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Compound Interest

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Compound Interest An Example Suppose that you were going to invest $5000 in an IRA earning interest at an annual rate of 5.5% How would you determine the amount of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Compound Interest


1
Compound Interest
2
An Example
  • Suppose that you were going to invest 5000 in an
    IRA earning interest at an annual rate of 5.5
  • How would you determine the amount of interest
    youve made on your investment after one year?

3
An Example
  • How much money would you have in your IRA
    account?
  • How much interest would you get after two years?

4
An Example
  • How much money would you have in your IRA account
    after two years?
  • What about 10 years?

5
Compound Interest
  • Notice that the interest in our account was paid
    at regular intervals, in this case every year,
    while our money remained in the account. This is
    called compounding annually or one time per year.

6
Compound Interest
  • Suppose that instead of collecting interest at
    the end of each year, we decided to collect
    interest at the end of each quarter, so our
    interest is paid four times each year. What
    would happen to our investment?
  • Since our account has an interest rate of 5.5
    annually, we need to adjust this rate so that we
    get interest on a quarterly basis. The quarterly
    rate is

7
Compound Interest
  • So for our IRA account of 5000 at the end of a
    year looks like
  • After 10 years, we have

8
Compound Interest Formula
  • P dollars invested at an annual rate r,
    compounded n times per year, has a value of F
    dollars after t years.
  • Think of P as the present value, and F as the
    future value of the deposit.

9
Yield
  • One may compare investments with different
    interest rates and different frequencies of
    compounding by looking at the values of P
    dollars at the end of one year, and then
    computing the annual rates that would produce
    these amounts without compounding.

10
Yield
  • Such a rate is called the effective annual yield,
    annual percentage yield, or simply yield.
  • In our previous example when we compounded
    quarterly, after one year we had

11
Yield
  • To find the effective annual yield, y, notice
    that we gained 280.72 on interest after a year
    compounded quarterly. That interest represents a
    gain of 5.61 on 5000

12
Finding the Yield
  • To find the effective annual yield, find the
    difference between our money after one year and
    our initial investment and divided by the
    initial investment.
  • Therefore, interest at an annual rate r,
    compounded n times per year has yield y

13
More on Yield
  • There may be times when we need to find the
    annual rate that would produce a given yield at a
    specified frequency of compounding. In other
    words, we need to solve for r

14
Compound Interest Formula
  • Notice that when we collected our interest more
    times during each year, i.e. we compounded more
    frequently, the amount of money in our account
    was actually greater than if only collected
    interest one time a year.
  • What would happen to our money if we compounded a
    really large number of times?

15
Continuous Compounding
  • As n increases, approaches a constant value in
    the Frequency Worksheet. Heres why
  • As n gets really large, m also becomes really
    large, and

16
Continuous Compounding
  • The value of P dollars after t years, when
    compounded continuously at an annual rate r , is
  • On the calculator use the button
  • (on TI-83 2nd LN )
  • In Excel, use the function EXP(x )

17
Yield
  • The effective annual yield, y, for compounding
    continuously at an annual interest rate of r is
  • To find the annual interest rate r if we know the
    yield, y, we would have to solve for r in the
    above equation. To do this you would use
    logarithms

18
Present Values
  • If we are given the future value, F, the annual
    interest rate r, the number of times compounded
    per year n, and the length of time invested t, we
    may solve the present value P

19
Ratios
  • Sometimes we are not interested in the percentage
    that an investment increases by. Rather, we
    would like to know by what factor the investment
    increased or decreased. Such factors are
    computed by find the ratio of the future value to
    the present value. This ratio, R, for continuous
    compounding is
  • This allows us to convert the interest rate for a
    given period to a ratio of future to present
    value for the same period.

20
Example Ratios
  • Suppose that in our IRA example, the annual
    interest rate of 5.5 is compounded continuously.
  • If we wanted to know the weekly rate our
    investment would increase, we would simply have
    0.055/52 or 0.00105 or 0.105. This would mean
    that the ratio of the future value to the present
    value between consecutive weeks compounded
    continuously would be e0.055/52 or 1.00105

21
Example Ratios
  • Multiplying by this weekly ratio 52 times yields
    a yearly ratio of (e0.055/52)52 e(0.055/52)?52
    e0.055. As we would expect, this corresponds
    to the annual rate of 0.055.

22
The Project
  • How can compound interest help us price a stock
    option?
  • Our annual risk-free rate of 4, compounded
    continuously, gives a weekly risk-free rate of
    rrf 0.04/52 ? 0.0007692. The weekly ratio
    corresponding to this weekly rate is e0.04/52.
  • We call Rrf e0.04/52 ? 1.0007695 the risk-free
    weekly ratio for the Walt Disney option.

23
The Project
  • Compound interest can help us with option pricing
    in a second way. Suppose that we know a future
    value F for our 20 week option at the end of the
    20 weeks. We suppose that money will earn at the
    risk-free annual interest rate or 4 compounded
    continuously. This can be used to find the
    present value, P, of the option.

24
Preliminary Reports
  • You will deliver your preliminary report on
    Monday March 28th, 2005.
  • Download your teams historical data today and
    start looking at the behavior of your companies
    particular stock.
  • For the report you want to determine what a
    reason able price will be for investors
    considering buying an option for your teams
    particular company and an explanation as to how
    you determined that.
  • The Chicago Board of Options Exchange is a good
    resource for understanding how options are
    priced.
  • I will need two hard copies of your powerpoint
    slides.
  • Because this is a new project, you will need to
    draft new team contracts. Those will be
    collected in class on Wednesday, March 30th,
    2005.
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