Continuous Compounding

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 5 Mathematics of Finance.
Advertisements

Chapter 03: Mortgage Loan Foundations: The Time Value of Money
Chapter 5 Mathematics of Finance.
Introductory Mathematics & Statistics
Exam in One week, will cover Chapters 1 and 2. Do Chapter 2 Self test.
MER439- Design of Thermal Fluid Systems Engineering Economics Lecture 2- Using Factors Professor Anderson Spring 2012.
Risk, Return, and the Time Value of Money
Exam 2 Practice Problems
Time Value of Money.
Learning Objectives for Section 3.2
Time Value of Money. Outline Meaning of Time Value Concept of Future Value and Compounding (FV) Concept of Present Value and Discounting (PV) Frequency.
Chapter ChEn 4253 Terry A. Ring
Savings Accounts Section 3.3.
Objectives Discuss the role of time value in finance, the use of computational tools, and the basic patterns of cash flow. Understand the concepts of.
Interest Rates Chapter
Equivalence Analysis using Effective Interest Rates Lecture No.9 Professor C. S. Park Fundamentals of Engineering Economics Copyright © 2005.
Decision-Making Steps
CHAPTER 4 The Time Value of Money Dr. Mohammad Abuhaiba, PE.
Chapter 4 More Interest Formulas
Example 1: In the following cash flow diagram, A8=A9=A10=A11=5000, and
HW 2 1. You have accumulated $4,400 in credit card debt. Your credit card rate is 8.5% APR and you are charged interest every month on the unpaid balance.
Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Lecture slides to accompany
Nominal and Effective Interest Rates
© 2012 by McGraw-Hill, New York, N.Y All Rights Reserved 4-1 Lecture slides to accompany Engineering Economy 7 th edition Leland Blank Anthony Tarquin.
What is Interest? Interest is the amount earned on an investment or an account. Annually: A = P(1 + r) t P = principal amount (the initial amount you borrow.
Chapter 03: Mortgage Loan Foundations: The Time Value of Money McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Example 1 Ms. Smith loans Mr. Brown $10,000 with interest compounded at a rate of 8% per year. How much will Mr. Brown owe Ms. Smith if he repays the loan.
Chapter 2 Solutions 1 TM 661Chapter 2 Solutions 1 # 9) Suppose you wanted to become a millionaire at retirement. If an annual compound interest rate of.
(c) 2002 Contemporary Engineering Economics 1 Chapter 4 Time Is Money Interest: The Cost of Money Economic Equivalence Development of Interest Formulas.
Lecture No.3.  Interest: The Cost of Money  Economic Equivalence  Interest Formulas – Single Cash Flows  Equal-Payment Series  Dealing with Gradient.
Chapter 3 Interest and Equivalence
State University of New York WARNING All rights reserved. No part of the course materials used in the instruction of this course may be reproduced in any.
Module 3 ANNUITY Engr. Gerard Ang School of EECE.
(c) 2002 Contemporary Engineering Economics
(c) 2002 Contemporary Engineering Economics
Flash Back from before break The Five Types of Cash Flows (a) Single cash flow (b) Equal (uniform) payment series (c) Linear gradient series (d) Geometric.
Lecture 2 Engineering Economics ENGR 3300 Department of Mechanical Engineering Inter American University of Puerto Rico Bayamon Campus Dr. Omar E. Meza.
Section 4 Dr.Hoda’s part Interest Sheet 5 Eng. Reda Zein.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Time Value of Money.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 9 9 Chapter The Time Value of Money-Part 2 McGraw-Hill Ryerson©2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Based on: Terry Fegarty.
1 1. You have accumulated $4,400 in credit card debt. Your credit card rate is 8.5% APR and you are charged interest every month on the unpaid balance.
PRINCIPLES OF MONEY-TIME RELATIONSHIPS. MONEY Medium of Exchange -- Means of payment for goods or services; What sellers accept and buyers pay ; Store.
The terms ‘nominal’ and ‘effective’ enter into consideration when the compounding period (i.e. interest period) is less than one year. A nominal interest.
Compounding and Discounting -A Presentation to DVC Field Trip Tony Wu PG&E4/15/2008.
Multiple/Continuous Compounding. Understand Effective Interest Rates Figure out how to use Inflation/Deflation in your decisions.
CTC 475 Review Gradient Series –Find P given G –Find A given G Rules: 1.P occurs two periods before the first G 2.n equals the number of cash flows + 1.
Present Value Present value is the current value of a future sum.
Matakuliah: D0762 – Ekonomi Teknik Tahun: 2009 Factors - Extra Problems Course Outline 3.
L8: Nominal and Effective Interest Rates ECON 320 Engineering Economics Mahmut Ali GOKCE Industrial Systems Engineering Computer.
Quantitative Finance Unit 1 Financial Mathematics.
Time Value of Money LECTURER: ISAAC OFOEDA. Chapter Objectives Understand what gives money its time value. Explain the methods of calculating present.
Economics.  Interest can mean two things to the consumer…  If you put money in a bank, you will get paid interest on your deposit over time.  If you.
Engineering Economic Analysis Canadian Edition Chapter 4: More Interest Formulas.
Engineering economy TUTORIAL
 Which rate is better if you’re a saver?  7.30% compounded quarterly  7.275% compounded monthly  7.25% compounded weekly  Find equivalent annually.
CHAPTER 4 MONEY-TIME RELATIONSHIPS AND EQUIVALENCE.
Chapter 3 Understanding Money Management
Chapter 2 Solutions 1 TM 661Chapter 2 Solutions 1 # 9) Suppose you wanted to become a millionaire at retirement. If an annual compound interest rate of.
Section 6.7 Financial Models. OBJECTIVE 1 A credit union pays interest of 4% per annum compounded quarterly on a certain savings plan. If $2000 is.
Section 5.7 Financial Models. A credit union pays interest of 4% per annum compounded quarterly on a certain savings plan. If $2000 is deposited.
INTRODUCTORY MATHEMATICAL ANALYSIS For Business, Economics, and the Life and Social Sciences  2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Mathematics of Finance.
Example 1: Because of general price inflation in the economy, the purchasing power of the Turkish Lira shrinks with the passage of time. If the general.
TM 661 Problems, Problems, Problems. Changing Interest Stu deposits $5,000 in an account that pays interest at a rate of 9% compounded monthly. Two years.
CHAPTER 3 COMPOUND INTEREST
Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Lecture slides to accompany
Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Lecture slides to accompany
Cash Flow With PP<CP
Example 1: Because of general price inflation in the economy, the purchasing power of the Turkish Lira shrinks with the passage of time. If the general.
UNDERSTANDING MONEY MANAGEMENT
Problem 1 You deposit $5000 in a savings account that earns 10% simple interest per year and withdraw all your money at the end of the fifth year. But.
Presentation transcript:

