Q. 1 Jim makes a deposit of $12‚000 in a bank account. The deposit is to earn interest annually at the rate of 9 percent for seven years. How much will Jim have on deposit at the end of seven years? Q. 2 Find the present value of $10‚000 to be received at the end of 10 periods at 8% per period. Q.3 What is the value of the following set of cash flows today? The interest rate is 8% for all cash flows. Year Amount 1 Rs. 3000 2 Rs.5000 3
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Time value of money‚ is exactly how it sounds. Time can determine the value of your money in aspects of Present Value (PV) and Future Value (FV). Present value is what your money is worth at the present point in time that you acquire it. Future value is what your money will be worth if you accrue interest over time. Equations for both are as follows. FV= PV (1 + i) ^n‚ PV= FV (1+i) ^ -n. Examples of both; you get $15‚000 now or $15‚000 in three years. If you take the $15k now and put it away
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TIME VALUE OF MONEY INTRODUCTION This module or note is created to provide students with step-by-step explanation and discussion on time value of money that mainly based on formulas instead of time value of money tables. The reason is so that students are able to answer all sorts of questions that involve interest rates and time period that are not available in the tables. OUTLINE OF THE NOTE A. Simple Interest B. Compound Interest 1. Single Amount • Future Value • Present Value
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Time Value of Money Danielle Kaplan B6022-P A01 Calculate the future value of 100‚000 ten years from now based on the following annual interest rates 2 ( 100‚000 x (1.02)10 121‚899 5 ( 100‚000 x (1.05)10 162‚899 8 ( 100‚000 x (1.08)10 215‚892 10 ( 100‚000 x (1.10)10 259‚374 Calculate the present value of a stream of cash flows based on a discount rate of 8. Annual cash flow is as follows Year 1 100‚000 ( 100‚000 / (1.08) 92‚592 Year 2 150‚000 ( 150‚000 / (1.08)2 128‚600 Year 3 200
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from today and the other will begin 17 years from today. You estimate your children’s college expenses to be $23‚000 per year per child‚ payable at the beginning of each school year. The annual interest rate is 5.5 percent. How much money must you deposit in account each year to fund your children’s education? Your deposits begin one year from today. You will make your last deposit when your oldest child enters college. Assume four years of college Solution: Cost of 1 year at university = 23
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Time Value of Money Project Show all your work! Name _________________ 1. If Mrs. Beach wanted to invest a lump sum of money today to have $100‚000 when she retired at 65 (she is 40 years old today) how much of a deposit would she have to make if the interest rate on the C.D. was 5%? a. What would Mrs. Beach have to deposit if she were to use high quality corporate bonds an earned an average rate of return of 7%. b. What would Mrs. Beach have to deposit if she
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Anti-Money Laundering Act R.A. 9160AMLA‚ As Amended by R.A. 9194 Subject: Business Laws and Corporate Practices Colegio de San Juan de Letran- Graduate School Submitted by: Michelle Ann G. Espisua Submitted to: Atty. Kriden Balgomera AMLA- Anti-Money Laundering Act R.A. 9160Anti-Money Laundering Act‚ As Amended by R.A. 9194 These Rules shall be known and cited as the "Revised Rules and Regulations Implementing Republic Act No. 9160” (the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2001 [AMLA]
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ones values- are influenced by society and the entity that frames our values entirely is capital. In this essay I will focus on this assumption put forward by Marx‚ how objects have moved from having not only a use value but an exchange value as well‚ as well as its relationship to “commodity fetishism”. When Marx talks about exchange value‚ he is referring about the value one places on a commodity. The concept of exchange value is very different to the concept of use value‚ the use value is “the
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The University of Phoenix simulation “Utilizing the Time Value of Money” focused on the financial principles used to evaluate and determine whether to outsource manufacturing or to invest in in-house operations. The simulation depicted real-life examples of how investment choices impacts the Net present value (NPV)‚ internal rate of return (IRR)‚ and cost of capital. The objective of the simulation was to apply time value of money principles to evaluate the investment alternatives of Cracker Pop
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The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 JFM GM520 - Legal Political & Ethical Dimensions of Business April‚ 12 2010 The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 was passed by congress to strengthen the government’s control of the financial markets. It was preceded by the Securities Exchange Act of 1933 which was enacted during the Great Depression in hopes that the stock market crash of 1929 would not be repeated. The basic difference between the two acts was that the 1933 Act was to govern the
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