1 Slides for BAII+ Calculator Training Videos. 2 Slides for Lesson 1 There are no corresponding slides for Lesson 1, “Introduction to the Calculator”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance
Advertisements

Fin351: lecture 3 Bond valuation The application of the present value concept.
Compound Interest Suppose you invest $100 in an account that will pay 10% interest per year. How much will be in the account after three years? – Year.
TVM (cont).
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2014 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
The Time Value of Money: Annuities and Other Topics
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5 2 Topics Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows Be able to compute the present value of.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation (Formulas) Chapter Six.
Understanding Interest Rates »... Wasn’t it Ben Franklin who said that???? A fool and his Money are soon Partying!!!! 1 Copyright © 2014 Diane Scott Docking.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 6 Calculators Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example 6.1
Mathematics of Finance Solutions to the examples in this presentation are based on using a Texas Instruments BAII Plus Financial calculator.
The application of the present value concept
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Introduction to Bonds Description and Pricing P.V. Viswanath.
5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation. 5.1 Key Concepts and Skills Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows Be able to compute.
5.0 Chapter 4 Time Value of Money: Valuing Cash Flows.
Chapter 5 Bond Prices and Interest Rate Risk 1Dr. Hisham Abdelbaki - FIN Chapter 5.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 4 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Topic 9 Time Value of Money.
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Lecture 5.
CHAPTER 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation. Key Concepts and Skills Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows Be able to compute the present.
5-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.  Be able to compute the future value of multiple cash flows  Be able to compute the present value of multiple cash flows.
Valuation of single cash flows at various points in time – Chapter 4, Sections 4.1 and 4.2 Module 1.2 Copyright © 2013 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
TIME VALUE OF MONEY CHAPTER 5.
McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 4.
0 Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation 1 Chapter Outline Future and Present Values of Multiple Cash Flows Valuing Level Cash Flows: Annuities and.
Chapter 6 Calculators Calculators Discounted Cash Flow Valuation McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Chapter 5 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation. 2 Overview Important Definitions Finding Future Value of an Ordinary Annuity Finding Future Value of Uneven.
Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money
1 Prentice Hall, 1998 Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money.
CH 17 Risk, Return & Time Value of Money. 2 Outline  I. Relationship Between Risk and Return  II. Types of Risk  III. Time Value of Money  IV. Effective.
The Application of the Present Value Concept
Valuing a Discount Bond with Annual Coupons
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. The Time Value of Money - The Basics Chapter 5.
NPV and the Time Value of Money
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved CHAPTER 4 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights Reserved 5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation.
Present Value Present value is the current value of a future sum.
6-1 July 16 Outline EAR versus APR Interest Rates and Bond Valuation.
Quick Quiz – Part 1 Suppose you are looking at the following possible cash flows: Year 1 CF = $100; Years 2 and 3 CFs = $200; Years 4 and 5 CFs = $300.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation. 2 BASIC PRINCIPAL Would you rather have $1,000 today or $1,000 in 30 years?  Why?
Quantitative Finance Unit 1 Financial Mathematics.
Principles of Investing FIN 330 CHAPTER 12 Bond Valuation Dr. David P. EchevarriaAll Rights ReservedSlide 1.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 5 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5. Copyright  2007 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Essentials of Corporate Finance by Ross, Trayler, Bird,
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter Six.
Lecture Outline Basic time value of money (TVM) relationship
MGT 470 Ch 4 TVM (cs3ed) v1.0 Aug 15 1 Ch 4: Time Value of Money Time Has Value (The Time Value of Money – TVM):  Time affects the value of financial.
Chapter 1 Appendix Time Value of Money: The Basics Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
5-1 Computing APRs What is the APR if the monthly rate is.5%? What is the APR if the semiannual rate is.5%? What is the monthly rate if the APR is 12%
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter Five. 1Barton College Don’t TEXT and DRIVE!!!
The Time Value of Money Schweser CFA Level 1 Book 1 – Reading #5 master time value of money mechanics and crunch the numbers.
Chapter 5 Time Value of Money. Basic Definitions Present Value – earlier money on a time line Future Value – later money on a time line Interest rate.
Understanding and Appreciating the Time Value of Money
MGT 326 Spring 2016 Test 1 Problem Solutions 1 7. Your company is considering borrowing $10,000,000 at a cost of debt of p.a. If your company pays.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 0 Chapter 5 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
PowerPoint to accompany Chapter 5 Interest Rates.
Presentation transcript:

1 Slides for BAII+ Calculator Training Videos

2 Slides for Lesson 1 There are no corresponding slides for Lesson 1, “Introduction to the Calculator”

3 Slides for Lesson 2 The following three (3) slides are used in Lesson 2, “Introduction to Time Value of Money” and are referred to in the video as the slides from Ch. 3, 6-8

