Time Value of Money
Time Value of Money
ENGR 301
Principles of Project Management and Economics
Dr. Schmitt
TIME VALUE OF MONEY
Our Refrain
• If you learn one thing in this course
– Money has time value!
• What does that mean?
– Simple interest
– Compound interest
• Can use these concepts to calculate equivalence
• Using
– Single payment compound interest formulas
3
Time Value of Money
• Which would you rather have
– $1000 now?
or
– $1000 5 years from now?
• Why?
• Two reasons
– Inflation
– Opportunity cost
Two related concepts that we will cover later in the course
i = I/P I = Pi
Total Interest
• compensation for giving up the use of the money for the
duration of the loan
𝐹 =𝑃+𝐼
• P principal
– the amount the money is worth today
– Present Worth of F 𝐼
• F: Future amount 𝑃
1
𝑃
F
period
– Future Worth of P
Interest rate
• I: interest amount (i)
– interest 𝐼
– can be expressed as an interest rate “i” with respect to P
– 𝐼 = 𝑃𝑖 so, 𝐹 = 𝑃 + 𝑃𝑖 = 𝑃(1 + 𝑖)
Types of Interest
• Simple Interest
– Interest accrues only on the original sum
– Never calculated on outstanding interest
• Compound Interest
– Interest accrues on original sum and outstanding interest
– Standard
Simple Interest
• Interest is earned (paid) in each period only on the initial
principal
• Interest is earned (paid) every period, accumulated, and
paid only at the end of a term of n periods
Simple Interest Calculation
• Where
– F is the future sum
– P is the present sum
– n is the number of time periods
– i is the interest rate/period
– I is the total interest charges
• 𝐼 = 𝑃𝑖𝑁 → 𝐹 = 𝑃 + 𝐼 → 𝐹 = 𝑃(1 + 𝑖×𝑁)
I = Pin
Types of Interest
• Simple Interest
− Interest accrues only on the original sum
− Never calculated on outstanding interest
• Compound Interest
− Interest accrues on original sum and outstanding interest
− Standard
Compound Interest
• The standard interest calculation
• Simple interest is not used unless specifically stated
otherwise
• Interest is calculated on the accumulated amount and not
simply on the original amount
• ‘Interest on top of interest’
The difference...
• Calculate compound interest for multiple periods (not
just one)
• Consider a single period loan (n=1). In this case, the
same formula applies
F = P(1 + in) = P(1 + i ×1) = P(1 + i )
• Now, suppose we extend the loan to two periods.
How much will the future value be?
F = P(1 + i ) + iP(1 + i )
• This is because the future value is also calculated on
outstanding interest from the first period.
When are simple and compound interest the same?
F = P(1 + i) n
Compound Interest
• Consider a $25,000 loan at 10% per year:
Year Total in Year Interest Amount
accumulated at accumulated at
end of year end of year
1 $25000.00
P
2
3
4
Compound Interest
• Consider a $25,000 loan at 10% per year:
Year Total in Year Interest Amount
accumulated at accumulated at
end of year end of year
$
𝑖& = 1 + 𝑖" −1
• where:
– 𝑖" = effective interest rate for the full period,
– 𝑖! = interest rate for the sub-period,
– m= the number of sub-periods (in the longer period)
Effective Interest Question
• What is the annual effective interest rate equivalent to a
nominal rate of 12% per year compounded monthly?
• The nominal interest rate
– r = 12 per year
• the number of corresponding periods per year is
– m = 12
• Meaning
– r/m = 0.12/12 = 0.01
• Calculating effective interest
– ie = (1+is)m – 1 = (1+ 0.01)12 -1 = 0.127 or 12.7%
Upshot
• an interest rate of 1% per month, compounded
monthly, is equivalent to an effective rate of
approximately 12.7% per year compounded
yearly)
Loan Shark: Nominal Rate
• You can borrow money at a rate of 5% per week.
