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Review: Time Value of Money

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1 Review: Time Value of Money
SMF Prep Workshop Andrew Chen - OSU

2 This session: This should be a review
The mother of all finance formulas 𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛 Other TVM formulas Growing Perpetuity Perpetuity Annuity Valuing Bonds This should be a review

3 $53,000 Thank you. Is it worth it? (yes) How much is it worth?

4 NPV of the SMF: Ingredients
Tuition / Fees: $53,000 New Salary: $85,000 (Median Fisher MBA) Old Salary: $50,000 (Nice round number) Years β€˜till retirement: 40

5 NPV of the SMF $35,000 in 2050 is not the same thing as $35,000 today.
(Change in Salary) x (Working Years) = $35,000 x 45 = $1.575 million (Benefits) – (Costs) = $1.575 million - $50, = $1.525 million $35,000 in 2050 is not the same thing as $35,000 today.

6 NPV of the SMF: the right way
Additional ingredients Discount rate: 5% Annuity Formula PV(Salary Increase) = $35,000 1βˆ’ (1.05) βˆ’ =$601,000 NPV = PV(Salary Increase – Tuition) = $572,000 CONGRATULATIONS!

7 NPV of the SMF: tweaking
A few problems: Forgot to include lost salary while in school Screwed up salary timing: your salary increase should be delayed by a year Why a 5% discount rate? (The interested student should calculate a better NPV)

8 Time value of money Formulas

9 TVM: the basic idea $100 today is not the same as $100 four years from now t = 0 1 2 3 4 $100 t = 0 1 2 3 4 $100

10 TVM: the basic idea Suppose your bank offers you 3% interest
1 2 3 4 $100 $100 x (1.03) $100 x (1.03)^2 $100 x (1.03)^3 $100 x (1.03)^4 = $113 $100 today is worth $113 four years from now

11 TVM: the basic idea Flip that around: $100= $113 (1+0.03) 4
$113 four years from now is worth $100= $113 (1+0.03) 4 More generally If the bank offers you an interest rate r, The PV of C dollars, n years from now, is 𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛

12 𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛 TVM: Formulas The mother of all finance formulas:
𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛 In β€œprinciple,” this is all you need to know.

13 TVM: Formulas The key: Present values add up
If the bank offers you interest rate r And you receive C1, C2, C3 ,… , Cn at the end of years 1, 2, 3, …, n, 𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) $𝐢 2 (1+π‘Ÿ) $𝐢 3 (1+π‘Ÿ) 3 …+ $𝐢 𝑛 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛

14 Basic TVM Formula: Example 1
A zero-coupon bond will pay $15,000 in 10 years. Similar bonds have an interest rate of 6% per year What is the bond worth today?

15 Basic TVM Formula: Example 2
You need to buy a car. Your rich uncle will lend you money as long as you pay him back with interest (at 6% per year) within 4 years. You think you can pay him $5,000 next year and $8,000 each year after that. How much can you borrow from your uncle?

16 Basic TVM Formula: Example 3
Your crazy uncle has a business plan that will generate $100 every year forever. He claims that an appropriate discount rate is 5%. How much does he think his business plan is worth?

17 TVM Formulas Growing Perpetuity Perpetuity Annuity
Note: for all formulas, the first cash flow C is at time 1

18 TVM Formulas No need to memorize But it’s useful to memorize them
In exams, you’ll get a formula sheet In real life, you’ll use Excel or Matlab But it’s useful to memorize them Back-of-the-envelope calculations Intuition *First impressions

19 TVM Formulas: Intuition
Growing Perpetuity: Intuition: As the discount rate goes up, PV goes down As the growth rate goes up, PV goes up (This is a nice one to memorize)

20 Growing Perpetuity Example
A stock pays out a $2 dividend every year. The dividend grows at 1% per year, and the discount rate is 6%. How much is the stock worth?

21 Perpetuity Formula Perpetuity: Intuition:
This is just a growing perpetuity with 0 growth Similar interpretation to a growing perpetuity

22 Deriving the Perpetuity Formula
It’s just some clever factoring: 𝑃𝑉= 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) + 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) (1+π‘Ÿ) 3 … 𝑃𝑉= 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) + 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) + 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) 2 … Notice the thing in [] is the PV 𝑃𝑉= 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) + 1 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑃𝑉 Solve for PV 𝑃𝑉= 1 π‘Ÿ

23 TVM Formulas: Intuition
Annuity: Intuition: This is the difference between two perpetuities

24 Annuity Example You’ve won a $30 million lottery. You can either take the money as (a) 30 payments of $1 million per year (starting one year from today) or (b) as $15 million paid today. Use an 8% discount rate. Which option should you take? *What’s wrong with this analysis?

