Finance Ch.4

  1. is the value today of a future payment, or stream of payments,
    discounted at the appropriate rate of interest.  It is also the beginning amount that will grow to some future value.
    PV or Present Value
  2. an investment is the rate of return available on the best
    alternative investment of similar risk
    Opportunity Cost Rate
  3. is the periodic interest rate that an account pays and is the dollars of interest earned each period.
    Parameter INT
  4. is the ending amount in an account, where n is the number of periods the moneyis left in the account. PVAn is the value today of a future stream of equal payments (an annuity) and FVAn is the ending value of a stream of equal payments, where n is the number of payments of the annuity. PMT is equal to the dollar amount of an equal, or constant cash flow (an annuity). In the EAR equation, m is used to denote the number of compounding periods per year, while iNom is the nominal, or quoted, interest rate.
    FVn (future value)
  5. is a series of payments of a fixed amount for a specified number of periods.
    An annuity
  6. as opposed to an annuity, consists of one payment
    occurring now or at some future time.
    A lump sum or single amount
  7. flow can be an inflow (a receipt) or an outflow (a deposit, a cost, or an amount paid). We distinguish between the terms cash flow and PMT. We use the term cash flow for uneven streams, while we use the term PMT for annuities, or constant payment amounts.
    A cash flow
  8. is a series of cash flows in which the amount varies from one period to the next. The PV(or FVn) of an uneven payment stream is merely the sum of the present values (or future
    values) of each individual payment.
    An uneven cash flow stream
  9. has payments occurring at the end of each period, The payment period must be equal to the compounding period.
    An ordinary annuity or deferred payment annuity
  10. has payments occurring at the beginning of each period.
    The payment period must be equal to the compounding period.
    An annuity due
  11. is a series of payments of a fixed amount that last indefinitely. In other words, it is an annuity where n equals infinity.
    A perpetuity
  12. is a deposit, a cost, or an amount paid, while an inflow is a receipt
    An outflow
  13. is an important tool used in time value of money analysis; it is a graphical representation which is used to show the timing of cash flows.
    A time line
  14. is the future value of an uneven cash flow stream.
    A terminal value
  15. is the process of finding the future value of a single payment or series of payments.
    Compounding
  16. is the process of finding the present value of a single
    payment or series of payments; it is the reverse of compounding.
    discounting
  17. interest is paid once a year.
    Annual compounding
  18. interest is paid 2, 4, 12, and 365 times per year
    respectively. When compounding occurs more frequently than once a year, you earn interest on interest more often, thus increasing the future value. The more frequent the
    compounding, the higher the future value.
    multiple compounding periods, semi-annual, quarterly, monthly and daily.
  19. is the rate that, under annual compounding, would have
    produced the same future value at the end of 1 year as was produced by more frequent
    compounding, say quarterly.
    The effective annual rate
  20. is the rate of interest stated in a contract
    Nominal (quoted) interest rate
  21. occurs annually, the effective annual rate and the nominal rate are the same.
    compounding
  22. is also called the annual percentage rate, or APR.
    nominal annual interest rate
  23. is the rate charged by a lender or paid by a borrower each period. It can be a rate per year, per 6-
    month period, per quarter, per month, per day, or per any other time interval (usually
    one year or less).
    The periodic rate, iPER,
  24. is a table that breaks down the periodic fixed payment of an
    installment loan into its principal and interest components. 
    The principal component of each payment reduces the remaining principal balance. The interest component is
    the interest payment on the beginning-of-period principal balance. An amortized loan is one that is repaid in equal periodic amounts (or "killed off" over time).
    An amortization schedule
  25. EAR or EFF
    Effective Annual Rate or Effective percentage rate
  26. PMT/I =
    Value of a perpetuity
  27. Nominal quoted interest rate
    I
  28. Number of compounding periods per year
    M
  29. Number of Years
    N
  30. PVA-due = PVA-ordinary(1+I)
    FVA-due = FVA-ordinary(1+I)
  31. r=[(1+r-nominal)/(1 + inflation)]-1.0
    Real rate
  32. EAR = (1 + Iperiodic)^M-1.0
    EFF=EAR, effective annula rate
  33. Periodic rate Iper= Inominal/M
    FVn (annuity) = PV[(1 + Inom/M)]^MN
  34. FV= FV1 "the number 1 means year 1"  FV(1+I)

    =PV(1+I)^N

    to find future values
    PV= FV(n)/(1+I)^N

    discounting present value
  35. I= [FV(N)/PV]^(1/N) - 1
    N = [LN(FN(N)/PV/LN(1+I)]
  36. FVA(N)= PMT[(1+I)^N/I - 1/I]=
    PMT[(1+I)^N-1/I]
  37. PVA(N) = PMT[1/I - 1/I(1+I)^N]
Author
aminime
ID
352582
Card Set
Finance Ch.4
Description
Chapter 4
Updated