CH 5-Time Value of Money-Gitman - pmf13 - ppt05 Ge
CH 5-Time Value of Money-Gitman - pmf13 - ppt05 Ge
CH 5-Time Value of Money-Gitman - pmf13 - ppt05 Ge
Time Value of
Money
LG3 Find the future value and the present value of both an
ordinary annuity and an annuity due, and find the
present value of a perpetuity.
LG4 Calculate both the future value and the present value
of a mixed stream of cash flows.
Electronic spreadsheets:
Like financial calculators, electronic spreadsheets have built-in
routines that simplify time value calculations.
The value for each variable is entered in a cell in the
spreadsheet, and the calculation is programmed using an
equation that links the individual cells.
Changing any of the input variables automatically changes the
solution as a result of the equation linking the cells.
PV (1 + 0.06) = $300
Fran Abrams wishes to determine how much money she will have at the end
of 5 years if he chooses annuity A, the ordinary annuity and it earns 7%
annually. Annuity A is depicted graphically below:
Kansas truck driver, Donald Damon, got the surprise of his life when
he learned he held the winning ticket for the Powerball lottery drawing
held November 11, 2009. The advertised lottery jackpot was $96.6
million. Damon could have chosen to collect his prize in 30 annual
payments of $3,220,000 (30 $3.22 million = $96.6 million), but
instead he elected to accept a lump sum payment of $48,367,329.08,
roughly half the stated jackpot total.
PV = CF r
Recalculate the example for the Fred Moreno example assuming (1)
semiannual compounding and (2) quarterly compounding.
The following equation calculates the annual cash payment (CF) that
wed have to save to achieve a future value (FVn):
Suppose you want to buy a house 5 years from now, and you estimate
that an initial down payment of $30,000 will be required at that time.
To accumulate the $30,000, you will wish to make equal annual end-
of-year deposits into an account paying annual interest of 6 percent.