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Time Value of Money

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Time Value of Money

Importance
Accounting – understand time value of money
calculations to account for certain transactions such as
loan amortization, lease payments and bond interest
rates
Information Systems – to design systems that
accurately measure and value the firm’s cash flows
Management – to manage cash receipts and
disbursements in a way that will enable the firm to
receive the greatest value from its cash flows
Marketing - funding for new programs and products
must be justified financially using time value of money
techniques
Importance

Operations – because the value of investments in new


equipment, in new processes and in inventory will be
affected by the time value of money

Personal life - widely used in personal financial


planning; used to calculate the value of savings at given
future dates and to estimate the amount needed to
accumulate a given amount at a future date; to value
lump sum amounts or streams of periodic cash flows
The Role of Time in Finance
• it is better to receive money sooner than later
• money that you have in hand today can be
invested to earn a positive rate of return, producing
more money tomorrow
• In business, manager constantly face trade-offs in
situations where actions that require outflows of
cash today may produce inflows of cash later
• Because the cash that comes in the future is worth
less than the cash that firms spend up front,
managers need a set of tools to help them
compare cash inflows and outflows that occur at
different times.
Future Value Versus Present Value

Time Line – a horizontal line on which time


zero appears at the leftmost end and future
periods are marked from left to right; can be
used to depict investment cash flows
Compounding and Discounting
Time line showing compounding to find future
value and discounting to find present value
Financial Calculators

• Include numerous preprogrammed financial


routines. Learning how to use these routines
can make present and future values
calculations a breeze.
CPT = Compute key used to initiate financial
calculation once all values are input
Basic Patterns of Cash Flow
The cash flow - both inflows and outflows-of
a firm can be described by its general
pattern. It can be defined as a single amount,
an annuity, or a mixed stream
Single Amount – a lump-sum amount either
currently held or expected at some future
date.
Annuity – a level periodic stream of cash flow.
For our purposes, we’ll work primarily with
annual cash flows.
Basic Patterns of Cashflow

Mixed Stream – a stream of cash flow that


is not an annuity; a stream of unequal
periodic cash flows that reflect no
particular pattern
Single Amounts
Imagine that at age 25 you began investing $2,000
per year in an investment that earns 5 percent
interest. At the end of 40 years, at age 65, you
would have invested a total of $80,000 (40 years x
$2,000 per year). How much would you have
accumulated at the end of the fortieth year?
$100,000? $150,000? $200,000? No, your $80,000
would have grown to $242,000! Why? Because the
time value of money allowed your investments to
generate returns that built on each other over the 40
years.
Future Value

Future Value – the value at a given future date


of an amount placed on deposit today and
earning interest at a specified rate. Found by
applying compound interest over a specified
period of time.
The Concept of Future Value
• Compound Interest – interest that is
earned on a given deposit and has
become part of the principal at the end of
a specified period.
• Principal – the amount of money on which
interest is paid.
The Equation for Future Value

• FV n = future value at the end of period n


• PV = initial principal, or present value
• r = annual rate of interest paid. (Note: On
financial calculators, I is typically used to
represent this rate.
• n = number of periods (typically years) that
the money is left on deposit.
The general equation for the future value at
the end of period n is

FV n = PV x (1 + r )ⁿ
Calculator Use
Spreadsheet Use
Present Value of a Single Amount

• Present Value – the current peso value


of a future amount-the amount of money
that would have to be invested today at
a given interest rate over a specified
period to equal the future amount
The Concept of Present Value
The process of finding present values is often referred to
as discounting cash flows. It is concerned with answering
the following question: If I can earn r percent on my money,
what is the most I would be willing to pay now for an
opportunity to receive FVn pesos n period from today?

This process is actually the inverse of compounding


interest. Instead of finding the future value of present
pesos invested at a given rate, discounting determines the
present value of a future amount, assuming an opportunity
to earn a certain return on the money. This annual rate of
return is variously referred to as the discount rate,
required return, cost of capital, and opportunity cost.
• Discounting Cash Flow – the process
of finding present values; the inverse
of compounding interest.
The Equation of Present Value

PV = FVn / (1 + r)ⁿ
Annuities

• Annuity – a stream of equal periodic cash


flow over a specified time period. These
cash flows can be inflows of returns earned
on investments or outflows of funds invested
to earn future returns.
Types of Annuities

• Ordinary Annuity – an annuity for which the


cash flows occurs at the end of each period.

• Annuity Due – an annuity for which the cash


flow occurs at the beginning of each period.
Finding the Future Value of an
Ordinary Annuity

FVn = CF x { [(1 + r)ⁿ - 1] / r }


Finding the Future Value of An
Annuity Due

FVn = CF x { [(1 + r)ⁿ - 1] / r } x (1 + r)


Finding the Present Value of an
Annuity Due

• PVn = (CF/r) x [ 1 – 1/(1 + r)ⁿ] x (1 + r)


Finding the Present Value of a
Perpetuity

PV = CF / r
Perpetuity – an annuity with an
infinite life, providing continual
annual cash flow.
Two Basic Types of Cash Flow
Streams
• Annuity – is a pattern of equal
periodic cash flows.
• Mixed Stream – is a stream of un
equal periodic cash flow that reflect
no particular pattern.
Future Value of a Mixed Stream

Determining the future value of a


mixed stream of cash flows is
straightforward. We determine the
future value of each cash flow at
the specified future date and then
add all the individual future values
to find the total future value.
Present Value of a Mixed Stream

Finding the present value of a


mixed stream of cash flows is
similar to finding the future value of
a mixed stream. We determine the
present value of each future
amount and then add all the
individual present values together
to find the total present value.
Compounding Interest More
Frequently Than Annually

Interest is often compounded more


frequently than once a year. Savings
institutions compound interest
semiannually, quarterly, monthly,
weekly, daily, or even continuously.
• Semiannual Compounding – compounding of
interest over two periods within the year.

• Quarterly Compounding – compounding of


interest over four periods within the year.

• Continuous Compounding – compounding of


interest an infinite number of times per year
at intervals of microseconds
Nominal and Effective Annual Rates
of Interest
• Nominal (stated) Annual Rate –
contractual annual rate of interest
charged by a lender or promised by a
borrower.
• Effective (true) Annual Rate (EAR) –
The annual rate of interest actually
paid or earned.
Effective Annual Rates of Interest
Special Applications of Time Value
• Determining deposits needed to
accumulate a future sum
• Loan Amortization
• Finding interest or growth rates
• Finding an unknown number of
periods
Determining deposits needed to
accumulate a future sum
Loan Amortization
Loan Amortization – the determination of
the equal periodic loan payments
necessary to provide a lender with a
specified interest return and to repay
the loan principal over a specified
period.
Loan Amortization Schedule – a schedule
of equal payments to repay a loan. It
shows the allocation of each loan
Loan Amortization

CF = (PV x r) / [ 1 – 1/(1 + r)ⁿ


Finding Interest or Growth Rates
Finding Interest or Growth
Rates
• The simplest situation is one in
which an investment’s value has
increased over time, and you want
to know the annual rate of growth
(that is, interest) that is
represented by the increase in the
investment.

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