Continuous Compounding Discrete Cash Flow Continuous Compounding (DC) Continuous Cash Flow Continuous Compounding (CC)

Discrete Cash Flow Continuous Compounding (DC) i = er - 1 then follow the DD case. Suppose that one has a present loan of $1,000 and desires to determine what equivalent uniform end-of-year payments, A, could be obtained from it for 10 years if the nominal interest rate is 20% compounded continuously i = er - 1 = e0.2 - 1 = 0.2214 A = P(A/P,r,n) = 1,000(A/P,0.2214,10) = 1,000*0.2214*7.389/6.389 = 256 Sep. 9 1997

Another Example i = er - 1 = e0.035 - 1 = 0.0356 An individual needs $12,000 immediately as a down payment on a new home. Suppose that he can borrow this money from his insurance company. He must repay the loan in equal payments every six months over the next eight years. The nominal interest rate being charged is 7% compounded continuously. What is the amount of each payment? i = er - 1 = e0.035 - 1 = 0.0356 A = P(A/P, 0.419, 16) = 12,000*0.0356*1.75/0.75 = 997 Sep. 9 1997

Continuous Cash Flow Continuous Compounding If there is a continuous cash flow A each year for n years with nominal interest rate per year r. then: (P/A, r, n) = (F/A, r, n) = er n - 1 rern ern - 1 r Sep. 9 1997

Example Sol: F = A(F/A,8%,5) = $500 x 6.1478 = $3,074 What will be the future equivalent amount at the end of five years of a uniform, continuous cash flow, at the rate of $500 per year for five years, with interest compounded continuously at the nominal annual rate of 8%? Sol: F = A(F/A,8%,5) = $500 x 6.1478 = $3,074 Sep. 9 1997

Example What is the future equivalent of $10,000 per year that flows continuously for 8.5 years if the nominal interest is 10% compounded continuously? Sol: F = A(F/A,5%, 17) = 133,964.5 or F = A = 10,000 ern - 1 r e0.1(8.5) - 1 0.1 Sep. 9 1997

Discussion Examples Suppose the 8% nominal interest rate. If compounding occurs monthly, what is the effective annual interest rate? Sep. 9 1997

Example With the minimum number of interest factors, find the value of X below so that the two cash flow diagrams are equivalent when the interest rate is 10% per year. Sep. 9 1997

Example Set up an expression for the value of Z on the left-hand cash flow diagram that establishes equivalence with the right-hand cash flow diagram. The nominal interest rate is 12% compounded quarterly. Sep. 9 1997

Example A student decides to make semi-annual payments of $500 each into a bank account that pays an APR (nominal interest) of 8% compounded weekly. How much money will this student have accumulated in this bank account at the end of 20 years? Assume only one (the final) withdrawal is made. Sep. 9 1997

Example Consider an end-of-year (EOY) geometric gradient, which lasts for eight years, whose initial value at EOY one is $5,000, and f = 6.04% per year thereafter. Find the equivalent uniform gradient amount over the same time period if the initial value of the uniform gradient at the end of year one is $4,000. The nominal rate is 8% compounded semi-annually. What is iCR? P0? and What is G? Sep. 9 1997

Example An individual makes five annual deposits of $2,000 in a savings account that pays interest at a rate of 4% per year. One year after making the last deposit, the interest rate changes to 6% per year. Five years after the last deposit the accumulated money is withdrawn from the account. How much is withdrawn? Sep. 9 1997

Example Some future amount, F, is equivalent to $2,000 being received every 6 months over the next 12 years. The nominal interest rate is 20% compounded continuously. What is the value of F? Sep. 9 1997

Example What is the value of P that is equivalent to A = $800/yr ($800 flowing continuously each year) for 11.2 years? The nominal rate of interest is 10%, continuously compounded. Sep. 9 1997

Discrete Cash Flows Continuous Compounding i = ( 1 + r/M)M - 1 If M ->  then i = er - 1 F/P = (1+i)n => F/P = ern P/F = e-rn F/A = (ern - 1) / (er - 1) Sep. 9 1997

Example Suppose that one has a present loan of $1,000 and desires to determine what equivalent uniform end-of-year payments, A, could be obtained from it for 10 years if the nominal interest rate is 20% compounded continuously. A = P (A/P, r, n) = P[ern (er - 1)]/ (ern - 1) ern = e0.2 (10) er = e0.2 Sep. 9 1997

Homework # 3 - Chapter 3 Problem Number: 93, 95, 98, 99, 101, 102, 105, 106 Due Date: Oct. 8 (Thursday) Sep. 9 1997

Engineering Economy