• What is the nominal interest rate for these loans?
• Nominal interest rate
• 𝑟 = 𝑖" ×𝑚
• 𝑟 = 5% * 52 weeks
• 𝑟 = 260%
• (recall that nominal interest rates are usually expressed on
a yearly basis)
Loan Shark: Effective Rate
• You can borrow money at a rate of 5% per week.
• What is the effective annual interest rate?
• Effective annual interest rate
– ie = (1+is)m – 1
– ie = (1 + 0.05)52 – 1
– ie = 11.64
– (meaning: Effective annual interest rate of about
1164%)
Credit Card Interest
• Your credit card has a nominal 20% interest on overdue
accounts, compounded daily. What is the effective interest
rate?
• This is r=20%
• is =r/m
• is =20%/365
• is =0.00054795
• ie = (1+is)m – 1
• ie =(1+ 0.00054795)365 – 1
• ie =22.13%
Interest, Equivalence & Time
• Money has time value!
• Equivalence calculation requires an interest rate
– F = P(1+i)n = P(F/P, i, n)
– P = F/(1+i)-n = F(1+i)-n = F(P/F, i, n)
• (More generally: any meaningful calculation we do in
this class requires an interest rate)
• Can calculate present or future value using formulas
• Or notation factors
– Appendix B, page 576-606
Equivalence
• Equivalence with respect to the ‘time value of
money’ implies that:
– A sum of money in one time period may have
the same value as a different sum in another
time period with respect to an interest rate.
or
– $x today is worth the same as $y in the
future
• How to determine?
– Compound interest formulas
Check for Equivalence
• Claim: a and b are equivalent to $1000
– (a) $1050 one year from now at 5% per year
– (b) $1102.50 two years from now at 5% per year
• How to confirm?
• F=P(1+i)n
• F=P(F/P, i, n)
Are (a) and (b) Equivalent?
• Check using F=P(1+i)n
– (a) F=1000(1+.05) 1=1000(1.05)=1050
• $1050 in one year at 5% interest
– (b) F=1000(1+.05) 2=1000(1.1025)=1102.50
• $1102 two years from now at 5% per year
Checking with Present Value
• So far, have calculated Future Value
F=P(1+i)n
• Can also calculate Present Value
• Turn formula around
F * P-1 =P(1+i)n * P-1
F/P = (1+i)n
F (1+i)-n = P
• Or more generally,
P =F (1+i)-n
Are (c) and (d) Equivalent?
• Claim:
– c and d are equivalent to $1000
• (c) $1100 one year from now at 10% per year
• (d) $1210 two years from now at 10% per year
– How to check?
– P=F(1+i)-n
or
– P=F(P/F, i,n)
Are (c) and (d) Equivalent?
• Claim:
– c and d are equivalent to $1000
• (c) $1100 one year from now at 10% per year
• (d) $1210 two years from now at 10% per year
– Check using P=F(1+i)-n
• (c) 1100(1+.1)-1=1100/1.1=1000
• (d) 1210(1+.1)-2=1210/1.21=1000
Equivalence Example?
• Demonstrated equivalence for $1000:
• (a) $1050 one year from now at 5% per year
• (b) $1102.50 two years from now at 5% per year
• (c) $1100 one year from now at 10% per year
• (d) $1210 two years from now at 10% per year
– What about:
• $1050 one year from now at 10% interest?
Equivalence Example?
• Demonstrated equivalence for $1000:
• (a) $1050 one year from now at 5% per year
• (b) $1102.50 two years from now at 5% per year
• (c) $1100 one year from now at 10% per year
• (d) $1210 two years from now at 10% per year
– What about:
• $1050 one year from now at 10% interest?
– P=F(1+i)-n
• 1050(1+.1)-1=1050/1.1=954.50
– NOT Equivalent
• Why?
Types of Questions
• What is the future value of this present value?
• What is the present value of this future value?
• What interest would make this equivalent?