Financial Management Exam 2
According to your textbook, what is Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Valuation?
"Calculating the PV of a future cash flow to determine its value today."
Explain the differences between the APR and EAR
- APR is based on simple interest and is used on things like mortgages and auto loans - EAR is based on compounding interest and is used on things like credit cards
balloon or bullet payment
- a large payment due at the end of a balloon loan, such as a mortgage, commercial loan, or another type of amortized loan. - typically the last of the loan/mortgage/whatever is paid off with this payment
Explain the difference between an ordinary annuity and an annuity due
- annuity due is paid at the beginning of the period - ordinary annuity is paid at the end of a period
amortizing
- gradually write off the initial cost of an asset over a period - reduce/pay off a debt with regular payments
Explain why Effective Annual Rate (EAR) increases as the number of compounding periods per year increases.
Because if you increase the number of compounding periods per year, the EAR is compounding more often causing the value to increase
Explain how compound interest differs from simple interest
Compound interest: earned on principal and interest amounts Simple interest: only earned on principal amount
Explain what it means to amortize a loan
Decrease balance of loan/pay off some of the loan
Explain why the dollar amount of a Future Value of an annuity due is larger than the Future Value of an ordinary annuity
FV of an annuity due is larger than the FV of an ordinary annuity because when payments are made at the beginning of the period, there's more time for value to compound which will make the value higher
Explain why increasing the interest rate or the number of years causes the PRESENT value to DECREASE
Increasing the interest rate or number of years will decrease present value because if you increase one part of the formula, something else (PV) must decrease in order for the formula to equal a set FV.
Explain why increasing the interest rate or the number of years causes the FUTURE value to INCREASE
Increasing the interest rate will make the FV increase in value because it will be compounding at a higher value. Increasing the number of years will cause the FV to increase because the money will have a longer time to compound and earn interest.
compound interest
Interest earned on both the initial principal and the interest reinvested from prior periods.
simple interest
Interest earned only on the original principal amount invested
Explain why the dollar amount of the Present Value of an annuity due is larger than the Present Value of an ordinary annuity
PV of an annuity due is larger than PV of ordinary annuity because payments are made sooner
stated interest rate
The interest rate expressed in terms of the interest payment made each period. Also known as the quoted interest rate.
Describe how you would use the Rule of 72.
You would use the Rule of 72 to calculate how many years it would take to double your money. All you do to calculate this is divide your interest rate by 72.
annuity
a level of cash flows for a fixed period of time
interest-only loan
a loan in which the borrower pays only the interest for some/all of the term, with the principal balance unchanged during the interest-only period
amortized loan
a loan with scheduled that are applied to both principal and interest
ordinary annuity
a series of equal payments made at the end of consecutive periods over a fixed length of time
annuity due
an annuity for which the cash flows occur at the beginning of the period
perpetuity
an annuity in which the cash flows continue forever
consol
bond that pays interest in perpetuity
discounting
calculate the present value of some future amount
effective annual rate (EAR)
interest rate expressed as if it were compounded once per year
pure discount loan
promise to pay a certain sum of money in the future in exchange for borrowing money today
future value
the amount an investment is worth after one or more periods
present value
the current value of future cash flows discounted at the appropriate discount rate
annual percentage rate (APR)
the interest rate charged per period multiplied by the number of periods per year
compounding
the process of accumulating interest on an investment over time to earn more interest
discount rate
the rate used to calculate the present value of future cash flows