Why Pass Exams?  Much more important to employers than GPA (within reason) Big advantage for internships Nearly required for full-time work  Best thing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Exam FM/2 Review Introduction and Time Value of Money
Advertisements

FM Exam Workshop Sean Ke. Basic Introduction - Registration Exams provided every two months. (even #) Register at Fees: $225 Deadline:
Nominal and Effective Interest Rates Lecture slides to accompany
FA2 Module 5. Interest concepts of future and present value 1.Time value of money 2.Basic interest concepts 3.Present and future values a.Single payment.
© 2012 by McGraw-Hill, New York, N.Y All Rights Reserved 4-1 Lecture slides to accompany Engineering Economy 7 th edition Leland Blank Anthony Tarquin.
What is Interest? Interest is the amount earned on an investment or an account. Annually: A = P(1 + r) t P = principal amount (the initial amount you borrow.
Chapter Outline Future and Present Values of Multiple Cash Flows
Chapter 6 - Time Value of Money
Net Present Value.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter 5.
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.
D- 1 TIME VALUE OF MONEY Financial Accounting, Sixth Edition D.
Chapter 2 Applying Time Value Concepts Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. Edited by Laura Lamb, Department of Economics, TRU 1.
2-1 CHAPTER 2 Time Value of Money Future value Present value Annuities Rates of return Amortization.
Lecture Four Time Value of Money and Its Applications.
Present Value and… Net Present Value. Basic Assumptions: All cash payments (receipts) Certainty regarding: Amount of cash flows Timing of cash flows All.
Understanding the Time Value of Money
Why Pass Exams?  Much more important to employers than GPA (within reason) Big advantage for internships Nearly required for full-time work  Best thing.
Appendix – Compound Interest: Concepts and Applications
Multiple Cash Flows –Future Value Example 6.1
British Columbia Institute of Technology
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.
Chapter 5 Bond Prices and Interest Rate Risk 1Dr. Hisham Abdelbaki - FIN Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY The Magic of Compounding.
7-8 simple and compound interest
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.
Basics  Annuities are streams of payments, in our case for a specified length  Boil down to geometric series.
Future Value Present Value Annuities Different compounding Periods Adjusting for frequent compounding Effective Annual Rate (EAR) Chapter
Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money Chapter Outline
1 Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money Some Important Concepts.
Advanced Precalculus Notes 4.7 Compound Interest
Basics  Annuities are streams of payments, in our case for a specified length  Boil down to geometric series.
TVM Sample Problems (ver. 2.1 Fall 13) 1 More Than One Future Cash Flow? YesNo Even or Uneven Cash Flows Uneven Even CF Worksheet Annuity (5 parameters)
TVM Sample Problems (ver. 2.1 Fall 13) 1 More Than One Future Cash Flow? YesNo Even or Uneven Cash Flows Uneven Even CF Worksheet Annuity (5 parameters)
6-0 Week 3 Lecture 3 Ross, Westerfield and Jordan 7e Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 9 9 Chapter The Time Value of Money-Part 2 McGraw-Hill Ryerson©2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Based on: Terry Fegarty.
Risk, Return, and the Time Value of Money Chapter 14.
The Time Value of Money. Why is £100 today worth more than £100 tomorrow? Deposit account in bank pays interest, so, overnight, £100 will have grown to.
2-1 CHAPTER 2 Time Value of Money Future value Present value Annuities Rates of return Amortization.
Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money
Chapter 2 INTEREST: BASIC APPLICATIONS Equation of Value Unknown Rate of Interest Time-Weighted Rate of Return.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. The Time Value of Money - The Basics Chapter 5.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 9 9 Chapter The Time Value of Money-Part 1 McGraw-Hill Ryerson©2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Based on: Terry Fegarty.
Thinking Mathematically
NPV and the Time Value of Money
Exam 1 Review. Things You Should Know l Time Value of Money problems l All the readings including WSJ ‘little’ book n Stocks: trading, calculating returns.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights Reserved 5.0 Chapter 5 Discounte d Cash Flow Valuation.
The Time Value of Money Lecture 3 and 4 Corporate Finance Ronald F. Singer Fall, 2010.
Time Value of Money Chapter 5 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
1 Chapter 04 Time Value of Money 1: Analyzing Single Cash Flows McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Why Pass Exams?  Much more important to employers than GPA (within reason) Big advantage for internships Nearly required for full-time work  Best thing.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter Six.
PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 7-7 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Simple and Compound Interest (7-7) principal: the amount of money that is invested (put in to earn more)
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.
T6.1 Chapter Outline Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Chapter Organization 6.1Future and Present Values of Multiple Cash Flows 6.2Valuing Level.
Compound Interest Formula. Compound interest arises when interest is added to the principal, so that, from that moment on, the interest that has been.
CHAPTER 5 TIME VALUE OF MONEY. Chapter Outline Introduction Future value Present value Multiple cash flow Annuities Perpetuities Amortization.
Determine the amount saved if $375 is deposited every month for 6 years at 5.9% per year compounded monthly. N = 12 X 6 = 72 I% = 5.9 PV = 0 PMT = -375.
Chapter 4 Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Fifth Edition Slides by Matthew Will McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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.
1 The Time Value of Money. 2 Would you prefer to have $1 million now or $1 million 10 years from now? Of course, we would all prefer the money now! This.
Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money— The Basics. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.5-2 Slide Contents Learning Objectives Principles.
1 Simple interest, Compound Interests & Time Value of Money Lesson 1 – Simple Interest.
Time Value of Money Chapter 5  Future Value  Present Value  Annuities  Rates of Return  Amortization.
Compound Interest. homework Worksheet: Compound Interests.
Interest Applications - To solve problems involving interest.
The Time Value of Money Topics Covered Future Values Present Values Multiple Cash Flows Perpetuities and Annuities Inflation & Time Value Effective Annual.
Exam FM/2 Review Cash Flows, portfolios, duration, & immunization
More Than One Future Cash Flow?
Presentation transcript:

Why Pass Exams?  Much more important to employers than GPA (within reason) Big advantage for internships Nearly required for full-time work  Best thing you can do right now for your career Immediately: get that internship/full-time job! Later: get on your way to bigger opportunities  Easier to pass them now in school than working full-time

Exam FM/2  3 hours  35 multiple choice questions  Computer-based Preliminary pass/fail Few pilot questions  100 hours of study per exam hour = 300 hours No substitute for time!

Schedule  October 8: Intro and Time Value of MoneyIntro and Time Value of Money  October 15: AnnuitiesAnnuities  October 22: Loans and BondsLoans and Bonds  October 29: Duration, Immunization, Cash Flows (part 1)Duration, Immunization, Cash Flows  November 5: Duration, Immunization, Cash Flows (part 2, same PP)  November 12: Derivatives and Options  November 19: Combining Options, Forwards, Futures, SwapsCombining Options, Forwards, Futures, Swaps  December 3: Cumulative Review and Open Session  NOTE: Subject to change – you guys can tell me what you want to focus on

Study Session Format  Read ASM/Actex manual and work problems ahead of time  Cover concepts and techniques in manual  Work problems  Answer any final questions  Q: Anyone not junior in 410?

How to Get Your Time’s Worth  Use these sessions to review and clarify, not to learn Learn from RM 410 and your manual  Work problems from the end of ASM before the session  Whenever you get a problem wrong, read the solution and do it again until you know it  Bring questions General concepts Specific problems

How to Prepare  You need ~ hours 2 hours/week in this room isn’t enough  Supplement your independent study of ASM with the review session and 410  Clarify the details with review sessions  Problems, problems, problems  Practice tests – practice until you can consistently pass any sample exam  ADAPT or Infinite Actuary good call at end

Simple Interest  Fixed rate per time, actually decreases relative to value

Compound Interest  Interest on interest

Present and Future Value  PV=Value brought back in time to the present  Inverse of accumulation  FV= Value accumulated into the future

Present and Future Value Problems  Make sure to always use the same point in time. Pick a point that makes sense and bring every transaction to that point.  When in doubt, make a timeline.  May need to use calculator to solve (i)  NEVER SHAME IN THE TIMELINE

Discounting  Basically a different way of looking at compound interest, same effect  It may help to recognize the formulas, but you can derive them all quickly

M-thly compounding  Interest is compounded more frequently, so you make slightly more of it

Force of Interest  Rate of change with respect to amount  If constant rate

Overall problems  Make sure to use negative exponent for accumulating  Make sure to always use the same point in time. Pick a point that makes sense and bring every transaction to that point.  When in doubt, make a TIMELINE.  May need to use calculator to solve (i)

Problem 1  An investor puts 100 into Fund X and 100 into Fund Y. Fund Y earns compound interest at the annual rate of j > 0, and Fund X earns simple interest at the annual rate of 1.05j. At the end of 2 years, the amount in Fund Y is equal to the amount in Fund X. Calculate the amount in Fund Y at the end of 5 years.  ASM p.22, #6 Answer: 161

Problem 2  Money accumulates in a fund at an effective annual interest rate of i during the first 5 years, and at an effective annual interest rate of 2i thereafter. A deposit of 1 is made into the fund at time 0. It accumulates to 3.09 at the and of 10 years and to at the end of 20 years. What is the value of the deposit at the end of 7 years?  ASM p.22, #2 Answer: 1.98

Problem 3  Eric deposits X into a savings accout at time 0, which pays interest at a nominal rate of i, compounded semiannually. Mike deposits 2x into a different savings account at time 0, which pays simple interest at an annual rate of i. Eric and Mike earn the same amount of interest during the last 6 months of the 8 th year. Calculate i.  ASM p.38, #1 Answer: 9.46%

Problem 4  Jennifer deposits 1000 into a bank account. The bank credits interest at a nominal annual rate of i convertible semiannually for the first 7 years and a nominal annual rate of 2i convertible quarterly for all years thereafter. The accumulated amount in the account at the end of 5 years is X. The accumulated amount in the account at the end of 10.5 years is Calculate X.  Pg. 38, #6 Answer: 1276

Problem 5  Bruce deposits 100 into a bank account. His account is credited interest at a nominal rate of interest i convertible semiannually. At the same time, Peter deposits 100 into a separate account. Peter’s account is credited interest at a force of interest of δ. After 7.25 years, the value of each account is 200. Calculate (i- δ).  ASM p.55, #1 Answer:.23%

Problem 6  The force of interest is δt = 0.02t, where t is the number of years from January 1, If $1.00 is invested on January 1, 2003, how much is in the fund on January 1,  ASM p.67, #1 Answer: 1.568

Problem 7  A fund starts with a zero balance at time zero. The fund accumulates with a varying force of interest A deposit is made at time 2. Calculate the number of years from the time of deposit for the fund to double.  ASM p.72, #11 Answer: 1