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Calculating Different Types of Annuities

The document discusses different types of annuities including ordinary annuities and annuities due. An ordinary annuity has payments made at the end of each period and interest compounded at the same interval, while an annuity due has payments made at the beginning of each period. Formulas are provided for calculating the sum, present value, and other values for ordinary annuities and annuities due based on factors like the payment amount, interest rate, number of periods. Examples demonstrate using the formulas to solve problems related to savings, investments, and rent payments.

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Zohair Mushtaq
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
213 views7 pages

Calculating Different Types of Annuities

The document discusses different types of annuities including ordinary annuities and annuities due. An ordinary annuity has payments made at the end of each period and interest compounded at the same interval, while an annuity due has payments made at the beginning of each period. Formulas are provided for calculating the sum, present value, and other values for ordinary annuities and annuities due based on factors like the payment amount, interest rate, number of periods. Examples demonstrate using the formulas to solve problems related to savings, investments, and rent payments.

Uploaded by

Zohair Mushtaq
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Calculating Different Types of Annuities

Definition
An annuity is a series of payments required to be made or received over time
at regular intervals.

The most common payment intervals are yearly (once a year), semi-annually
(twice a year), quarterly (four times a year), and monthly (once a month).

Some examples of annuities: Mortgages, Car payments, Rent, Pension fund


payments, Insurance premiums.

TYPES OF ANNUITIES

Ordinary Annuity:
An Ordinary Annuity has the following characteristics
• The payments are always made at the end of each interval
• The interest rate compounds at the same interval as the payment
interval
For calculating the sum of a series of regular payments the following formula
should be used:

C[(1+i)n -1]
S n = -----------------
i

Example: Alan decides to set aside $50 at the end of each month for his
child’s college education. If the child were to be born today, how much will be
available for its college education when s/he turns 19 years old Assume an
interest rate of 5% compounded monthly.

Solution:
First, we assign all the terms:
C= $50
i= 0.05/12 or 0.004166
n= 18 x 12, or 216

Now substituting into our formula, we have:

C[(1+i)n -1]
S n = -------------------
i

$50[(1+0.05/12)^216 -1]
S n = --------------------------------
0.05 / 12

S n = $50(349.2020206)
S n = $17,460.10

Formula for calculating present value of a simple annuity:

C[1-(1+i)-n]
PV = --------------------
i

Calculating Different Types of Annuities

Definition
An annuity is a series of payments required to be made or received over time
at regular intervals.

The most common payment intervals are yearly (once a year), semi-annually
(twice a year), quarterly (four times a year), and monthly (once a month).

Some examples of annuities: Mortgages, Car payments, Rent, Pension fund


payments, Insurance premiums.

TYPES OF ANNUITIES

Ordinary Annuity:
An Ordinary Annuity has the following characteristics
• The payments are always made at the end of each interval
• The interest rate compounds at the same interval as the payment
interval
For calculating the sum of a series of regular payments the following formula
should be used:

C[(1+i)n -1]
S n = -----------------
i

Example: Alan decides to set aside $50 at the end of each month for his
child’s college education. If the child were to be born today, how much will be
available for its college education when s/he turns 19 years old Assume an
interest rate of 5% compounded monthly.

Solution:
First, we assign all the terms:
C = $50
i= 0.05/12 or 0.004166
n= 18 x 12, or 216

Now substituting into our formula, we have:


C [(1+i)n-1]
S n = -------------------
i

$50[(1+0.05/12)^216 -1]
S n = --------------------------------
0.05 / 12

S n = $50(349.2020206)

S n = $17,460.10

Formula for calculating present value of a simple annuity:

C [1-(1+i)-n]
PV = --------------------
i

Example: Alan asks you to help him determine the appropriate price to pay
for an annuity offering a retirement income of $1,000 a month for 10 years.
Assume the interest rate is 6% compounded monthly.

