Effective and nominal rates of interest and discount each measure interest over some interval of time. The measure of the intensity of interest at a particular.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance
Advertisements

MATH 3286 Mathematics of Finance
Effective and nominal rates of interest and discount each measure interest over some interval of time. The measure of the intensity of interest at a particular.
Differential Equations Brannan Copyright © 2010 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 08: Series Solutions of Second Order Linear Equations.
MATH 2040 Introduction to Mathematical Finance
LOGO 1 MATH 2040 Introduction to Mathematical Finance Instructor: Dr. Ken Tsang.
Recall: The effective rate of interest i is the amount of money that one unit (one dollar) invested at the beginning of a (the first) period will earn.
Consider the graphs of f(x) = x – 1 and f(x) = lnx. x y y = x – 1 y = lnx (1.0) Sections 2.6, 2.7, 2.8 We find that for any x > 0, x – 1 > lnx Now, suppose.
Before the technological advances which made it easy to calculate exponential and logarithmic functions, approximations were available. Today, such approximations.
Taylor Series (11/12/08) Given a nice smooth function f (x): What is the best constant function to approximate it near 0? Best linear function to approximate.
Consider the accumulation function a(t) = (1 + i) t for integer t  0. Interest accruing according to this function is called compound interest. We call.
Sections 3.1, 3.2, 3.3 A series of payments made at equal intervals of time is called an annuity. An annuity where payments are guaranteed to occur for.
Chapter 7 Engineering Economic Analysis Time Value of Money.
1 Feedback and Warm-Up Review Feedback of your requests Cash Flow Cash Flow Diagrams Economic Equivalence.
Consider annuities payable less frequently than interest is convertible. We let k = n = i = the number of interest conversion periods in one payment period,
Section 5.7 Compound Interest. A credit union pays interest of 4% per annum compounded quarterly on a certain savings plan. If $2000 is deposited.
If one unit (one dollar) is invested at time t = 0, the accumulation function a(t) gives the accumulated value at time t  0. a(0) =a(t) is (usually) a(t)
Sections 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5 Interest problems generally involve four quantities: principal(s), investment period length(s), interest rate(s), accumulated.
 What are the next three terms in each sequence?  17, 20, 23, 26, _____, _____, _____  9, 4, -1, -6, _____, _____, _____  500, 600, 700, 800, _____,
TIME VALUE OF MONEY CHAPTER 5.
Maclaurin and Taylor Series; Power Series Objective: To take our knowledge of Maclaurin and Taylor polynomials and extend it to series.
MATH 2040 Introduction to Mathematical Finance
Copyright © 2015, 2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4, Unit B, Slide 1 Managing Money 4.
Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance
Initial Value Problems, Slope Fields Section 6.1a.
Copyright © 2015, 2011, and 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Chapter 11 Annuities, Stocks, and Bonds Section 1 Annuities and Retirement Accounts.
Sections 4.7, 4.8, 4.9 Consider an annuity-immediate with a term of n periods where the interest rate is i per period, and where the first payment is 1.
MAT 125 – Applied Calculus 5.3 – Compound Interest.
Chapter 10: Compound Interest, Future Value, and Present Value  Find the future value and compound interest by compounding manually.  Find the future.
20.3 Compound Interest. The more common form of interest used is Compound Interest. It is called compound because the interest accumulates each year is.
5-1 Chapter Five The Time Value of Money Future Value and Compounding 5.2 Present Value and Discounting 5.3 More on Present and Future Values.
Chapter 7: Rational Algebraic Functions Section 7-11: Variation Functions.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 3 Discrete Random Variables and Probability Distributions.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 3 Discrete Random Variables and Probability Distributions.
Section 6.7 Financial Models. OBJECTIVE 1 A credit union pays interest of 4% per annum compounded quarterly on a certain savings plan. If $2000 is.
Section 5.7 Financial Models. A credit union pays interest of 4% per annum compounded quarterly on a certain savings plan. If $2000 is deposited.
Section 2.5 Linear Inequalities in One Variable (Interval Notation)
ACTIVITY 39 Exponential and Logarithmic (Section 5.4, pp ) Equations.
Topic 1. Accumulation and Discounting. Time Factor in Quantitative Analysis of Financial Operations Key elements for financial modeling are time and money.
Topic 2. Payment, Annuity Streams. 2 Basic Definitions Let us call the sequence (range) of payments and inflows arranged for different time moments a.
MTH 253 Calculus (Other Topics) Chapter 11 – Infinite Sequences and Series Section 11.8 –Taylor and Maclaurin Series Copyright © 2009 by Ron Wallace, all.
12 FURTHER MATHEMATICS Modelling geometric growth and decay.
QMT 3301 BUSINESS MATHEMATICS
Arithmetic and Geometric sequence and series
Sections 1.9, 1.10, 1.11 Effective and nominal rates of interest and discount each measure interest over some interval of time. The measure of the intensity.
Section 5.7 Financial Models
Section 4.7 Compound Interest.
Interest Formulas for Single Cash Flows
Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance
Future Value of an Investment
Annuities Chapter M7 Learning Objectives
Section 11.3 – Power Series.
Let a function be given as the sum of a power series in the convergence interval of the power series Then such a power series is unique and its.
Motion with Constant Acceleration
Lesson 2 The amount of an Annuity
Integral as Net Change Chapter 8.1.
Taylor Polynomials & Approximation (9.7)
For the geometric series below, what is the limit as n →∞ of the ratio of the n + 1 term to the n term?
Clicker Question 1 What is the interval of convergence of A. (-, )
Taylor & Maclaurin Series (9.10)
Let a function be given as the sum of a power series in the convergence interval of the power series Then such a power series is unique and its.
Sec 7.1 – Power Series A Review From Calc II.
Section 11.3 Power Series.
Clicker Question 1 What is the interval of convergence of A. (-, )
Taylor Series – Day 2 Section 9.6 Calculus BC AP/Dual, Revised ©2014
Section 11.6 – Taylor’s Formula with Remainder
Sections 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 If one unit (one dollar) is invested at time t = 0, the accumulation function a(t) gives the accumulated value at time t 
Annuities, Stocks, and Bonds
Compound Interest.
Example 7 Investment The future value of $3000 invested for 3 years at rate r, compounded annually, is given by What interest rate will give a future value.
Presentation transcript:

