Formulas for Loans, Mortgages and Savings accounts Bernard Liengme January 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How to Calculate Present Value & Future Value Using Microsoft Excel ACCT 2154 Chapter 7.
Advertisements

FA2 Module 5. Interest concepts of future and present value 1.Time value of money 2.Basic interest concepts 3.Present and future values a.Single payment.
6-1 CHAPTER 28 Time Value of Money The language of Finance The most important lesson.
TVM (cont).
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
The Time Value of Money: Annuities and Other Topics
Time Value of Money, Loan Calculations and Analysis Chapter 3.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
1 Chapter 11 Time Value of Money Adapted from Financial Accounting 4e by Porter and Norton.
Chapter 5 Time Value of Money
TOPIC TWO: Chapter 3: Financial Mathematics By Diana Beal and Michelle Goyen.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 6 Calculators Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example 6.1
QUESTIONS IN SPREADSHEET Dr. Faiyaz Gadiwalla Hinduja College.
MS-Excel Manual-3 Pradeep Velugoti Lakshman Tallam.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
LSP 120: Quantitative Reasoning and Technological Literacy Section 118
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.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. The Time Value of Money: Annuities and Other Topics Chapter 6.
5-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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.
6-0 Week 3 Lecture 3 Ross, Westerfield and Jordan 7e Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Agenda 11/28 Review Quiz 4 Discuss interest and the time value of money Explore the Excel time value of money functions Examine the accounting measures.
Before you begin If a yellow security bar appears at the top of the screen in PowerPoint, click Enable Editing. You need PowerPoint 2010 to view this presentation.
Section 4C Loan Payments, and Credit Cards Pages C.
Chapter 6 Calculators Calculators Discounted Cash Flow Valuation McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 9: Mathematics of Finance
CS&E 1111 ExFin Microsoft Excel Financial Functions Objectives: Understanding and using Financial Functions the time value of money PV, FV, Rate, NPER,
1 Agenda – 4/17/2013 Discuss interest and the time value of money Explore the Excel time value of money functions Examine the accounting measures of profitability.
Chapter 13 Creating Formulas for Financial Applications Microsoft Office Excel 2003.
Financial Functions. Working with Loans and Investments =PMT(rate, nper, pv, [fv=0] [type=0]) =FV(rate, nper, pmt, [pv=0] [type=0]) =NPER(rate, pmt, pv,
LSP 120: Quantitative Reasoning and Technological Literacy Topic 9: Financial Mathematics Loans and Credit Cards Prepared by Ozlem Elgun1.
6-0 Finding the Number of Payments – Example 1 You ran a little short on your February vacation, so you put $1,000 on your credit card. You can only afford.
ISU CCEE CE 203 More Interest Formulas (EEA Chap 4)
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. The Time Value of Money - The Basics Chapter 5.
1 FINC3131 Business Finance Chapter 5: Time Value of Money: The Basic Concepts.
1 Slides for BAII+ Calculator Training Videos. 2 Slides for Lesson 1 There are no corresponding slides for Lesson 1, “Introduction to the Calculator”
210 – Payment Function Buying a Car – The ABC’s So you want to buy a car! We must first look at all the variables! Car Price, Down Payment, Interest.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights Reserved 5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation.
Computer Science & Engineering 4194 Day 9 Financial Functions 1.
Quick Quiz – Part 1 Suppose you are looking at the following possible cash flows: Year 1 CF = $100; Years 2 and 3 CFs = $200; Years 4 and 5 CFs = $300.
Annuities Chapter 11 2 Annuities Equal Cash Flows at Equal Time Intervals Ordinary Annuity (End): Cash Flow At End Of Each Period Annuity Due (Begin):
Quick answers If the bank is offering 12% per year compounded quarterly what would be the value of “i” in the Amount of an annuity formula? If the Nicole.
Quantitative Finance Unit 1 Financial Mathematics.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
Simple Interest. Simple Interest – * the amount of money you must pay back for borrowing money from a bank or on a credit card or * the amount of money.
Lecture Outline Basic time value of money (TVM) relationship
Ch.7 The Time Value of Money Goals: Concept of the time value of money Present value and Future value Cash flows and time value calculation Compounding.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter Five. 1Barton College Don’t TEXT and DRIVE!!!
Computer Science & Engineering 2111 Lecture 6 Financial Functions 1.
Determine the amount saved if $375 is deposited every month for 6 years at 5.9% per year compounded monthly. N = 12 X 6 = 72 I% = 5.9 PV = 0 PMT = -375.
What is Interest? Discuss with a partner for 2 minutes!
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.
Chapter 6 The Time Value of Money— Annuities and Other Topics.
Understanding and Appreciating the Time Value of Money
Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money— The Basics. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.5-2 Slide Contents Learning Objectives Principles.
Principles of Finance with Excel, 2 nd edition Instructor materials Chapter 3 What does it cost? Understanding IRR.
1 Simple interest, Compound Interests & Time Value of Money Lesson 1 – Simple Interest.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 0 Chapter 5 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
1 Financial Functions By Prof. J. Brink with modifications by L. Murphy 1/13/2009.
Time Value of Money Basics and Building Blocks
The Time Value of Money - The Basics
LSP 120: Quantitative Reasoning and Technological Literacy
LSP 120: Quantitative Reasoning and Technological Literacy
Financial Functions This lecture will cover the use of some basic functions provided by EXCEL. We will be explore how these functions work and how they.
Engineering Economic Analysis
Presentation transcript:

