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Financial management, Exercises of Financial Management

Financial management mid-term practice test

Typology: Exercises

2018/2019

Uploaded on 11/13/2019

mac-lam-giang
mac-lam-giang 🇻🇳

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Download Financial management and more Exercises Financial Management in PDF only on Docsity! Midterm 1 Practice Problems 1. Calculate the present value of each cashflow using a discount rate of 7%. Which do you most prefer most? Show and explain all supporting calculations! Cashflow A: receive $60 today and then receive $60 in four years. Cashflow B: receive $12 every year, forever, starting today. Cashflow C: pay $50 every year for five years, with the first payment being next year, and then subsequently receive $30 every year for 20 years. Cashflow D: receive $9 every other year, forever, with the first payment being next year. 2. Consider a project costing $1m each year from year 1 to year T. Then starting in year T+1, the project will generate a profit of $700k each year, forever. a) Write a formula for the present value of this project with a discount rate of r. b) Write a formula in terms of r for the value of T at which you break even (ignoring the issue of whether T is an integer). 3. Suppose you had $10,000 to invest for one year. You are deciding between a savings account with a 2% annual interest rate compounded daily (alternative A) and one with a 2% annual interest rate compounded monthly (alternative B). You are about to invest in the alternative A, but then you realize that since that bank is in downtown Chicago, you’ll need to spend an extra $1 for parking when opening the account. Alternative B does not have this cost (it’s a bank in Evanston). Should you change your decision or stick with alternative A? Show and explain all supporting calculations! 4. What is the effective annual interest rate in each situation? a. A savings account with 4% annual interest rate compounded daily (assume a year consists of 365 days)? b. A savings account with 4% annual interest rate compounded monthly? 5. Consider the following cashflow stream and a bank account paying 3% annual interest. What is the present value? Is the account value ever negative? Year Cashflow 0 8 1 2 2 4 3 -15 4 16 6. Which of the following cashflows do you most prefer using a discount rate of 10%? Using a discount rate of 1%? Show and explain all supporting calculations! Cashflow A: receive $10 every year, forever, with the first payment next year Cashflow B: receive $19 every other year, forever, with the first payment being next year Cashflow C: pay $5 every year for 20 years, with the first payment being today, and then subsequently receive $30 every year for 20 years. Cashflow D: receive $70 today and then receive $50 in five years. 7. Irene Engels recently graduated with an MBA. In August 2007, she borrowed $50,000, and she borrowed another $50,000 in August 2008. Her student loan has an annual interest rate of 2% compounded monthly. Irene doesn’t make any payments on her student debt until she starts a lucrative Wall St. job. Then starting in September 2009 she makes a payment of $1000 every month. Now bonus time is coming near. For January 2010 she plans to make another $1000 payment (her 5th) and also apply her bonus to the debt. How big must her bonus be so that she will have completely paid-off the debt at the end of this January? 8. You are analyzing the value of the company Twitter using a 15% discount rate. You expect its cashflows over the next 4 years to be as shown below and you estimate its NPV as $1B. Explain. Year Cashflow 0 -20M 1 -10M 2 0 3 12M 4 40M 9. A bank offers a savings account with a 3% annual interest rate, compounded monthly. 9.1 What is the effective annual interest rate? 9.2 Stu wants to open a savings account and make one deposit now that will enable him to withdraw $700 to go on vacation 5 months from now and $2000 for a deposit on a rental apartment when he starts working in 20 months from now. How much money does Stu need to deposit now? 10. If the discount rate is 12%, what is the present value of receiving $1000 per year at the end of each of the next 8 years? 11. Using a discount rate of 5%, what is the net present value of the following cashflow stream? Year Cashflow 0 -20 1 2 2 4 3 8 5 16 12. You bought a $200k condo. You got a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage and made a 20% down payment. 27. Consider a stimulus program that intends to spend $300 billion every year, for three years. Assuming a 3% discount rate, a) what is the present value of the program? b) how much would the present value increase if the $300 billion were spent at the beginning of each year rather than at the end? 28. You are running a small business. At the beginning of the month you have $1000. At the end of the first week you have revenues of $2200 and expenses of $1000 for that week. In the second week your revenues are $2000 and your expenses are $700. In the third week your revenues are $2100 and your expenses are $1100. In the fourth week, your revenues are $2200 and your expenses are $3000 (they are higher as you need to pay the rent). You have a checking account earning 1% annually compounded weekly. a) How much money do you have at the end of the four weeks? b) What is the minimum balance of the account over those four weeks? Does it ever drop below $1000? 