1 Chapter 2 The Two Key Concepts in Finance Prof.S.V.MURULIDHAR. M.COM.MBA.,M.Phil.,MHRD.PGDCA.,PGDMM(PhD) Dept.of Studies in Commerce & Management.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Finance
Advertisements

Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money 1. Learning Outcomes Chapter 4  Identify various types of cash flow patterns  Compute the future value and the present.
The Time Value of Money: Annuities and Other Topics
Chapter 2 The Time Value of Money.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
TOPIC TWO: Chapter 3: Financial Mathematics By Diana Beal and Michelle Goyen.
Lecture Four Time Value of Money and Its Applications.
CHAPTER 4 BOND PRICES, BOND YIELDS, AND INTEREST RATE RISK.
Chapter 4 Return and Risk. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.4-2 The Concept of Return Return –The level of profit from an investment,
Chapter 4 Return and Risks.
Chapter 4: Time Value of Money
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Managing Your Money.
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example 6.1
Chapter 2 Valuation, Risk, Return, and Uncertainty
Chapter 4 Return and Risks. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 4-2 Return and Risks Learning Goals 1.Review the concept of.
Chapter 4 Return and Risks. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 4-2 Return and Risks Learning Goals 1.Review the concept of.
Part Two Fundamentals of Financial Markets. Chapter 3 What Do Interest Rates Mean and What is Their Role in Valuation?
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
1 Chapter 2 Valuation, Risk, Return, and Uncertainty Portfolio Construction, Management, & Protection, 5e, Robert A. Strong Copyright ©2009 by South-Western,
Interest Rates and Rates of Return
Basic Tools of Finance Finance is the field that studies how people make decisions regarding the allocation of resources over time and the handling of.
5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation. 5.1 Key Concepts and Skills Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows Be able to compute.
5.0 Chapter 4 Time Value of Money: Valuing Cash Flows.
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example
CHAPTER 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation. Key Concepts and Skills Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows Be able to compute the present.
Future Value Present Value Annuities Different compounding Periods Adjusting for frequent compounding Effective Annual Rate (EAR) Chapter
Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money Chapter Outline
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.  Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows  Be able to compute the present value of multiple cash flows.
TIME VALUE OF MONEY CHAPTER 5.
BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK
0 Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation 1 Chapter Outline Future and Present Values of Multiple Cash Flows Valuing Level Cash Flows: Annuities and.
Bennie Waller – Longwood University Personal Finance Bennie Waller Longwood University 201 High Street Farmville, VA.
1 Chapter 2 Valuation, Risk, Return, and Uncertainty Portfolio Construction, Management, & Protection, 4e, Robert A. Strong Copyright ©2006 by South-Western,
Chapter 6 Calculators Calculators Discounted Cash Flow Valuation McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Time Value of Money A core concept in financial management
Finance 2009 Spring Chapter 4 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
NPV and the Time Value of Money
FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab.
CHAPTER TWO UNDERSTANDING RISK AND RETURN © 2001 South-Western College Publishing.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights Reserved 5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation.
Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.5-1 Learning Objectives 1.Explain the mechanics of compounding,
UNDERSTANDING RISK AND RETURN CHAPTER TWO Practical Investment Management Robert A. Strong.
TIME VALUE OF MONEY A dollar on hand today is worth more than a dollar to be received in the future because the dollar on hand today can be invested to.
© 2009 Cengage Learning/South-Western The Time Value Of Money Chapter 3.
Stephen G. CECCHETTI Kermit L. SCHOENHOLTZ Understanding Risk Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 5 Choice Under Uncertainty. Chapter 5Slide 2 Topics to be Discussed Describing Risk Preferences Toward Risk Reducing Risk The Demand for Risky.
Chapter Four Present Value. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.4 | 2 Would you rather have $100 today or $105 in one year? What.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
Investment Risk and Return. Learning Goals Know the concept of risk and return and their relationship How to measure risk and return What is Capital Asset.
CHAPTER 5 BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK. Learning Objectives Explain the time value of money and its application to bonds pricing. Explain the difference.
1 Chapter 5 – The Time Value of MoneyCopyright 2008 John Wiley & Sons MT 480 Unit 2 CHAPTER 5 The Time Value of Money.
Lecture Outline Basic time value of money (TVM) relationship
5-1 Economics: Theory Through Applications. 5-2 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Real Estate Finance, January XX, 2016 Review.  The interest rate can be thought of as the price of consumption now rather than later If you deposit $100.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied, or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Lonni Steven Wilson, Medaille College chapter 6 Time Value of Money.
C H A P T E R 7 Time Value of Money Chapter 7.
6-1 Time Value of Money Future value Present value Annuities Rates of return Amortization.
Chapter The Basic Tools of Finance 27. Present Value: Measuring the Time Value of Money Finance – Studies how people make decisions regarding Allocation.
The Time Value of Money Schweser CFA Level 1 Book 1 – Reading #5 master time value of money mechanics and crunch the numbers.
Chapter 5 Time Value of Money. Basic Definitions Present Value – earlier money on a time line Future Value – later money on a time line Interest rate.
Money and Banking Lecture 11. Review of the Previous Lecture Application of Present Value Concept Internal Rate of Return Bond Pricing Real Vs Nominal.
Chapter 2 Valuation, Risk, Return, and Uncertainty 1.
Understanding and Appreciating the Time Value of Money
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 0 Chapter 5 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Chapter 6: Pricing Fixed-Income Securities 1. Future Value and Present Value: Single Payment Cash today is worth more than cash in the future. A security.
CHAPTER TWO UNDERSTANDING RISK AND RETURN Practical Investment Management Robert A. Strong.
Chapter 5 Understanding Risk
Chapter 1 The Process of Portfolio Management
Chapter Five Understanding Risk.
Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2 The Two Key Concepts in Finance Prof.S.V.MURULIDHAR. M.COM.MBA.,M.Phil.,MHRD.PGDCA.,PGDMM(PhD) Dept.of Studies in Commerce & Management

