Time Value
Time Value
• Most financial decisions involve costs & benefits that are spread out over time.
• Time value of money allows comparison of cash flows from different periods.
• Question: Your father has offered to give you some money and asks that you
choose one of the following two alternatives:
– $1,000 today, or
– $1,100 one year from now.
• What do you do?
• The answer depends on what rate of interest you could earn on any money you
receive today.
• For example, if you could deposit the $1,000 today at 12% per year, you
would prefer to be paid today.
• Alternatively, if you could only earn 5% on deposited funds, you would be
better off if you chose the $1,100 in one year.
• Suppose a firm has an opportunity to spend $15,000 today on some investment that will
produce $17,000 spread out over the next five years as follows:
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.
• The cash inflows and outflows of a firm can be described by its general pattern.
• The three basic patterns include a single amount, an annuity, or a mixed stream:
• Present value is the current dollar value of a future amount—the amount of money that
would have to be invested today at a given interest rate over a specified period to equal the
future amount.
• It is based on the idea that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow.
• Discounting cash flows is the process of finding present values; the inverse of
compounding interest.
• The discount rate is often also referred to as the opportunity cost, the discount rate, the
required return, or the cost of capital.
PV (1 + 0.06) = $300
• As before, in this equation r represents the interest rate and n represents the
number of payments in the annuity (or equivalently, the number of years over
which the annuity is spread).
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:
• As before, in this equation r represents the interest rate and n represents the
number of payments in the annuity (or equivalently, the number of years over
which the annuity is spread).
• As before, in this equation r represents the interest rate and n represents the
number of payments in the annuity (or equivalently, the number of years over
which the annuity is spread).
• As before, in this equation r represents the interest rate and n represents the
number of payments in the annuity (or equivalently, the number of years over
which the annuity is spread).
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
Ross Clark wishes to endow a chair in finance at his alma mater. The university
indicated that it requires $200,000 per year to support the chair, and the
endowment would earn 10% per year. To determine the amount Ross must give
the university to fund the chair, we must determine the present value of a
$200,000 perpetuity discounted at 10%.
If the firm expects to earn at least 8% on its investments, how much will it accumulate by the
end of year 5 if it immediately invests these cash flows when they are received?
This situation is depicted on the following time line.
Frey Company, a shoe manufacturer, has been offered an opportunity to receive the following
mixed stream of cash flows over the next 5 years.
If the firm must earn at least 9% on its investments, what is the most it should
pay for this opportunity?
This situation is depicted on the following time line.
Recalculate the example for the Fred Moreno example assuming (1) semiannual compounding
and (2) quarterly compounding.
Fred Moreno wishes to find the effective annual rate associated with an 8%
nominal annual rate (r = 0.08) when interest is compounded (1) annually (m = 1);
(2) semiannually (m = 2); and (3) quarterly (m = 4).
• Say you borrow $6,000 at 10 percent and agree to make equal annual end-of-year payments
over 4 years. To find the size of the payments, the lender determines the amount of a 4-year
annuity discounted at 10 percent that has a present value of $6,000.