4 Propose to buy an asset costing $350 million. Assume the asset will sell for $520 million at the end of 4 years. You could invest your money elsewhere for 10%, where risk is similar to the risk of proposed asset. Should you buy the asset? Why or why not? Example: Investment Evaluation (referred to as slide 6) * 520 * By convention, cash OUTFLOWS are listed as negatives, while cash INFLOWS are listed as positives. It is helpful to draw a timeline IMPORTANT FINANCE PRINCIPLE Assets with similar risk should have similar return. Thus the appropriate rate to use here is the 10% benchmark.

5 Example Solution (referred to as slide 7) 2. Calculate Future Value of the $ Calculate Present Value of the $ Calculate Rate of Return on Asset Should Buy intrinsic value ($355.17) greater than cost ($350 ) Should Buy Future expected value of not buying ($512.44) less than value of buying ($520) Should Buy expected return of buying (10.4%) Greater than investing elsewhere (10%)

6 Example Solution – Calculator (referred to as slide 8) NI/YPVPMTFV NI/YPVPMTFV NI/YPVPMTFV Calculate Present Value Calculate Future Value Calculate Interest Rate Clear TVM registersSet P/Y=1

7 Slides for Lesson 3 The following six (6) slides are used in Lesson 3, “TVM – Annuities and Periods other than Annual” and are referred to in the video as the slides from Ch. 3, , 21, and 36

8 Example: Present Value of an Annuity (referred to as slide 17) You need $25,000 a year for business school. –1st $25,000 at the end of 12 months –2nd $25,000 at the end of 24 months You can earn 8% per year in an investment account. How much money do you need today?

9 Example Solution – Annuity Formula (referred to as slide 18) $ ? 0 12 $ 25,000

10 Example Solution – Calculator and Excel (referred to as slide 19) In Excel, Use the PV Function NI/YPVPMTFV On the calculator, input N, I/Y, PMT, and FV

11 Example: Future Value of an Annuity (referred to as slide 21) Suppose you plan to retire ten years from today. You plan to invest $2,000 a year at the end of each of the next ten years. You can earn 8% per year (compounded annually) on your money. How much will your investment be worth at the end of the tenth year?

12 Example Solution – Calculator and Excel (referred to as slide 21, continued) NI/YPVPMTFV ,00028, On calculator, set P/Y=1, set payments to END, input N, I/Y, PV, PMT and compute FV In Excel, use the FV function The zero indicates that the cash flows occur at the END of the year. If they were at the beginning, we would enter a 1 here.

13 Present Value Example (referred to as slide 36) Suppose you need $400 to buy textbooks in 2 quarters. Current interest rates are 12% per year (compounded quarterly). How much money do you need to deposit today? (Remember that t and r must match) –Can use quarters –Is there another way? What if we use 6-month periods?

14 Slides for Lesson 4 The following six (6) slides are used in Lesson 4, “TVM – Amortizing Loans” and are referred to in the video as the slides from Ch. 3,

15 Amortizing Loans – Example (referred to as slide 39) You have decided to buy a new SUV and finance the purchase with a five year loan. The car costs $36,000 and you are going to put $2,500 down. Interest starts accruing when the loan is taken. The first loan payment is one month after the interest starts accruing. The interest rate on the loan is 8.4% (APR) per year for the five year period.

16 Amortizing Loans – Example (referred to as slide 40) –You know you will be paying an equal amount each month for the next 60 months. What type of security is this? –What is the present value of the loan? What is the present value of the annuity? –What is the effective monthly rate that you are paying for your car? What is the EAR? –How can you determine your monthly payment? It is an annuity with t=60 36,000 – 2,500 = 33,500

17 Determining Your Payment (referred to as slide 41) Recall you are borrowing $33,500 at 8.4% APR for 60 months. Also recall: We know the present value, r, and t. Thus, we can solve for C which is the payment

18 Determining Your Payment – Calculator (referred to as slide 42) NI/YPVPMTFV Recall you are borrowing $33,500 at 8.4% APR for 60 months. On BA II+ –Clear TVM –Set payments per year to 12 ( 12 ) ,

19 Amortization Table (referred to as slide 43) $33,500 car loan at 8.4% APR for 60 months x 33, – ,500 – , x 33, – , , – , Balance after 3 payments Balance after 48 payments

20 What if ? (referred to as slide 44) What if you wanted to know the balance remaining after 2 years of payments? What if you wanted to know the total amount you paid in principal during the first 2 years? What if you wanted to know the total amount paid in interest during the first 2 years? What if you wanted to know the total amount of interest paid during the third year?