Solution:
Substituting into our formula, we have:

C = $1,000
i = 0.06 /12 or 0.005
n = 12 x 10, or 120

$1,000[1-(1+0.005)^-120]
PV = -----------------------------------
0.005

PV = $90,073.45

Annuity Due:
In an annuity due, the payments occur at the beginning of the payment
period.

For calculating the sum of a series of regular payments the following formula
should be used:

C (1+i)[(1+i) n -1]
S n (due)= -----------------------
i

Example: Alan wants to deposit $300 into a fund at the beginning of each
month. If he can earn 10% compounded interest monthly, how much amount
will be there in the fund at the end of 6 years.

Solution:
C = $300
i = 0.10/12 or 0.008333
n = 12 x 6 or 72

Substituting into our formula yields:

$300(1+0.10/12)[(1+0.10/12)^72-1]
S n (due) = -------------------------------------------------
0.10/12

S n (due) = $300(98.93)
S n (due) = $29,679

Formula for calculating present value of an annuity due:

C (1+i)[1-(1+i)-n]
PV(due) = -------------------------
i

Calculating Different Types of Annuities

Definition
An annuity is a series of payments required to be made or received over time
at regular intervals.

The most common payment intervals are yearly (once a year), semi-annually
(twice a year), quarterly (four times a year), and monthly (once a month).

Some examples of annuities: Mortgages, Car payments, Rent, Pension fund


payments, Insurance premiums.

TYPES OF ANNUITIES

Ordinary Annuity:
An Ordinary Annuity has the following characteristics
• The payments are always made at the end of each interval
• The interest rate compounds at the same interval as the payment
interval
For calculating the sum of a series of regular payments the following formula
should be used:

C [(1+i)^ n -1]
S n = -----------------
i

Example: Alan decides to set aside $50 at the end of each month for his
child’s college education. If the child were to be born today, how much will be
available for its college education when s/he turns 19 years old Assume an
interest rate of 5% compounded monthly.

Solution:
First, we assign all the terms:
C = $50
i= 0.05/12 or 0.004166
n= 18 x 12, or 216

Now substituting into our formula, we have:

C [(1+i)n-1]
S n = -------------------
i

$50[(1+0.05/12)^216 -1]
S n = --------------------------------
0.05 / 12

S n = $50(349.2020206)

S n = $17,460.10

Formula for calculating present value of a simple annuity:

C [1-(1+i)-n]
PV = --------------------
i

Example: Alan asks you to help him determine the appropriate price to pay
for an annuity offering a retirement income of $1,000 a month for 10 years.
Assume the interest rate is 6% compounded monthly.

Solution:
Substituting into our formula, we have:

C = $1,000
i = 0.06 /12 or 0.005
n = 12 x 10, or 120
$1,000[1-(1+0.005)^-120]
PV = -----------------------------------
0.005

PV = $90,073.45

Annuity Due:
In an annuity due, the payments occur at the beginning of the payment
period.

For calculating the sum of a series of regular payments the following formula
should be used:

C (1+i)[(1+i)^ n -1]
S n (due)= -----------------------
i

Example: Alan wants to deposit $300 into a fund at the beginning of each
month. If he can earn 10% compounded interest monthly, how much amount
will be there in the fund at the end of 6 years.

Solution:
C = $300
i = 0.10/12 or 0.008333
n = 12 x 6 or 72

Substituting into our formula yields:

$300(1+0.10/12)[(1+0.10/12)^72-1]
S n (due) = -------------------------------------------------
0.10/12

S n (due) = $300(98.93)
S n (due) = $29,679

Formula for calculating present value of an annuity due:

C (1+i)[1-(1+i)-n]
PV (due) = -------------------------
i

Example: The monthly rent on an apartment is $950 per month payable at


the beginning of each month. If the current interest is 12% compounded
monthly, what single payment 12 months in advance would be equal to a
year’s rent?

Solution:
C = $950
i= 0.12/12 or 0.01
n= 12

Substituting into the formula gives:

$950(1+0.03)[1-(1+0.01)^-12]
PV (due) = ---------------------------------------
0.01

PV(due) = $950(11.37)
PV(due) = $10,801.50

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