Formulas for Loans, Mortgages and Savings accounts Bernard Liengme January 2012

Interest Rate When you borrow money you pay interest; when you save money you earn interest. The interest is computed as a percentage rate and in normally quoted as a yearly (per annum) value. It is then called the APR – annual percentage rate. But you are generally charged (or earn) on a monthly basis If rate is the per annum percentage then the monthly percentage is rate/12 The interest rates banks charge on credit card balances is criminal! Somewhere around 26%

Number of Periods (nper) A period is the interval between which you make a payment on the load (or the bank deposits earned interest into your account) All of our examples will use monthly periods If nper is the number of years over which you will pay of the load then in our formulas we replace nper by nper * 12.

Principal The starting amount of a load to distinguish it from the interest Get the spelling right it is NOT principle This word does not appear in Excel formulas

Present Value PV A $100 bill is worth (surprise!) $100. That is its present value. You have won a prize that pays you $100 a month for 10 years. What is it worth? Or what is its present value? Its PV is the amount of money someone would need to invest and get $100 a month for 10 years leaving nothing in the bank at the end of that time We have to assume the interest rate remains the same as today’s value.

Future Value FV A $100 bill is worth $100 today and will be worth $100 in 10 years time (It may not buy as many pints of beer but it will still have a value of $100). That is it PV and its FV. I deposit $100 in the bank, wait 10 years and then withdraw it. How much will I get? Or what will be its future value? The catch phrase is the time value of money.

Payment pmt You borrow $1,000 from the bank for 1 year. Every month you give the bank $86.99 (normally this will be deducted from you regular bank account automatically) After 12 months the loan is paid off When you began the loan: PV = 1000, FV = 0, rate = 8%/12 and nper = 1 * 12. We will see soon how to compute the payment pmt.

How are these thing related? By the money equation shown here But we will not have to worry about it

Money has a value and a direction There is a difference between giving and receiving money. Money received is a credit and we give it a positive value Money paid into the bank is a debit and we give it a negative sign

Excel formulas All the formulas for personal finance use the terms PV, FV, rate, nper and pmt For everything but rate, we can rearrange the money equation to get just one term on the left.

PV Present value =PV(rate,nper, pmt, [fv],[type]) Arguments in brackets [] can be omitted when zero My prize gives me $100 each month for 10 years, what is its PV? If the rate is 8% pa then we compute the present value with: =PV(8%/12,10*12,100) What if I will also get $500 at the end of the 10 years? =PV(8%/12,10*12,100, 500)

And the answer is Open the workbook Finance and on the PV worksheet note the way we do the calculations. Why are the two PV values shown in red? Because it someone went to the bank to set up a price like this they would have to give money to the bank. Money would flow away from them.

FV Future value =FV(rate, nper, pmt, [pv],[type]) I deposit $100 each month into a saving account. The interest rate is 8% pa. PV = 0 since the saving account had nothing in it before the first payment. What formula should I use to find how much I can expect after 3 years? =FV(8%/12,3*12,-100) Why is pv given the value -100 with a negative sign? See worksheet FV

Payment Payment: =PMT(rate, nper, pv, [fv], [type]) I borrow $1,000 at 8% pa and pay off the loan in 12 monthly installments. How much must I pay? See worksheet PMT

Number of Periods I plan to save $250 each month until I have $100,000. Assuming the APR is 8%, how many monthly payments must I make? Number of periods =NPER(rate, pmt, pv, fv, type) Rate=APR/12; PMT = -250 (note the negative) PV = 0, FV = 100,000, type = 0 (end of month) Worksheet NPER

Rate Rate is found with RATE(nper,pmt,pv,fv,type,guess) When the syntax is shown like this the bold arguments are required and the others are optional – in the other form we used [] for optional arguments The money equation cannot be solved for rate, so Excel uses a ‘trial-and-error’ method like GoalSeek. Hence the guess argument: it sometimes helps to give Excel a start!

Rate (cont) I plan to save $400 each month for 25 years to give myself a pension. If my target is $500,000 what must the APR be during this time? The answer is 9.65% which is unlikely at the present time. See worksheet Rate

IPMT and PPMT Where as PMT computes the payment on a loan, IPMT computes the interest part of this payment and PPMT computes how much went to paying down the principal. See worksheet IPMT