Today Banking and Money: Modules 24 and 25 Personal Banking Video Monday Quiz.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Profit, Rent,& Interest. Sources of Economic Profit u u reward for assuming uninsurable risks (for example, unexpected changes in demand or cost conditions)
Advertisements

Understanding the Concept of Present Value
1 Chapter 11 Time Value of Money Adapted from Financial Accounting 4e by Porter and Norton.
1 Finance: Net Present Value 8.1 ECON 201 Summer 2009.
State University of New York WARNING All rights reserved. No part of the course materials used in the instruction of this course may be reproduced in any.
Introducing the Mathematics of Finance
The Time Value of Money Module 24.
1 Microeconomics Lecture 11 Capital market Institute of Economic Theories - University of Miskolc Mónika Orloczki Assistant lecturer Andrea Gubik Safrany,
Thank you Presentation to Cox Business Students FINA 3320: Financial Management Lecture 6: Time Value of Money – Part 1 The Basics of Time Value of Money.
1 FINC3131 Business Finance Chapter 5: Time Value of Money: The Basic Concepts.
Understanding the Concept of Present Value. Interest Rates, Compounding, and Present Value In economics, an interest rate is known as the yield to maturity.
© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 6 Time Value of Money Concepts.
CHAPTER 5 INTRODUCTION TO VALUATION: THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY.
Agribusiness Library LESSON L060013: THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY.
Pump Primer : Why do you think a dollar today is worth more than a dollar a year from now?
Money, Measurement, and Time Cost. Roles of Money Existence of money improves standard of living, as it eliminates “double coincidence of needs” 1. Medium.
© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 6 Time Value of Money Concepts.
ECON 201 Lecture 4-5(a) Finance: Net Present Value & Benefit/Cost Analysis.
Module 24: The Time Value of Money Present Value : The use of interest rates to compare the value of a dollar realized today with the value of a dollar.
+ Time Value of Money Demonstrate understanding of the time value of money by explaining the options of the Mega Millions Jackpot.
Chapter 5 Learning Objectives
Chapter 5 The time value of money.
Time Value of Money Annuity.
The Time Value of Money - The Basics
Chapter 5 Interest Rates.
Introduction to valuation: The time value of money
Chapter 4 Lecture - Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money
The Loanable Funds Market
Chapter Outline Future Value and Compounding
Time Value of Money and Quantity of Money
Time Value of Money Multiple Cash Flows.
Business Mathematics 5 types of transactions / questions
Time Value of Money Present value of any the amount of money today that would future sum of money = be needed at current interest rates to.
Chapter 4 Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money.
Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy
ECO218: PRINCIPLES OF FINANCE
Chapter 3.3 Time Value of Money.
7.6.7 Simple Interest.
Module 24 The Time Value of Money KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP*
Learning Goals LG1 Discuss the role of time value in finance, the use of computational tools, and the basic patterns of cash flow. LG2 Understand the.
Discounted cash flow valuation
Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy
Interest Principal (p) - Amount borrowed or invested.
Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy
Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money
24 Module The Time Value of Money KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP*
Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money
Saving and Borrowing.
Chapter 4 Time Value of Money.
Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy
How does credit work and what do banks do?
Chapter 4 Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money.
24 Module The Time Value of Money KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP*
Translating Today’s Benefits to the Future
Chapter 1.2 Opportunity Costs Financial Strategies
Who is hurt and who is helped by inflation?
By Muhammad Shahid Iqbal
Engineering Economic Analysis
Chapter 4: The Time Value of Money
Contemporary Engineering Economics
Time Value of Money Concepts
The Time Value of Money AP Macro Mr. Warner.
Time Value of Money (TVM)
Time Value of Money-PART 1
Time Value of Money.
Warm Up Mrs. Law or Mrs. Kile will hand you the International Towne Skills Assessment and International Towne Position Application… please complete the.
Module 24 The Time Value of Money KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP*
Money Supply Money Demand & Money Market Equilibrium Lecture 17
Section 5 Module 24.
Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money
Presentation transcript:

Today Banking and Money: Modules 24 and 25 Personal Banking Video Monday Quiz

Border Patrol Union backs Trump A15-year-old anti-Trump protestor feeling the “Bern” of Mace.

