+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Computer Science & Engineering 2111 Lecture 6 Financial Functions 1CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial...

Computer Science & Engineering 2111 Lecture 6 Financial Functions 1CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial...

Date post: 28-Mar-2015
Category:
Upload: savannah-brightman
View: 224 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
18
Computer Science & Engineering 2111 Lecture 6 Financial Functions 1 CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions
Transcript

1

Computer Science & Engineering 2111

Computer Science & Engineering 2111

Lecture 6Financial Functions

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

2

Financial Functions

• Functions that can be used to calculate values based on compounded interest– Taking a loan– Investing in a savings account

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

3

Simple Interest vs. Compound Interest

• Simple interest always calculates interest based on the original amount.

So $1,000 at 4% per year for 2 years• Year 1: $1000 * 4% $40 in interest for the 1st year.• Year 2: $1000 * 4% $40 in interest for the 2nd year.

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

After 2 years you would have:$1,000 * 4% = $80 interest

For a total of $1,080

4

Simple Interest vs. Compound Interest

• Compound interest always calculates interest based on the “latest amount”.

So $1,000 at 4% per year for 2 years compounded Yearly• Year 1: $1,000 * 4% $40 in interest for the 1st year.• Year 2: $1,040 * 4% $41.60 in interest for the 2nd year.

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

After 2 years you would have:$1,000 * 4% = $81.60 interest

For a total of $1,081.60

Simple InterestCompound Interest

$79.00

$79.50

$80.00

$80.50

$81.00

$81.50

$82.00

Simple Vs. Compound Interest$1,000 after 2 Years at 4%

5

Compounding Periods

• Compounded Yearly• Compounded Quarterly• Compounded Semi-Annually• Compounded Monthly

• The total amount of your financial transaction will be different based on when the interest is compounded.

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

6

Compounding Interest Quarterly

What if we compound our 4% interest quarterly for the $1,000.This would be four separate calculations

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

Quarter Principal Interest1st Quarter $1,000 * 1% = $10.002nd Quarter $1,010 * 1% = $10.103rd Quarter $1,020.10 * 1% = $10.2014th Quarter $1,030.301 * 1% ≈ $10.30

7CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

8

Financial Functions• Present Value (PV)

– What you get/pay at the beginning of the financial transaction

• Future Value (FV)– What you are going to get OR what you will have to pay at the end

of the financial transaction

• Payment (PMT)– Payment made each period. It remains constant over life of annuity

• RATE– Interest rate per period

• NPER– Number of payment periods

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

9

Financial Functions-Syntax

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

=PV(rate, nper, pmt, [fv], [type])

=FV(rate, nper, pmt, [pv], [type])

=PMT(rate, nper, pv, [fv], [type])

=RATE(nper, pmt, pv, [fv], [type], [guess])*Compounding Periods

=NPER(rate, pmt, pv, [fv], [type]) / Compounding Periods

10

Arguments in Financial Functions

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

Argument Description Argument Rules

rate Interest rate per compounding period

Always divide the rate by the number of compounding periodsRate/ # of compounding periods

nper Number of compounding periods

Always multiply the number of years by the compounding period# of compounding periods * # of years

pmt Periodic payments to the initial sum

Payment amount cannot vary

pv Original value of financial transaction

fv Value at the end of the financial transaction

type Designates when payments are made

0: Payments are made at the end of the period1: Payments are made at the beginning of the period(0 is the default and is implied)

11

Using Financial Functions Arguments• Use consistent signs– Outgoing cash ( - )– Incoming cash ( + )

• For arguments that are zero, at least a comma must be put in the function to maintain the argument order, unless no other non-zero arguments follow.

=PV(.03, 2, 0, 5000, 0) same as

=PV(.03, 2, , 5000)

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

12

Write an excel formula in cell D2 to calculate the payment for a loan amount of $15,000 at 9% interest rate for a period of 5 years.

Assume the loan is compounded monthly.

=PMT(rate, nper, pv, [fv], [type]) ----Returns periodic payment

=PMT(.09/12,5*12,15000,0,0) OR =PMT(.09/12,5*12,15000)

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

13

Write an excel formula in cell B2 to determine how many years it will take to save $12,000 if you put $10,000 into a savings account

paying 4% annual interest compounded quarterly.

=NPER(rate, pmt, pv, [fv], [type]) ----Returns # of Payment periods

=NPER(.04/4,0,-10000,12000,0) /4 OR =NPER(.04/4,,-10000,12000)/4

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

Note: Divide the function by the number of compounding periods to calculate the number of years for the annuity

14

Write an excel formula in cell A2 to calculate the annual interest rate of a new Chevy Cruz. The cost of the car is $18,999, and you will put down $2,000. You will pay $350 per month for five years. The annual interest

rate is compounded monthly.

=RATE(nper, pmt, pv, [fv], [type]) ----Returns the rate per period

=RATE(5*12,-350,16999,0,0)*12 OR =RATE(5*12,-350,16999)*12

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

Note: Multiply the function by the number of compounding periods to calculate the annual interest rate

15

Write an excel formula in cell E2 to determine how much money you would have to put into a CD now to have a $5,000 down payment on a car

when you graduate in 2 years. The CD pays 3% annual interest rate compounded yearly.

=PV(rate, nper, pmt, [fv], [type]) - Returns the present value of an investment

=PV(.03,2,0,5000,0) OR =PV(.03,2,,5000)

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

16

Write an excel formula in cell F2 to determine the value of a CD in 2 years. You plan on an initial investment of $5,000 and you will add an additional $50 per month. The CD pays an annual interest rate of 3% compounded monthly.

=FV(rate, nper, pmt, [pv], [type]) - Returns the future value of an investment

=FV(.03/12,2*12,-50,-5000,0) OR =FV(.03/12,2*12,-50,-5000)

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

17

Write an Excel formula in cell G2 to calculate the monthly mortgage payment for a $100,000 home with a balloon payment of $10,000. The annual interest rate is 4%

compounded monthly with a loan duration of 30 years. Note: A balloon payment is an amount due at the end of the loan and is indicated in the fv argument as a negative value

.

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions

18

Five years ago you won $75,000 on the game show, “I Wanna Win A lot of Money”! At that time, you invested the money in a CD that paid 6% per year compounded monthly. Write a formula in cell C9, to determine T/F if you have enough money to purchase a $100,000 house without financing.

CSE 2111 Lecture 6-Financial Functions


Recommended