Effective and nominal rates of interest and discount each measure interest over some interval of time. The measure of the intensity of interest at a particular moment of time is called the force of interest. For a given amount function A(t), the derivative A  (t) is not a satisfactory measure of intensity, since it depends on the amount initially invested A(0). The force of interest at time t, used to measure intensity, is A  (t)a  (t)  t =—— =——. A(t) a(t) a  (t)d Observe that  t =—— =—ln[a(t)]  a(t)dt Sections 1.9, 1.10, 1.11

0 t  r dr= 0 t d —ln[a(r)] dr= dr 0 t ln[a(r)] = a(t) = e  r dr 0 t An analogous definition to measure force of discount would be [a(t)] –1 d — dt [a(t)] –1 – = [a(t)] d — dt [a(t)] –2 [a(t)] –1 = – [a(t)  t ] [a(t)] –2 [a(t)] –1 = –  t, which is the negative of the force of interest. Consequently, we do not need a separate measure for the force of discount. ln[a(t)] – 0 

Find the force of interest with compound interest, that is, with an accumulation function a(t) = (1 + i) t, a  (t)  t =——= a(t) We see that with compound interest, the force of interest is constant. With compound discount, the force of interest must also be constant. In general, if the force of interest is constant over an interval of time, then the effective rate of interest will also be constant over that interval. That is (with n a positive integer), if  t =  for 0  t  n, then a(t) = e =  r dr 0 t etet a(1) = e  = 1 + i  a(t) = (1 + i) t, which is the accumulation function for compound interest, where effective rate of interest is constant. (1 + i) t ln(1 + i) ——————— = (1 + i) t ln(1 + i) = 

m i (m) 1 + — = m 1 + i = v –1 =(1 – d) –1 = d (p) 1 – — =e . p –p–p We may now write Using Maclaurin series expansions, we can write the following:  2  3  4 i = e  – 1 =  + — +— +— + … 2!3!4! i 2 i 3 i 4  = ln(1 + i) = i –— +— –— + … A similar expansion is possible for i (m), for d, and for d (m). (See page 27.) We can then show i (m) and d (m) each  as m .

Suppose $2000 is invested at a rate of compound interest of 9% per annum. (a) Find the accumulation function. (b) Find the force of interest. (c) Find the value of the investment after 3 years. a(t) = ( ) t  = ln( )  ( ) 3 = $ Suppose $2000 is invested for 3 years with a constant force of interest equal to 9%. (a) Find the accumulation function. (b) Find the effective rate of compound interest. (c) Find the value of the investment after 3 years. a(t) = e 0.09t i = e 0.09 – 1 = e (0.09)(3) = $ Note: an accumulation function of the form a(t) = e t  is often considered as representing a rate of compound interest of  compounded continuously.

Find the force of interest with simple interest, that is, with an accumulation function a(t) = 1 + it. Find the force of interest with simple discount, that is, with an accumulation function a(t) = (1 – dt) –1 for 0  t < 1/d. a  (t)  t =——= a(t) i —— 1 + it a  (t)  t =——= a(t) – (1 – dt) –2 (–d) ——————– = (1 – dt) –1 d ——— for 0  t < 1/d (1 – dt) Find the accumulated value of $200 invested for 5 years if the force of interest is  t = 1 / (8 + t). a(5) = e = (8 + t) –1 dt 0 5 e = ln(8 + t) /8 A(5) = 200(13/8) = $325 This is the force of interest function for simple interest with i =

Find the accumulated value of $500 invested for 9 years if the rate of interest is 5% for the first 3 years, 5.5% for the second 3 years, and 6.25% for the third 3 years. 500( ) 3 ( ) 3 ( ) 3 = $ Table 1.1 on page 29 summarizes much of the material in Chapter 1.