25 Timing Details Growing Perpetuity Perpetuity Annuity Note: for all formulas, the first cash flow C is at time 1

26 Timing Example 1 Your food truck has earned $1,000 each year (at the end of the year). You expect this to continue for 4 years, and for the earnings to grow after that at 7% forever. Use a 10% discount rate How much is your food truck worth?

27 Timing Example 2 Your aunt gave you a loan to buy the food truck and understood that it’d take time for the profits to come in. She said you can pay her $1000 at the end of each year for 10 years with the first payment coming in exactly 4 years from now. Use a 10% discount rate. How much did she lend you?

28 Future Values Any of the formulas can be used to find future values by rearranging the basic equation 𝑃𝑉= 𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛 is the same as 𝐢= 1+π‘Ÿ 𝑛 𝑃𝑉 or 𝐹𝑉= 1+π‘Ÿ 𝑛 (𝑃𝑉) Then do a two-step 1) Use PV formulas to take cash flows to the present 2) Use FV formula to move to the future

29 Future Values: Example
You want expand your food truck business by getting a second truck. You figure you can save $500 each year and your bank pays you 3% interest. How much can you spend on your truck in 10 years?

30 Solving for interest rates
Sometimes you can solve for the interest rate: Growing Perpetuity: 𝑃𝑉= 𝐢 π‘Ÿβˆ’π‘” can re-arranged to be π‘Ÿ= 𝐢 𝑃𝑉 +𝑔 Other times, you can’t Annuity: 𝑃𝑉= 𝐢 π‘Ÿ (1βˆ’ π‘Ÿ 𝑛 ) cannot be solved for r by using algebra

31 Solving for interest rates numerically
But you can solve for r in 𝑃𝑉= 𝐢 π‘Ÿ (1βˆ’ π‘Ÿ 𝑛 ) by using Excel. Rate(n,-C,PV) gives you r Excel has similar functions for finding the PV and n PV(r,n,-C) gives you PV Nper(r,-C,PV) gives you n

32 Time value of money Valuing Bonds

33 Valuing Bonds: Jargon Face value: the amount used to calculate the coupon Usually repaid at maturity Coupon: a regular payment paid until the maturity APR: β€œannualized” interest rate computed by simple multiplication Does not take into account compounding interest Yield-to-Maturity (YTM): the interest rate

34 Valuing Bonds: Example 1
You are thinking of buying a 5-year, $1000 face- value bond with a 5% coupon rate and semiannual coupons. Suppose the YTM on comparable bonds is 6.3% (APR with seminannual compounding). How much is the bond worth?

35 Valuing Bonds: Example 2
A $1000 face value bond pays a 8% semiannual coupon and matures in 10 years. Similar bonds trade at a YTM of 8% (semiannual APR) How much is the bond worth?

36 Bonds: More Jargon Bonds are typically issued at par: Price is equal to the face value Here, the coupon rate = interest rate After issuance, prices fluctuate. The price may be At a premium: price > par At a discount: price < par

37 Valuing Bonds: Example 3
A software firm issues a 10 year $1000 bond at par. The bond pays a 12% annual coupon. Two years later, there is good news about the industry, and interests rates for similar firms fall to 8% (annual). Does the bond trade at a premium or discount? What is the new bond price?

38 Why it’s called β€œYield to Maturity”
A software firm issues a 10 year $1000 bond at par. The bond pays a 12% annual coupon. Two years later, there is good news about the industry, and interests rates for similar firms fall to 8% (annual). If you bought the bond at issue and held it to maturity, what β€œeffective interest rate” did you get? If you bought it at issue and sold it two years later, what β€œeffective interest rate” did you get?

39 TVM Wrapup: We covered…
The mother of all finance formulas 𝑃𝑉= $𝐢 (1+π‘Ÿ) 𝑛 Other TVM formulas Growing Perpetuity Perpetuity Annuity Valuing Bonds


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