1 / 33

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management. Instructor: Rogério Mazali Lecture 05: 09/23/2011. FINE 3010-01 Instructor: Rogério Mazali. Chapter 5 : The Time Value of Money. Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Sixth Edition Richard A. Brealey Stewart C. Myers Alan J. Marcus McGraw Hill/Irwin.

sibley
Télécharger la présentation

FINE 3010-01 Financial Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FINE 3010-01Financial Management Instructor: RogérioMazali Lecture 05: 09/23/2011

  2. FINE 3010-01Instructor: RogérioMazali Chapter 5: The Time Value of Money Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Sixth Edition Richard A. Brealey Stewart C. Myers Alan J. Marcus McGraw Hill/Irwin

  3. Agenda • Perpetuities • Annnuities • Ordinary Annuities • Delayed Annuities • Annuities-Due • Effective Annual Interest Rates and Inflation • Real vs. Nominal Cash Flows • Inflation and Interest Rates • Valuing Real Cash Payments • Real or Nominal?

  4. Perpetuities and Annuities • Streams of equal cash flows: • Home mortgage • Car loans • Student loans • Coupon paying Government Bonds • Coupon paying Corporate Bonds • Annuity: any sequence of equally spaced, level cash flows • Example: fixed-rate mortgage • Perpetuity: any sequence of equally spaced, level, everlasting cash flows • Example: Consols (British Government Bonds that pay a yearly coupon forever

  5. Perpetuities • A perpetuity will pay a constant cash flow CFt = C forever C C C C C C C … 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

  6. Perpetuities • How to evaluate the PV of a perpetuity?

  7. Perpetuities

  8. Perpetuities • Perpetuity Formula: • Example: British consols that promise to pay £100 as interest yearly (Take r = 10% yearly): PV0 = C/r

  9. Delayed Perpetuities • Consider that you work for a company who has just sold your business in the UK to a British company • It will take two years to finish the deal • You will be paid in British Consol bonds that will pay a total of £3 million in coupons (regular payments). • What is the value of the deal today? £ 3M £ 3M £ 3M £ 3M £ 3M … 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

  10. Delayed Perpetuities • We know how to find the value of our bonds when we receive them: • Once we have that, we can find the consols value at today:

  11. Growing Perpetuities • Annual payments grow at a constant rate g

  12. Growing Perpetuities

  13. Example • What is PV if C = $100, r = 10%, and g = 2%?

  14. Example • An investment in a growing perpetuity costs $5000, it is expected to pay $200 next year. • If the interest is 10%, what is the growth rate of the annual payment? • A: we have C = $200, r = 10%, and PV = $5,000; g = ? • Note: this formula only works if g < r

  15. Annuities • An annuity is a series of equal payments made at fixed intervals for a specific length of time • Ordinary Annuity: payments occur at the end of each period • Annuity Due: payments occur at the beginning of each period C C C C C 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

  16. Annuities • How to find the PV of an annuity? • Consider, for example, a 3-year annuity C C C 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

  17. Ordinary Annuities • Now consider the following strategy: • Buy today perpetuity paying C starting at t=1; • Issue perpetuity at t = 3 promising to pay C starting at t = 4; • Payoffs are: C C C C C C C … … 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 C C C C

  18. Ordinary Annuity

  19. Ordinary Annuity • PV of an ordinary annuity paying C dollars every year, for t years:

  20. Example 1 • Compute the present value of a 3-year ordinary annuity with payments of $100 at r=10%

  21. Example 2 • You agree to lease a car for 4 years at $300 per month, payable at the end of the month. If the discount rate is 0.5% per month, what is the cost of the lease?

  22. Delayed Annuity • The Problem: No payment for 5 years… • Then pay 4-year annuity of Example 1 $100 $100 $100 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  23. Delayed Annuity • Step 1: Calculate the PV at time 5 using the following formula • Step 2: Determine the PV at time zero:

  24. Example 3 • What is the value today of a 10-year annuity that pays $300 a year (at yearend) if the annuity’s first cash flow starts at the end of year 6 and the interest rate is 15% for years 1 through 5 and 10% thereafter? • Steps: • Get value of annuity at t= 5 (year end) • Bring value in step 1 to t=0

  25. Annuities Due • Annuity and Perpetuity formulas: payment at the end of period • What if payments are made in the beginning of the period? • Often, cash payments start immediately • A level stream of payments starting immediately (beginning of period) is known as annuity due.

  26. Annuity Due • Annuity-Due PV formula:

  27. Future Value of an Annuity • Example: if you save $3,000 a year, at 8% interest rate, how much you would have at the end of 4 years?

  28. Future Value of an Annuity • With many cash flows, calculation can be hard • However, cash flows are the same as annuities’.

  29. Future Value of an Annuity • Future Value of an Annuity paying C dollars for t years: • Future Value of an Annuity-Due paying C dollars for t years:

  30. Inflation and the Time Value of Money • Inflati0n erodes the purchase power of money • So far we have computed PVs and FVs disregarding this issue • Inflation: GENERAL increase in prices, effect of money’s loss of value • Measure of Inflation: Consumer Price Index (CPI)

  31. Inflation and the Time of Money • Nominal vs. Real Values • Nominal Values: actual numbers of dollars of the day • Real Values: amount of purchasing power; stated in number of dollars of reference period • Example: 6% interest rate and 6% inflation rate => you gain NOTHING! • Approximation commonly used:

  32. Inflation and the Time Value of Money • Discounting Cash Flows: $100 to be received 1 year from today when annual interest rate is 10%: • Discounting $100 to be received 1 year from today when real interest rate is 2.8% and inflation is expected to be 7%. • Note: • NOMINAL cash flows discounted using NOMINAL interest rates • REAL cash flows must be discounted using REAL interest rates

More Related