21 Slides for Lesson 5 The following six (6) slides are used in Lesson 4, “Bonds” and are referred to in the video as the slides from Ch. 5,

22 Bond Pricing, Example (Referred to as slide 11) Suppose IPC Co. Issues $1,000 bonds with 5 years to maturity. The semi-annual coupon is $50. Suppose the market quoted yield-to-maturity for similar bonds is 10% (APR, compounded semiannually). What is the present value (i.e. current market price) of the bond? What if the YTM was 8%? What if the YTM was 12%? Steps to calculate bond price –Calculate the present value of the Face amount –Calculate the present value of the coupon payments –Add the two components to get the price IMPORTANT FINANCE PRINCIPLE REMEMBER: Assets with similar risk should have similar return. Thus the appropriate rate to use here is 10%

23 IPC Example (Referred to as slide 13) 1. Price if similar bonds have a 10% yield-to-maturity: Remember that payment, time, and rate ALL must match. Since we have a semiannual payment we NEED a semiannual rate. What is the effective semiannual rate? Notice that 5 years means 10 semiannual periods.

24 IPC Example (Referred to as slide 13 and slide 14) 2. Price if similar bonds have an 8% yield-to-maturity: 3. Price if similar bonds have a 12% yield-to-maturity: Notice the impact of Change in YTM on Price

25 NI/YPVPMTFV 10 -1,000501,000 Easy Bond Pricing on your Calculator (Referred to as slide 15) NI/YPVPMTFV 108-1, ,000 NI/YPVPMTFV ,200501,000 Price if YTM = 10% Price if YTM = 8% What is YTM if Price=$1,200? Clear TVM registers Set P/Y=2 (2 payments per year)

26 Par, Discount, and Premium Bonds Par Bonds –Price = Face Value –YTM = Coupon Rate –Current yield = Coupon rate Discount Bonds –Price < Face Value –YTM > Coupon Rate –Current yield > Coupon rate Premium Bonds –Price > Face Value –YTM < Coupon Rate –Current yield < Coupon rate YTM = 10%, Price = $1000 Coupon Rate Current Yield Recall IPC Bond Example YTM = 12%, Price = $ Coupon Rate Current Yield YTM = 8%, Price = $ Coupon Rate Current Yield

27 Slides for Lesson 6 The following six (6) slides are used in Lesson 6, “Cash Flow Worksheet – NPV and IRR” and are referred to in the video as the slides from Ch. 6, and Ch 5, slides

28 NPV Example (referred to as slide 6) Decide whether to open a new production plant. The initial cost of the plant is $600 million. Over the next four years, the plant is expected to generate cash flows from assets of $200 mm, $220 mm, $225 mm, and $210 mm. The risk of the cashflows requires that the appropriate discount rate is 20%. How do you compute cash flows from assets? Should we proceed with the project?

29 NPV Example Required Rate of return on project is 20% NPV = =

30 Internal Rate of Return (IRR) Thus, for our example: The rate that makes this equation true is 15.67%. Thus, IRR = 15.67%

31 Bond Pricing, Example (Referred to as slide 12 in Ch. 5) Suppose IPC Co. Issues $1,000 bonds with 5 years to maturity. The semi-annual coupon is $50. Suppose the market quoted yield-to-maturity for similar bonds is 10% (APR, compounded semiannually). What is the present value (i.e. current market price) of the bond? What if the YTM was 8%? What if the YTM was 12%? Steps to calculate bond price –Calculate the present value of the Face amount –Calculate the present value of the coupon payments –Add the two components to get the price IMPORTANT FINANCE PRINCIPLE REMEMBER: Assets with similar risk should have similar return. Thus the appropriate rate to use here is 10%

32 IPC Example (Referred to as slide 13 in Ch. 5) 1. Price if similar bonds have a 10% yield-to-maturity: Remember that payment, time, and rate ALL must match. Since we have a semiannual payment we NEED a semiannual rate. What is the effective semiannual rate? Notice that 5 years means 10 semiannual periods.

33 IPC Example (Referred to as slide 13 and slide 14, in Ch. 5) 2. Price if similar bonds have an 8% yield-to-maturity: 3. Price if similar bonds have a 12% yield-to-maturity: Notice the impact of Change in YTM on Price

34 NI/YPVPMTFV 10 -1,000501,000 Easy Bond Pricing on your Calculator (Referred to as slide 15, in Ch. 5) NI/YPVPMTFV 108-1, ,000 NI/YPVPMTFV ,200501,000 Price if YTM = 10% Price if YTM = 8% What is YTM if Price=$1,200? Clear TVM registers Set P/Y=2 (2 payments per year)