Title: Time value of money
1Time value of money
2Todays agenda
- Review of what we have learned in the last
lecture - Continue to discuss the concept of the time value
of money - present value (PV)
- discount rate (r)
- net present value (NPV)
- Learn how to draw cash flows of projects
- Learn how to calculate the present value of
annuities - Learn how to calculate the present value of
perpetuities - Inflation, real interest rates and nominal
interest rates, and their relationship
3What have we learned in the last lecture
- The motivation for the study of the financial
market - The seven functions of a financial market
- The cost of capital
- The present value concept
- The NPV rule
- The difference between capital budgeting and the
investment in the financial market (simply called
investment)
4Example 1
- John got his MBA from SFSU. When he was
interviewed by a big firm, the interviewer asked
him the following question - A project costs 10 m and produces future cash
flows, as shown in the next slide, where cash
flows depend on the state of the economy. - In a boom economy payoffs will be high
- over the next three years, there is a 20 chance
of a boom - In a normal economy payoffs will be medium
- over the next three years, there is a 50 chance
of normal - In a recession payoffs will be low
- over the next 3 years, there is a 30 chance of a
recession - In all three states, the discount rate is 8 over
all time horizons. - Tell me whether to take the project or not
5Cash flows diagram in each state
- Boom economy
- Normal economy
- Recession
3 m
8 m
3 m
-10 m
2 m
7 m
1.5 m
-10 m
0.9 m
1 m
6 m
-10 m
6Example 1 (continues)
- The interviewer then asked John
- Before you tell me the final decision, how do you
calculate the NPV? - Should you calculate the NPV at each economy or
take the average first and then calculate NPV - Can your conclusion be generalized to any
situations?
7Calculate the NPV at each economy
- In the boom economy, the NPV is
- -10 8/1.08 3/1.082 3/1.0832.36
- In the average economy, the NPV is
- -10 7/1.08 2/1.082 1.5/1.083-0.613
- In the bust economy, the NPV is
- -10 6/1.08 1/1.082 0.9/1.083 -2.87
- The expected NPV is
- 0.22.360.5(-.613)0.3(-2.87)-0.696
8Calculate the expected cash flows at each time
- At period 1, the expected cash flow is
- C10.280.570.366.9
- At period 2, the expected cash flow is
- C20.230.520.311.9
- At period 3, the expected cash flows is
- C30.230.51.50.30.91.62
- The NPV is
- NPV-106.9/1.081.9/1.0821.62/1.083
- -0.696
9Perpetuities
- We are going to look at the PV of a perpetuity
starting one year from now. - Definition if a project makes a level, periodic
payment into perpetuity, it is called a
perpetuity. - Lets suppose your friend promises to pay you 1
every year, starting in one year. His future
family will continue to pay you and your future
family forever. The discount rate is assumed to
be constant at 8.5. How much is this promise
worth?
C
C
C
C
C
C
PV ???
Yr1
Yr2
Yr3
Yr4
Yr5
Timeinfinity
10Perpetuities (continue)
- Calculating the PV of the perpetuity could be
hard
11Perpetuities (continue)
- To calculate the PV of perpetuities, we can have
some math exercise as follows
12Perpetuities (continue)
- Calculating the PV of the perpetuity could also
be easy if you ask George
13Calculate the PV of the perpetuity
- Consider the perpetuity of one dollar every
period your friend promises to pay you. The
interest rate or discount rate is 8.5. - Then PV 1/0.08511.765, not a big gift.
14Perpetuity (continue)
- What is the PV of a perpetuity of paying C every
year, starting from year t 1, with a constant
discount rate of r ?
C
C
C
C
C
C
t1
t2
t3
t4
T5
Timetinf
Yr0
15Perpetuity (continue)
- What is the PV of a perpetuity of paying C every
year, starting from year t 1, with a constant
discount rate of r ?
16Perpetuity (alternative method)
- What is the PV of a perpetuity that pays C every
year, starting in year t1, at constant discount
rate r? - Alternative method we can think of PV of a
perpetuity starting year t1. The normal formula
gives us the value AS OF year t. We then need
to discount this value to account for periods 1
to t - That is
17Annuities
- Well, a project might not pay you forever.
Instead, consider a project that promises to pay
you C every year, for the next T years. This
is called an annuity. - Can you think of examples of annuities in the
real world?
C
C
C
C
C
C
PV ???
Yr1
Yr2
Yr3
Yr4
Yr5
TimeT
18Value the annuity
- Think of it as the difference between two
perpetuities - add the value of a perpetuity starting in yr 1
- subtract the value of perpetuity starting in yr
T1
19Example for annuities
- you win the million dollar lottery! but wait, you
will actually get paid 50,000 per year for the
next 20 years if the discount rate is a constant
7 and the first payment will be in one year, how
much have you actually won (in PV-terms) ?
20My solution
- Using the formula for the annuity
21Example
You agree to lease a car for 4 years at 300
per month. You are not required to pay any money
up front or at the end of your agreement. If
your opportunity cost of capital is 0.5 per
month, what is the cost of the lease?
22Solution
23Lottery example
- Paper reports Todays JACKPOT 20mm !!
- paid in 20 annual equal installments.
- payment are tax-free.
- odds of winning the lottery is 13mm1
- Should you invest 1 for a ticket?
- assume the risk-adjusted discount rate is 8
24My solution
- Should you invest ?
- Step1 calculate the PV
- Step 2 get the expectation of the PV
- Pass up this this wonderful opportunity
25Mortgage-style loans
- Suppose you take a 20,000 3-yr car loan with
mortgage style payments - annual payments
- interest rate is 7.5
- Mortgage style loans have two main features
- They require the borrower to make the same
payment every period (in this case, every year) - The are fully amortizing (the loan is completely
paid off by the end of the last period)
26Mortgage-style loans
- The best way to deal with mortgage-style loans is
to make a loan amortization schedule - The schedule tells both the borrower and lender
exactly - what the loan balance is each period (in this
case - year) - how much interest is due each year ? ( 7.5 )
- what the total payment is each period (year)
- Can you use what you have learned to figure out
this schedule?
27My solution
Ending balance
Total payment
Interest payment
Principle payment
year
Beginning balance
0
20,000
1,500
6,191
7,691
13,809
1
7,154
13,809
1,036
6,655
7,691
2
7,154
7,691
0
7,154
537
3
28Future value
- The formula for converting the present value to
future value -
- present value at time zero
- future value in year i
- discount rate during the i years
29Manhattan Island Sale
Peter Minuit bought Manhattan Island for 24 in
1629. Was this a good deal? Suppose the interest
rate is 8.
30Manhattan Island Sale
Peter Minuit bought Manhattan Island for 24 in
1629. Was this a good deal?
To answer, determine 24 is worth in the year
2003, compounded at 8.
FYI - The value of Manhattan Island land is well
below this figure.
31Inflation
- What is inflation?
- What is the real interest rate?
- What is the nominal interest rate?
32Inflation rule
- Be consistent in how you handle inflation!!
- Use nominal interest rates to discount nominal
cash flows. - Use real interest rates to discount real cash
flows. - You will get the same results, whether you use
nominal or real figures
33Example
- You own a lease that will cost you 8,000 next
year, increasing at 3 a year (the forecasted
inflation rate) for 3 additional years (4 years
total). If discount rates are 10 what is the
present value cost of the lease?
34Inflation
- Example - nominal figures
35Inflation