2 It’s what we learn after we think we know it all that counts. - Kin Hubbard

3 Outline u Introduction u Time value of money u Safe dollars and risky dollars u Relationship between risk and return

4 Introduction u The occasional reading of basic material in your chosen field is an excellent philosophical exercise Do not be tempted to include that you “know it all” –E.g., what is the present value of a growing perpetuity that begins payments in five years

5 Time Value of Money u Introduction u Present and future values u Present and future value factors u Compounding u Growing income streams

6 Introduction u Time has a value If we owe, we would prefer to pay money later If we are owed, we would prefer to receive money sooner The longer the term of a single-payment loan, the higher the amount the borrower must repay

7 Present and Future Values u Basic time value of money relationships:

8 Present and Future Values (cont’d) u A present value is the discounted value of one or more future cash flows u A future value is the compounded value of a present value u The discount factor is the present value of a dollar invested in the future u The compounding factor is the future value of a dollar invested today

9 Present and Future Values (cont’d) u Why is a dollar today worth more than a dollar tomorrow? The discount factor: –Decreases as time increases The farther away a cash flow is, the more we discount it –Decreases as interest rates increase When interest rates are high, a dollar today is worth much more than that same dollar will be in the future

10 Present and Future Values (cont’d) u Situations: Know the future value and the discount factor –Like solving for the theoretical price of a bond Know the future value and present value –Like finding the yield to maturity on a bond Know the present value and the discount rate –Like solving for an account balance in the future

11 Present and Future Value Factors u Single sum factors u How we get present and future value tables u Ordinary annuities and annuities due

12 Single Sum Factors u Present value interest factor and future value interest factor:

13 Single Sum Factors (cont’d) Example You just invested $2,000 in a three-year bank certificate of deposit (CD) with a 9 percent interest rate. How much will you receive at maturity?