24 Module The Time Value of Money

What you will learn in this Module: Why a dollar today is worth more than a dollar a year from now How the concept of present value can help you make decisions when costs or benefits come in the future

Borrowing, Lending, and Interest The effect of time on cost benefit analysis Ask the students: “Suppose you could have $1000 today or $1000 next year? Which would you choose?” $1000 today! Of course, but why? It would allow me the satisfaction of buying or saving today, rather than waiting. For example, if I need to buy food or pay my rent, I can’t wait a year to get my hands on that money. The other reason is that if you had the money today, you could put it in the bank and in a year you would have more than $1000.   So for both reasons, $1000 today is worth more than waiting a year to get $1000. Note: it can be useful to get the students to think about lending money to someone for a year. They have a self-interest to start thinking about the benefits of receiving interest rather than paying interest in a borrowing example. Example: You are going to lend your friend $100, and he is going to pay you back in one year. Assume no inflation, you agree to a 10% interest rate, the going rate you could receive if you had simply saved the money. Why do you need to receive interest on this loan? The opportunity cost of lending your friend $100 is the interest you could have earned, $10, after a year had passed. So the interest rate measures the cost to you of forgoing the use of that $100. Rather than saving it, you could have spent $100 on clothing right now that would have provided immediate benefit to you. Repayment received on lending $100 for one year = $100 + $100*.10 = $100*(1+.10) What if you were going to lend your friend the money for two years? Repayment in two years = $100(1.10)*(1.10) = $121 Generalization: Your friend, as a borrower, must pay you $21 to compensate you for the fact that he has your $100 for a period of two years. You, as a saver, could put the $100 in the bank today, two years from now you would have $121 to spend on goods and services. This implies that you would be completely indifferent between having $100 in your pocket today or $121 two years from today. They are equivalent measures of purchasing power, just measured at two different points in time, and it is the interest rate that equates the two.

Defining Present Value Let fv = future value of $ pv = present value of $ r = real interest rate n = # of years The Simple Interest Formula (if interest=10%) fv = ( 1 + r )n * pv pv = fv / (1 + r)n As the above examples demonstrate, there is a difference between dollars received today and dollars received in the future. We will provide some more specifics to this relationship.   Generalization: To see the relationship between dollars today (present value PV) and dollars 1 year from now (future value FV), a simple equation is applied: Future Payment, or FV = PV*(1+r) or, using our example, FV = $100*(1.10) = $110 In other words, one year into the future, $100 in the present will be worth $110. This is true whether you saved it or lent it to your friend. We can also rearrange our equation and solve for the present value PV: PV = FV/(1+r) Using our example again, PV = $110/(1.10) = $100 This tells us that $110 received a year from now is worth $100 in today’s dollars. Now let’s look again at the decision to lend the money for a period of t=2 years: Repayment in two years = $100(1.10)*(1.10) = $121 FV = PV(1+r)(1+r) = PV(1+r)t Or PV = FV/(1+r)t Money today is more valuable than the same amount of money in the future. The present value of $1 received one year from now is $1/(1+r). The future value of $1 invested today is $1*(1+r). Interest paid on savings and interest charged on borrowing is designed to equate the value of dollars today with the value of future dollars.

FV = $100*(1.10) = $110 In other words, one year into the future, $100 in the present will be worth $110. This is true whether you saved it or lent it to your friend.   We can also rearrange our equation and solve for the present value PV: PV = FV/(1+r) Using our example again, PV = $110/(1.10) = $100 This tells us that $110 received a year from now is worth $100 in today’s dollars. Now let’s look again at the decision to lend the money for a period of t=2 years: Repayment in two years = $100(1.10)*(1.10) = $121 Generalization: FV = PV(1+r)(1+r) = PV(1+r)t Or PV = FV/(1+r)t Money today is more valuable than the same amount of money in the future. The present value of $1 received one year from now is $1/(1+r). The future value of $1 invested today is $1*(1+r). Interest paid on savings and interest charged on borrowing is designed to equate the value of dollars today with the value of future dollars.