEPARATELY, the geometric gradient formula, Pg, is the
total amount and INCLUDES the base amount.
Note well: There are no tables for geometric gradients.
(P/A, g, i, n) =
(P/A, g, i, n) =
gi
g=i
It is possible to derive factors for the A and F values; however, it is easier to first
determine Pg and then multiply Pg by the A/P factor to yield A or the F/P factor to yield F.
There are no direct spreadsheet solutions. See example 2.11, p.73.
Note: There are no tables for geometric series.
Given: (P/A, g, i, n) = (P/A, 7, 12%, 10) g i
Find: Translate the above, calculate P/A