Lec 3 FM Numl
Lec 3 FM Numl
Lec 3 FM Numl
Lecture 03
Some Key Concepts
Future Value (FV) The amount an investment is worth after one or more periods.
The process of accumulating interest on an investment over time to earn more
Compounding interest.
Interest earned on the reinvestment of previous interest payments.
Interest on Interest
Interest earned on both the initial principal and the interest reinvested from prior
Compound Interest periods.
Interest earned only on the original principal amount invested.
Simple Interest
The current value of future cash flows discounted at the appropriate discount
Present Value (PV) rate.
Calculate the present value of some future amount.
Discount
The rate used to calculate the present value of future cash flows.
Discount Rate
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Calculating the present value of a future cash flow to determine its value today.
Valuation
Refers to the fact that a dollar in hand today is worth more than a dollar promised
Time Value of Money at some time in the future.
Lecture 3: Time Value of Money 2
What is Time Value of Money??
• The time value of money (TVM) is the concept that a sum of money is
worth more now than the same sum will be at a future date due to its
earnings potential in the interim.
• The difference in the value of money today and tomorrow is referred
to as the time value of money.
• This is a core principle of finance.
• A sum of money in the hand has greater value than the same sum to
be paid in the future.
• The time value of money is also referred to as present discounted
value.
Lecture 3: Time Value of Money 3
Examples of Time Value of Money
• Saving Account
• Interest increases the amount with time
• Loan
• Payment amount
• Retirement Annuity
• Pays out constant amount per month
• Pays out an amount that increases with inflation per month
Determinants of TVM
1. Risk and Uncertainty
•Future is always uncertain and risky. Outflow of cash is in our control as
payments to parties are made by us. There is no certainty for future cash
inflows. Cash inflows are dependent on our Creditor, Bank etc. As an
individual or firm is not certain about future cash receipts, it prefers
receiving cash now.
2. Inflation:
•In an inflationary economy, the money received today, has more
purchasing power than the money to be received in future. In other words,
a rupee today represents a greater real purchasing power than a rupee a
year after.
Lecture 3: Time Value of Money 5
Determinants of TVM
3. Consumption:
•Individuals generally prefer current consumption to future consumption.
4. Investment opportunities:
•An investor can profitably employ a rupee received today, to give him a
higher value to be received tomorrow or after a certain period of time.
Thus, the fundamental principle behind the concept of time value of
money is that, a sum of money received today, is worth more than if the
same is received after a certain period of time.
•For example, if an individual is given an alternative either to receive
Rs.10,000 now or after one year, he will prefer Rs. 10,000 now. This is
because, today, he may be in a position to purchase more goods with this
money than what he is going to get for the same amount after one year.
Lecture 3: Time Value of Money 6
The Time value of Money
• Compounding is the process of moving cash flows forward in time.
• Discounting is the process of moving cash flows back in time.
• Time value of money problems help us assess equivalency of differing cash
flow streams across time, including
• The value today (present value, or PV) of a single amount we will receive
in the future (future value, or FV)
• The value today (PV) of a stream of equally sized cash flows to be
received at uniform increments of time in the future (payments or
annuity, “A”)
• The value today (PV) of a stream of unequally sized and/or timed cash
flows in the future (CF)
Discounting
Time
Compounding
Lecture 3: Time Value of Money 7
Different Interest Rates
The frequency with which interest is calculated is known as
compounding.
• Simple interest is the amount of principal times the stated rate of
interest for a single period with no compounding.
• If the period of time for which we are examining simple interest is
less than a year, the interest rate for a single period is known as a
periodic rate.
• If the instrument pays interest more than once a year, the interest rate
will generally be known as a stated annual interest rate or a quoted
interest rate.
• The expression of the rate will then typically be followed by an
indication of how often interest is calculated.
• For example: 12% compounded monthly
FV2 = $1,254.40
t=0 t=1 t=2 r = 12%
r = 12% t=0 t=1 t=2
PV0 = $1,000
FV3 = $25,000
r = 9% t = 0t = 1t = 2t = 3
t = 0t = 1t = 2t = 3 r = 9%
PV0 = $19,604.59