14 Single Sum Factors (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution: Solve for the future value:

15 How We Get Present and Future Value Tables u Standard time value of money tables present factors for: Present value of a single sum Present value of an annuity Future value of a single sum Future value of an annuity

16 How We Get Present and Future Value Tables (cont’d) u Relationships: You can use the present value of a single sum to obtain: –The present value of an annuity factor (a running total of the single sum factors) –The future value of a single sum factor (the inverse of the present value of a single sum factor)

17 Ordinary Annuities and Annuities Due u An annuity is a series of payments at equal time intervals u An ordinary annuity assumes the first payment occurs at the end of the first year u An annuity due assumes the first payment occurs at the beginning of the first year

18 Ordinary Annuities and Annuities Due (cont’d) Example You have just won the lottery! You will receive $1 million in ten installments of $100,000 each. You think you can invest the $1 million at an 8 percent interest rate. What is the present value of the $1 million if the first $100,000 payment occurs one year from today? What is the present value if the first payment occurs today?

19 Ordinary Annuities and Annuities Due (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution: These questions treat the cash flows as an ordinary annuity and an annuity due, respectively:

20 Compounding u Definition u Discrete versus continuous intervals u Nominal versus effective yields

21 Definition u Compounding refers to the frequency with which interest is computed and added to the principal balance The more frequent the compounding, the higher the interest earned

22 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals u Discrete compounding means we can count the number of compounding periods per year E.g., once a year, twice a year, quarterly, monthly, or daily u Continuous compounding results when there is an infinite number of compounding periods

23 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals (cont’d) u Mathematical adjustment for discrete compounding:

24 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals (cont’d) u Mathematical equation for continuous compounding:

25 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals (cont’d) Example Your bank pays you 3 percent per year on your savings account. You just deposited $ in your savings account. What is the future value of the $ in one year if interest is compounded quarterly? If interest is compounded continuously?

26 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution: For quarterly compounding:

27 Discrete Versus Continuous Intervals (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution (cont’d): For continuous compounding:

28 Nominal Versus Effective Yields u The stated rate of interest is the simple rate or nominal rate 3.00% in the example u The interest rate that relates present and future values is the effective rate $3.03/$100 = 3.03% for quarterly compounding $3.05/$100 = 3.05% for continuous compounding

29 Growing Income Streams u Definition u Growing annuity u Growing perpetuity

30 Definition u A growing stream is one in which each successive cash flow is larger than the previous one A common problem is one in which the cash flows grow by some fixed percentage

31 Growing Annuity u A growing annuity is an annuity in which the cash flows grow at a constant rate g:

32 Growing Perpetuity u A growing perpetuity is an annuity where the cash flows continue indefinitely:

33 Safe Dollars and Risky Dollars u Introduction u Choosing among risky alternatives u Defining risk

34 Introduction u A safe dollar is worth more than a risky dollar Investing in the stock market is exchanging bird-in-the-hand safe dollars for a chance at a higher number of dollars in the future

35 Introduction (cont’d) u Most investors are risk averse People will take a risk only if they expect to be adequately rewarded for taking it u People have different degrees of risk aversion Some people are more willing to take a chance than others

36 Choosing Among Risky Alternatives Example You have won the right to spin a lottery wheel one time. The wheel contains numbers 1 through 100, and a pointer selects one number when the wheel stops. The payoff alternatives are on the next slide. Which alternative would you choose?

37 Choosing Among Risky Alternatives (cont’d) ABCD [1-50]$110[1-50]$200[1-90]$50[1-99]$1,000 [51-100]$90[51-100]$0[91-100]$500[100]-$89,000 Avg. payoff$100

38 Choosing Among Risky Alternatives (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution:  Most people would think Choice A is “safe.”  Choice B has an opportunity cost of $90 relative to Choice A.  People who get utility from playing a game pick Choice C.  People who cannot tolerate the chance of any loss would avoid Choice D.

39 Choosing Among Risky Alternatives (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution (cont’d):  Choice A is like buying shares of a utility stock.  Choice B is like purchasing a stock option.  Choice C is like a convertible bond.  Choice D is like writing out-of-the-money call options.