29. What is the effective annual interest rate of a) a car loan with a 5% annual interest rate compounded monthly? b) a credit card with a 24.7% annual interest rate compounded monthly? 30. The price of home is $250k. Calculate your monthly payment if you get a mortgage with a 20% down payment at 15-year fixed annual rate of 3%. 31. Five years ago you bought a home and took out a 30 year mortgage for 150k at 6%. Suppose you’ve made monthly payments of $1200. (This may be higher than the minimum monthly payment.) a) What is the remaining principal today? b) What is the monthly payment if you would refinance the mortgage with a new 15-year mortgage at 3%? 32. Consider a 30-year mortgage with a 5% interest rate and a 20% down payment. If you can afford a $1000 monthly payment, how expensive a house can you buy? How large is the down payment? Solutions 1. PV of A = 60+60*1.07^-4 = $105.77. PV of B = 12+12/0.07= $183.43 PV of C = -50/0.07*(1-1.07^-5)+30/0.07*(1-1.07^-20)*1.07^-5 = $21.59 PV of D = 9/(1.07^2-1)*1.07 = $66.46 The PV of cashflow B is largest and thus most preferred. 2. PV=$-1m*(1-(1+r)-T)/r + $700k*(1+r)-T/r PV=0 implies ($700k+$1m)(1+r)-T = $1m so T = log 1.7 / log (1+r) 3. FV of alternative A: $9999*(1+0.02/365)^365=$10,200.99. FV of alternative B: 10,000*(1+0.02/12)^12=$10,201.84. Since the FV of B is greater than the FV of A, you should change your decision and go with alternative B. 4a. (1+0.04/365)^365 - 1= 0.0408 = 4.08% 4b. (1+0.04/12)^12 - 1= 0.0407 = 4.07% 5. Present value equals 8+2*1.03^-1 + 4*1.03^-2 – 15*1.03^-3 + 16*1.03^-4 = 14.20. If the account value is ever negative, then it will be at the end of year 3. The present value up cashflows through year 3 is 8+2*1.03^-1 + 4*1.03^-2 – 15*1.03^-3=-0.01. Since this is negative, the account will be negative at the end of year 3. 6. The present value of cashflow A is 10/r, or 100 when r= 10% and 1000 when r=1%. The two period interest rate is s=(1+r)^2-1, or 21% when r=10% and 2.01% when r=1%. The present value of cashflow B is (1+r)*19/s where the 1+r factor accounts for the fact that the first payment is in one year (half of a two year period). Thus the present value is 99.52 when r=10% and 955 when r=1%. The present value of cashflow C is -5-5/r*(1- (1+r)^-19)+(1+r)^-19*(30/r*(1-(1+r)^-20), or -5.06 when r=10% and 357 when r=1%. The present value of cashflow D is 70+50*(1+r)^-5, or 101 when r=10% and 118 when r=1%. Thus when r=10% then cashflow D is preferred and when r=1% then cashflow A is preferred. 7. Let r=0.02/12 be the monthly interest rate. The future value of the debt at the end of August 2009 is 50000*(1+r)^24+50000*(1+r)^12 = 103,048. The present value at the end of August 2009 of the future payments is 1000/r*(1-(1+r)^-5) = 4975. Thus the value of the debt at the end of August 2009 is 103,048-4975=98,073. Thus the future value of the debt at the end of January 2010 is 98,073*(1+r)^5=$98,893. A bonus this big would allow her to pay off the debt. 8. Clearly the present value of the cashflows over the next 4 years is less than $1B. So to have a present value of $1B the cashflows after year 4 must be pretty big. Another way of saying the same thing is that the value of Twitter, X, at the end of year 4 must be quite high. We can actually calculate X. The future value X at year 4 is X=(1B-20M)*1.15^4 – 10M*1.15^3+12M*1.15^1+40M = 1.753B. 9.1 Answer: Since the annual interest rate a = 3%, compounded in m =12 periods, then the effective annual interest rate i is (1 + a /m) m -1 = (1 + 3% /12)12 -1 = 3.04%. 9.2 Answer: For future value y1 = $700 received in n1 = 5 months later, the present value is y1 *(1 + a/n1) –n1= 700 *(1 + 3%/12) -5 = 691.32. For future value y2 = $2000 received in n2 = 20 months later, the present value is y2 *(1 + a/n2) –n2= 2000 *(1 + 3%/12) -20 = 1902.58. Thus the money Stu needs to deposit now is 691.315 + 1902.578 = 2593.89. 10. Answer: PV=1000 * (1/0.12) * (1 – 1/(1.12^8)) = $4967.64. 11. Answer: NPV = -20 + 2(1.05)-1 + 4(1.05)-2 + 8(1.05)-3 + 16(1.05)-5 = 4.98. 12a. principal = 80% 200k = 160k. Payment = 160k r/(1-(1+r)^-180). Here r is the monthly interest rate, the annual rate divided by 12. 12b. smaller. 13. 9.49 14a. 946.68 14b. 0.52 15. 2.49m 16. 12.7% 17a. 586.82 17b. 114,807.22 18. The maximum monthly payment is $3000. Suppose you pay 180 months to pay off the debt. PV = A[1-1/(1+r)^n]/r = $379,365.73. This is the maximum principal you can pay. So the total cost of the house is $379,365.73/(1-0.2) = $474207.16 and the down payment is $474207.16 * 20% = $94,841.43 > $30,000. So the most expensive house you can afford is $30,000 / 20% = $150,000. 19a. 10/.05*(1-(1.05)^-30)/1.05^9 = $99.09 19b. 10m+10m/1.05-3m/.05 = -$40.48m
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