ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance Videos 156 videos
Okay, so you want to be a company financial manager. It's basically up to you to make money for the shareholders. It would also be swell if you mad...
How is a company... born? Can it be performed via C-section? Is there a midwife present? Do its parents get in a fight over what to name it? In thi...
What is an income statement, and why do we need it in our lives? Well, let's take a look at an income statement for Year 1 of the Sauce Company, an...
Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Present Value (aka Another Twist) 4 Views
Share It!
Description:
Hit play to learn all about present value.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop present value another twist all right
- 00:07
well you've just won a mini lottery it pays $10,000 a year for five years it's [hand scratching lottery ticket]
- 00:12
backed by Jeff Bezos founder of Amazon so if you attribute no risk to the money
- 00:17
not being paid you buy into the 10% of your stock market appreciation thing
- 00:23
meaning that you actually believe the market will go up on average about ten
Full Transcript
- 00:27
percent a year for the next few decades and you'd love to just put your money in
- 00:31
an index fund and well forget about it and go play some golf [man hits golf ball]
- 00:35
so the question what price buys you out of this annuity and yeah forget taxes
- 00:40
because well in most structures it's way better to leave the money coming in in
- 00:44
small payments over long periods of time if you take a lot of money out in year [stacks of money falling]
- 00:49
one well if you'd likely be taxed at a much higher rate than otherwise but
- 00:53
that's a separate issue from this problems fine illustration here well
- 00:56
here's the discount rate and this is what the math looks like so you got your
- 01:00
one you're gonna take out ten thousand bucks
- 01:02
you're gonna divide it by the interest rate there it's it's one plus point one
- 01:05
at point one for ten percent of your compounding notice it's to the first
- 01:09
power because it's after one year of compounding and you get to nine grand
- 01:12
and change and then a year two you take out another ten grand the present value
- 01:16
of it you have to discount by two iterations of that ten percent of your
- 01:21
thing you can you get eighty two hundred bucks
- 01:23
then we scoop all the way down to year five that's ten thousand dollars given
- 01:27
to you five years from now with no risk associated on the premium on top of it
- 01:31
and you're gonna guess that ten percent a year is about your opportunity cost of
- 01:35
compounding in the market that's one plus 0.1 there so you get one point one
- 01:39
to the fifth power and if you divide that into ten thousand will you get
- 01:43
sixty two hundred bucks and change okay so then you just add up this column this
- 01:47
stuff over here the nine grand plus eighty two hundred plus seventy got and
- 01:50
so on and you get about thirty eight grand so using the discount rate of 10%
- 01:55
a year ie the opportunity cost of what you could do with the money deploying it
- 01:58
elsewhere while the dough today is worth yeah about thirty eight grand
- 02:02
steep discount from the fifty thousand dollars you thought you'd won great
- 02:06
marketers those lottery people well the exercise here is really
- 02:09
important to understand professionals use present value technique
- 02:13
to value companies in the stock market and these flows don't just apply to
- 02:18
bonds or promise series of payments they apply to companies and all kinds of [people handling money]
- 02:23
other investing things that are coming your way in the meantime keep cursing
- 02:26
Bezos name to the heavens for tricking you because as long as you're near a [man is angry at computer]
- 02:30
computer microphone well he's probably listening or trying to sell you
- 02:33
something
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...