Time Value of Money: P.V. Viswanath
Time Value of Money: P.V. Viswanath
P.V. Viswanath
Key Concepts
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Chapter Outline
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Present and Future Value
Present Value – earlier money on a time line
Future Value – later money on a time line
100 100 100 100 100 100
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
If a project yields $100 a year for 6 years, we may want to know the
value of those flows as of year 1; then the year 1 value would be a
present value.
If we want to know the value of those flows as of year 6, that year 6
value would be a future value.
If we wanted to know the value of the year 4 payment of $100 as of
year 2, then we are thinking of the year 4 money as future value, and
the year 2 dollars as present value.
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Rates and Prices
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Rate Terminology
Interest rate – “exchange rate” between earlier money and later
money (normally the later money is certain).
Discount Rate – rate used to convert future value to present value.
Compounding rate – rate used to convert present value to future
value.
Cost of capital – the rate at which the firm obtains funds for
investment.
Opportunity cost of capital – the rate that the firm has to pay
investors in order to obtain an additional $ of funds.
Required rate of return – the rate of return that investors demand
for providing the firm with funds for investment.
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Relation between rates
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Discount Rates and Risk
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Future Values: General Formula
FV = PV(1 + r)t
FV = future value
PV = present value
r = period interest rate, expressed as a decimal
T = number of periods
Future value interest factor = (1 + r)t
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Effects of Compounding
Simple interest
Compound interest
The notion of compound interest is relevant when money is
invested for more than one period.
After one period, the original amount increases by the
amount of the interest paid for the use of the money over
that period.
After two periods, the borrower has the use of both the
original amount invested and the interest accrued for the
first period. Hence interest is paid on both quantities.
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Figure 4.1
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Figure 4.2
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Future Values – Example 2
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Future Values – Example 3
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Future Value as a General Growth
Formula
Suppose your company expects to increase unit
sales of books by 15% per year for the next 5 years.
If you currently sell 3 million books in one year,
how many books do you expect to sell in 5 years?
FV = 3,000,000(1.15)5 = 6,034,072
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Present Values
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PV – One Period Example
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Present Values – Example 2
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Present Values – Example 3
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PV – Important Relationship I
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PV – Important Relationship II
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Quick Quiz
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Figure 4.3
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The Basic PV Equation - Refresher
PV = FV / (1 + r)t
There are four parts to this equation
PV, FV, r and t
If we know any three, we can solve for the fourth
FV = PV(1+r) t
r = (FV/PV)-t – 1
t = ln(FV/PV) ln(1+r)
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Discount Rate – Example 1
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Discount Rate – Example 2
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Discount Rate – Example 3
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Quick Quiz: Part 3
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Finding the Number of Periods
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Number of Periods – Example 1
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Number of Periods – Example 2
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Example 2 Continued
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Basic Formulas Refresher
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Quick Quiz: Part 4
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The Frequency of Compounding
Banks frequently refer to interest rates on loans and deposits
in the form of an annual percentage rate (APR) with a
certain frequency of compounding.
For example, a loan might carry an APR of 18% per annum
with monthly compounding.
This actually means that the loan will carry a monthly rate
of interest of 18/12 = 1.5% per month.
The APR is also called the stated rate of interest in contrast
to the Effective Rate of Interest, which is effectively the
additional dollars the borrower will have to pay if the loan is
repaid at the end of a year, over and above the initial
principal, assuming no interim repayments.
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The Frequency of Compounding
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The Frequency of Compounding
Effective Annual
Frequency Rate t Formula Rate
Annual 10% 1 r 10.00%
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Present Value of an Annuity
A 1
PV
ofan PV
Annuity(A,r,n) 1 n
r (1r)
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Example: PV of an Annuity
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Annuity, given Present Value
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Computing Monthly Payment on a
Mortgage
Suppose you borrow $200,000 to buy a house on a
30-year mortgage with monthly payments. The
annual percentage rate on the loan is 8%.
The monthly payments on this loan, with the
payments occurring at the end of each month, can
be calculated using this equation:
Monthly interest rate on loan = APR/12 = 0.08/12 =
0.0067
0.0067
Monthly Payment on Mortgage = $200,000 1 $1473.11
1 -
(1.0067)360
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Future Value of an Annuity
(1 + r)n - 1
FV of an Annuity = FV(A,r,n) = A
r
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An Example
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Annuity, given Future Value
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Application : Saving for College
Tuition
Assume that you want to send your newborn child to a private college
(when he gets to be 18 years old). The tuition costs are $16000/year now
and that these costs are expected to rise 5% a year for the next 18 years.
Assume that you can invest, after taxes, at 8%.
Expected tuition cost/year 18 years from now = 16000*(1.05)18 = $38,506
PV of four years of tuition costs at $38,506/year = $38,506 * PV(A ,8%,4
years) = $127,537
If you need to set aside a lump sum now, the amount you would need to
set aside would be -
Amount one needs to set apart now = $127,357/(1.08)18 = $31,916
If set aside as an annuity each year, starting one year from now -
If set apart as an annuity = $127,537 * A(FV,8%,18 years) = $3,405
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Valuing a Straight Bond
You are trying to value a straight bond with a fifteen year maturity
and a 10.75% coupon rate. The current interest rate on bonds of this
risk level is 8.5%.
PV of cash flows on bond = 107.50* PV(A,8.5%,15 years) + 1000/1.08515 = $
1186.85
If interest rates rise to 10%,
PV of cash flows on bond = 107.50* PV(A,10%,15 years)+ 1000/1.1015 =
$1,057.05
Percentage change in price = -10.94%
If interest rate fall to 7%,
PV of cash flows on bond = 107.50* PV(A,7%,15 years)+ 1000/1.0715 = $1,341.55
Percentage change in price = +13.03%
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III. Growing Annuity
0 1 2 3 ........... n
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Present Value of a Growing Annuity
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The Value of a Gold Mine
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IV. Perpetuity
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Valuing a Consol Bond
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V. Growing Perpetuities
where
CF1 is the expected cash flow next year,
g is the constant growth rate and
r is the discount rate.
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