40 Defining Risk u Risk versus uncertainty u Dispersion and chance of loss u Types of risk

41 Risk Versus Uncertainty u Uncertainty involves a doubtful outcome What you will get for your birthday If a particular horse will win at the track u Risk involves the chance of loss If a particular horse will win at the track if you made a bet

42 Dispersion and Chance of Loss u There are two material factors we use in judging risk: The average outcome The scattering of the other possibilities around the average

43 Dispersion and Chance of Loss (cont’d) Investment A Investment B Time Investment value

44 Dispersion and Chance of Loss (cont’d) u Investments A and B have the same arithmetic mean u Investment B is riskier than Investment A

45 Types of Risk u Total risk refers to the overall variability of the returns of financial assets u Undiversifiable risk is risk that must be borne by virtue of being in the market Arises from systematic factors that affect all securities of a particular type

46 Types of Risk (cont’d) u Diversifiable risk can be removed by proper portfolio diversification The ups and down of individual securities due to company-specific events will cancel each other out The only return variability that remains will be due to economic events affecting all stocks

47 Relationship Between Risk and Return u Direct relationship u Concept of utility u Diminishing marginal utility of money u St. Petersburg paradox u Fair bets u The consumption decision u Other considerations

48 Direct Relationship u The more risk someone bears, the higher the expected return u The appropriate discount rate depends on the risk level of the investment u The risk-less rate of interest can be earned without bearing any risk

49 Direct Relationship (cont’d) Risk Expected return RfRf 0

50 Direct Relationship (cont’d) u The expected return is the weighted average of all possible returns The weights reflect the relative likelihood of each possible return u The risk is undiversifiable risk A person is not rewarded for bearing risk that could have been diversified away

51 Concept of Utility u Utility measures the satisfaction people get out of something Different individuals get different amounts of utility from the same source –Casino gambling –Pizza parties –CDs –Etc.

52 Diminishing Marginal Utility of Money u Rational people prefer more money to less Money provides utility Diminishing marginal utility of money –The relationship between more money and added utility is not linear –“I hate to lose more than I like to win”

53 Diminishing Marginal Utility of Money (cont’d) $ Utility

54 St. Petersburg Paradox u Assume the following game: A coin is flipped until a head appears The payoff is based on the number of tails observed (n) before the first head The payoff is calculated as $2 n u What is the expected payoff?

55 St. Petersburg Paradox (cont’d) Number of Tails Before First HeadProbabilityPayoff Probability x Payoff 0(1/2)1 = 1/2$1$0.50 1(1/2) 2 = 1/4$2$0.50 2(1/2) 3 = 1/8$4$0.50 3(1/2) 4 = 1/16$8$0.50 4(1/2) 5 = 1/32$16$0.50 n(1/2) n + 1 $2 n $0.50 Total1.00 

56 St. Petersburg Paradox (cont’d) u In the limit, the expected payoff is infinite u How much would you be willing to play the game? Most people would only pay a couple of dollars The marginal utility for each additional $0.50 declines

57 Fair Bets u A fair bet is a lottery in which the expected payoff is equal to the cost of playing E.g., matching quarters E.g., matching serial numbers on $100 bills u Most people will not take a fair bet unless the dollar amount involved is small Utility lost is greater than utility gained

58 The Consumption Decision u The consumption decision is the choice to save or to borrow If interest rates are high, we are inclined to save –E.g., open a new savings account If interest rates are low, borrowing looks attractive –E.g., a higher home mortgage

59 The Consumption Decision (cont’d) u The equilibrium interest rate causes savers to deposit a sufficient amount of money to satisfy the borrowing needs of the economy

60 Other Considerations u Psychic return u Price risk versus convenience risk

61 Psychic Return u Psychic return comes from an individual disposition about something People get utility from more expensive things, even if the quality is not higher than cheaper alternatives –E.g., Rolex watches, designer jeans

62 Price Risk Versus Convenience Risk u Price risk refers to the possibility of adverse changes in the value of an investment due to: A change in market conditions A change in the financial situation A change in public attitude u E.g., rising interest rates and stock prices, a change in the price of gold and the value of the dollar

63 Price Risk Versus Convenience Risk (cont’d) u Convenience risk refers to a loss of managerial time rather than a loss of dollars E.g., a bond’s call provision –Allows the issuer to call in the debt early, meaning the investor has to look for other investments