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Introduction to Financial Management FIN 102 – Week 4a

Introduction to Financial Management FIN 102 – Week 4a. Dr. Andrew L. H. Parkes “A practical and hands on course on the valuation and financial management of corporations”. The Time Value of Money Continued. Annuities Ordinary vs. Annuities Due Future Value Present Value Payments

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Introduction to Financial Management FIN 102 – Week 4a

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  1. Introduction to Financial ManagementFIN 102 – Week 4a Dr. Andrew L. H. Parkes “A practical and hands on course on the valuation and financial management of corporations”

  2. The Time Value of MoneyContinued • Annuities • Ordinary vs. Annuities Due • Future Value • Present Value • Payments • Amortizing a Loan Two Basic Topics: Annuities are often used for retirement and called a nest egg. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  3. Types of Annuities • Ordinary Annuity: Payments or receipts occur at the end of each period. • Annuity Due: Payments or receipts occur at the beginning of each period. • An Annuity represents a series of equal payments (or receipts) occurring over a specified number of equidistant periods. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  4. Examples of Annuities • Student Loan Payments • Car Loan Payments • Insurance Premiums • Mortgage Payments • Retirement Savings Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  5. Parts of an Annuity - A End of Period 2 (Ordinary Annuity) End of Period 1 End of Period 3 0 1 2 3 $100 $100 $100 Equal Cash Flows Each 1 Period Apart Today Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  6. Parts of an Annuity - B Beginning of Period 2 (Annuity Due) Beginning of Period 1 Beginning of Period 3 0 1 2 3 $100 $100 $100 Equal Cash Flows Each 1 Period Apart Today Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  7. FVAn = R(1+i)n-1 + R(1+i)n-2 + ... + R(1+i)1+ R(1+i)0 Overview of an Ordinary Annuity -- FVA Cash flows occur at the end of the period 0 1 2 n n+1 . . . i% R R R R= Periodic Cash Flow FVAn Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  8. FVA = $1,000(1.07)2 + $1,000(1.07)1 + $1,000(1.07)0 = $1,145 + $1,070 + $1,000 = $3,215 Example of anOrdinary Annuity -- FVA Cash flows occur at the end of the period 0 1 2 3 4 7% $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,070 $1,145 $3,215 = FVA Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  9. Ordinary annuities • Henry saves $600 each half year and invests it at 13% (convertible semi annually) How much money has Henry got after 10 years? Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  10. The answer • Time Line:After a half year Henry puts in his first $600 and so forth every half year • Starting today the first $600 will stay in the account 9.5 years …on the time line! • The second amount of $600 for 9 years. • The third amount 8.5 years etc. • The last amount of $600 will have no time to gather any interest • Let us use EXCEL!! – see the Function key Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  11. FVADn = R(1+i)n + R(1+i)n-1 + ... + R(1+i)2+ R(1+i)1 = FVAn (1+i) Overview View of anAnnuity Due Cash flows occur at the beginning of the period 0 1 2 3 n-1 n . . . i% R R R R R FVADn Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  12. FVAD3 = $1,000(1.07)3 + $1,000(1.07)2 + $1,000(1.07)1 = $1,225+$1,145+$1,070=$3,440 Example of an Annuity Due Cash flows occur at the beginning of the period 0 1 2 3 4 7% $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,070 $1,145 $1,225 $3,440 = FVAD3 Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  13. Ordinary versus Annuities Due • There is one extra interest period that accrues. • So we multiply the ordinary annuity by (1+i). • THAT IS ALL! Spencer Platt / Getty Images Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange watch the news of a bigger-than-expected rate cut from the Federal Reserve. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  14. The Power of Compound Interest A 20-year-old student wants to start saving for retirement. She plans to save $3 a day. Every day, she puts $3 in her drawer. At the end of the year, she invests the accumulated savings ($1,095) in an online stock account. The stock account has an expected annual return of 12%. How muchmoney will she have when she is 65 years old? – Set up the problem! Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  15. Solving for FV:Savings problem • If she begins saving today, and sticks to her plan, she will have ______________ when she is 65. • $1,487,261.89 Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  16. Solving for FV:Savings problem, if you wait until you are 40 years old to start • If a 40-year-old investor begins saving today _____________at age 65. This is $1.3 million less than if starting at age 20. • $146,000.59 • Lesson: It pays to start saving early. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  17. Solving for PMT:How much must the 40-year old deposit annually to catch the 20-year old? • To find the required annual contribution, enter the number of years until retirement and the final goal of $1,487,261.89, and solve for PMT. 11,154.42!! PER YEAR! Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  18. PVAn = R/(1+i)1 + R/(1+i)2 + ... + R/(1+i)n Present Value of anOrdinary Annuity -- PVA Cash flows occur at the end of the period 0 1 2 n n+1 . . . i% R R R R= Periodic Cash Flow PVAn Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  19. PVA3 = $1,000/(1.07)1 + $1,000/(1.07)2 + $1,000/(1.07)3 = $934.58 + $873.44 + $816.30 = $2,624.32 Example of an Present Value of an Ordinary Annuity Cash flows occur at the end of the period 0 1 2 34 7% $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $ 934.58 $ 873.44 $ 816.30 $2,624.32 = PVA3 Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  20. Calculate the Present Values… • For each of the following ordinary annuities: • $500 payment, compounded every 6 months, for 12 years at 9.5% interest • $1000 payment, compounded annually, for 8 years at 10.8% • $250 payment, compounded monthly, for 10 years, at 8% • $500 payment, compounded quarterly, for 8 years at 9.8% Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  21. The Present Value answers • There are 24 (2x12) periods of $500 payments at 4.75% (9.5/2) interest: $ 7070.27. • There are 8 yearly payments of $1000 discounted at 10.8% or $ 5183.03. • There are 120 payments of $250 at .067% (8/12) so $20,569.52 is the answer. • There are 32 payments (8 years and 4 times per year) of $500; at 0.0245% (9.8%/4) thus $11,001.81 is the answer. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  22. PVADn = R/(1+i)0 + R/(1+i)1 + ... + R/(1+i)n-1= PVAn (1+i) Overview of an Annuity Due Cash flows occur at the beginning of the period 0 1 2 n-1 n . . . i% R R R R R: Periodic Cash Flow PVADn Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  23. PVADn = $1,000/(1.07)0 + $1,000/(1.07)1 + $1,000/(1.07)2 = $2,808.02 Example of an Annuity Due Cash flows occur at the beginning of the period 0 1 2 3 4 7% $1,000.00 $1,000 $1,000 $ 934.58 $ 873.44 $2,808.02 = PVADn Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  24. Steps to Solve Time Value of Money Problems 1. Read problem thoroughly 2. Determine if it is a PV or FV (or PMT) problem 3. Create a time line 4. Put cash flows and arrows on time line 5. Determine if solution involves a single CF, annuity stream(s), or mixed flow 6. Solve the problem 7. Check (or solve) with Excel 8. Recheck work – does it make sense? Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  25. Used Car • A used car sells for $10,000 in cash OR: • $2000 deposit plus 6 instalments of $1400 per month for 6 months • What is the implied interest in the instalment plan? Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  26. The Interest Rate answer • 10,000 = 2,000 + 1400/(1+i/12) + 1400/(1+i/12)^2 + 1400/(1+i/12)^3+…+1400/(1+i/12)^6 • OR 8,000 = 1,400*(1/(1+i/12)+…+1/(1+i/12)^6) • In Excel, use the rate function: • PV = 8000, NPER = 6, PMT = 1400, … • Excel will solve it; I =1.41% per month OR i=16.945% annually! • Note that you must put in PMT or PV as a negative number. One is a pay OUT the other is paid IN. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  27. Steps to Amortizing a Loan 1. Calculate the payment per period. 2. Determine the interest in Period t. (Loan balance at t-1) x (i% / m) 3. Compute principal payment in Period t. (Payment - interest from Step 2) 4. Determine ending balance in Period t. (Balance - principal payment from Step 3) 5. Start again at Step 2 and repeat. Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  28. Amortizing a Loan Example Julie Miller is borrowing $10,000 at a compound annual interest rate of 12%. Amortize the loan if annual payments are made for 5 years. First calculate the Payment: $10,000 = C (PVIFA 12%,5) $10,000 = C (3.605) C = $10,000 / 3.605 = $2,774 Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  29. Amortizing a Loan Example [Last Payment Slightly Higher Due to Rounding] Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  30. Solving for the Payment The result indicates that a$10,000loan that costs12%annually for 5 years and will becompletely paid offat that time will require $2,774.10 in annual payments. • You are to amortize a loan of $125,000. Make sure to follow the example, use a 9% interest rate and 20 years. In Excel, total the interest payments, total payments and principal as in the exmple on the previous slide. (5 pts) Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  31. Homework Assignment • Chose a company from the Value Line documents (See my website, this is a Dow Jones 30 company). • Read the Value Line document and take a look at the financials. • Now calculate Free Cash Flow (FCF) = (NOPAT + depreciation +/- change in Working Capital - Capital Spending) • Do this for all the years available on the Value Line document. • Assume that the Cost of Capital (WACC%)=10% • Forecast the FCF for FY 2006 etc. years (assume an endless stream of FCF’s) • Now calculate the Present Value and use the WACC% as discount factor (i) • The present value you have calculated is an estimate for the value of the company you have chosen • Do it in Excel…and save time… Have fun! Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

  32. These are calculation techniques you need to master… • We will use them in the near future to calculate the present values of future cash flows of companies • Next week we will discuss Risk and Return (Chapter 5) We want to be aligned in the same direction… Intro. to Financial Managment-Week 4a

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