Instalment and Present value: Difference between pages

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1. ''Lending and borrowing.''
(PV).  


An agreed payment made by a borrower to a lender, as one amount in a schedule of payments over a period of time.
Today’s fair value of a future cash flow, calculated by discounting it appropriately.  


If the instalments are of equal value they are said to be equated.
The appropriate rate to discount with is the appropriately risk-adjusted current market [[cost of capital]].




Repayment of a loan by equated instalments ensures that the total cash payable by the borrower, comprised of interest plus principal, remains the same for each instalment.  Most repayment mortgages are set up in this way.
==Calculation of present value==


Equated instalments pay off varying proportions of interest and principal within each instalment, so that by the end of the schedule of instalments, the loan is paid off in full.
We can calculate present value for time lags of single or multiple periods.
The proportion of interest is greatest at the start, and least at the end.




2.  ''Tax and other liabilities.''
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example 1: One period at 10%'''</span>


More broadly, one of a number of payments to settle a total liability in parts over time.
If $110m is receivable one period from now, and the appropriate periodic cost of capital (r) for this level of risk is 10%,


For example, corporate taxpayers with larger tax liabilities may be required to pay part of their total liabilities earlier, by instalments, rather than in a single - later - lump sum.
the Present value is:


PV = $110m x 1.10<sup>-1</sup>


An alternative spelling is ''installment''.
= '''$100m'''.




==See also==
And more generally:
*[[Annuity factor]]
*[[Corporation Tax]]
*[[Equated instalment]]
*[[Interest]]
*[[Loan]]
*[[Principal]]
*[[Tax]]


PV = Future value x Discount factor (DF)


== Other resources ==
Where:
[[Media:2014_11_Nov_-_Ever_deceasing_circles.pdf| Ever decreasing circles, The Treasurer, 2014]]


DF = (1 + r)<sup>-n</sup>
:r = cost of capital per period; ''and''
:n = number of periods
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example 2: One period at 6%'''</span>
If $10m is receivable one year from now, and the cost of capital (r) is 6% per year,
the Present value is:
PV = $10m x 1.06<sup>-1</sup>
= '''$9.43m'''.
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example 3: Two periods at 6%'''</span>
Now let's change the timing from Example 2, while leaving everything else the same as before.
If exactly the same amount of $10m is receivable, but later, namely two years from now,
and the cost of capital (r) is still 6% per year,
the Present value falls to:
PV = $10m x 1.06<sup>-2</sup>
= '''$8.90m'''.
The longer the time lag before we receive our money, the less valuable the promise is today.
This is reflected in the lower Present value for the two years maturity cash flow of $8.90m, compared with $9.43m Present value for the cash flow receivable after only one year's delay.
== See also ==
* [[Adjusted present value]]
* [[Compounding factor]]
* [[Discount factor]]
* [[Annuity factor]]
* [[Discounted cash flow]]
* [[Economic value]]
* [[Future value]]
* [[Internal rate of return]]
* [[Intrinsic value]]
* [[Net present value]]
* [[Profitability index]]
* [[Terminal value]]
* [[Time value of money]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Trade_finance]]

Revision as of 14:10, 16 November 2016

(PV).

Today’s fair value of a future cash flow, calculated by discounting it appropriately.

The appropriate rate to discount with is the appropriately risk-adjusted current market cost of capital.


Calculation of present value

We can calculate present value for time lags of single or multiple periods.


Example 1: One period at 10%

If $110m is receivable one period from now, and the appropriate periodic cost of capital (r) for this level of risk is 10%,

the Present value is:

PV = $110m x 1.10-1

= $100m.


And more generally:

PV = Future value x Discount factor (DF)

Where:

DF = (1 + r)-n

r = cost of capital per period; and
n = number of periods


Example 2: One period at 6%

If $10m is receivable one year from now, and the cost of capital (r) is 6% per year,

the Present value is:

PV = $10m x 1.06-1

= $9.43m.


Example 3: Two periods at 6%

Now let's change the timing from Example 2, while leaving everything else the same as before.

If exactly the same amount of $10m is receivable, but later, namely two years from now,

and the cost of capital (r) is still 6% per year,

the Present value falls to:

PV = $10m x 1.06-2

= $8.90m.


The longer the time lag before we receive our money, the less valuable the promise is today.

This is reflected in the lower Present value for the two years maturity cash flow of $8.90m, compared with $9.43m Present value for the cash flow receivable after only one year's delay.


See also