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Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson [email protected]

Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson [email protected]

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Page 1: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Unit 7 Seminar: AnnuitiesProf. Otis D. Jackson

[email protected]

Page 2: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Find the future value of:

an ordinary annuity using the simple interest formula

an ordinary annuity using a $1.00 ordinary annuity future value table

an annuity due using the simple interest formula

an annuity due using a $1.00 ordinary annuity future value table

an annuity using a formula2

Page 3: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Calculate the value of a growing account subject to periodic investments of payments.

Some examples include:

Retirement funds

College education

Vacation

Company’s future investment in capital expenses

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Page 4: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Annuity payment: a payment made to an investment fund each period at a fixed interest rate.

Sinking fund payment: a payment made to an investment fund each period at a fixed interest rate to yield a predetermined future value.

Annuity certain: an annuity paid over a guaranteed number of periods.

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Page 5: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Contingent annuity: an annuity paid over an uncertain number of periods.

Ordinary annuity: an annuity for which payments are made at the end of each period.

Annuity due: an annuity for which payments are made at the beginning of each period.

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Page 6: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

1. Find the end-of-period principal. First end-of-period principal = annuity payment

2. For each remaining period in turn:End-of-period principal = annuity payment + [previous end-of-period principal * (1 + period interest rate)].

3. Identify the last end-of-period principal as the future value.Future value = last end-of-period principal

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Page 7: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

What is the FV of an annual ordinary annuity of $1,000 for 3 years at 4% annual interest?

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End-of-year 1 = $1,000 (no interest

earned Y1) End-of-year 2

= $1,000 + [$1,000 (1 + 0.04)] = $2,040

End of year 3 = $1,000 + [$2,040 (1.04)] = $3,121.60

The future value is $3,121.60.

Page 8: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Find the future value and total interest of an ordinary annuity with annual payments of $5,000 at 2.9% annual interest after four years.

Remember our formulas: First end-of-period principal = annuity payment Next end-of-period principal =Annuity payment + [previous end-of-period principal * (1 +

period interest rate)]Future value = last end-of-period principal

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Page 9: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

End-of-year 1 = $5,000 (no interest earned Y1)

End-of-year 2 = $5,000 + [$5,000 (1.029)]

= $10,145 End of year 3 = $5,000 + [$10,145 (1.029)]

= $15,439.21 End of year 4 = $5,000 + [$15,439.20

(1.029)]

= $20,886.94 = Future Value

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Page 10: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

4 years depositing $5,000 per year

4 * $5,000 = $20,000Future Value – principal = Interest

paid

$20,886.94 - $20,000 = $886.94 Interest = $886.94

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Page 11: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Find the value of an annuity after two years of $1,500 invested semi-annually at 4% annual interest. Then find the interest paid.

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Page 12: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

We have two periods per year (semi annual) and 2 years of interest 2 yrs * 2 periods/year = 4 periods

Interest is 4% annually. For each period then it would be 2%.4÷2 = 2% interest per period

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Page 13: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

End-of-period 1 = $1,500 (no interest earned P1) End-of-Period 2 = $1,500 + [$1,500 (1.02)]

= $3,030 End of Period 3 = $1,500 + [$3,030 (1.02)]

= $4,590.60 End of Period 4 = $1,500 + [$4,590.60

(1.02)]

= $6,182.41 = Future Value

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Page 14: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Future value = $6,182.41

Invested amount = $1,500 * 4 periods = $6,000

Interest = $6,182.42 - $6,000 = $182.41

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Page 15: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Using Table 1 from the lecture notes

1. Select the periods row corresponding to the number of interest periods.

2. Select the rate per period column corresponding to the period interest rate.

3. Locate the value in the cell where the periods row intersects with the rate-per-period column.

4. Multiply the annuity payment by the table from step 3.

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Page 16: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Using Table-1, find the FV of a semiannual ordinary annuity of $6,000 for five years at 6% annual interest, compounded semiannually.

5 years x 2 periods per year = 10 periods 6% annual interest rate / 2 periods per year

= 3% period interest rate See Table-1 for 10 periods at 3% = 11.464 FV = $6,000 x 11.464 = $68,784 The future value of this annuity is

$68,784.

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Page 17: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Use Table-1 to find the accumulation phase future value and total interest of an ordinary annuity of $4,000 for eight years at 2% annual interest.

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Page 18: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

First pull out all information needed:$4,000 for 8 years @ 2% annuallyGives us 8 periods at 2%

Go to Table-1: down to 8 periods and over to 2%

gives us the factor: 8.583$4,000 * 8.583 = $34,332 (future value)

Future Value – Principal = Interest$34,332 – ($4,000 * 8) = Interest$34,332 - $32,000 = $2,332 = Interest

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Page 19: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Use Table-1 to find the accumulated amount and total interest of an ordinary annuity with semi-annual payments of $6,000 for five years at 4% annual interest.

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Page 20: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Pull out all important information:$6,000 paid semi-annually for 5 years @ 4% annual

interestFind each period interest: 4÷2 = 2%Number of periods: 5 years * 2 periods per year = 10

periods

Going to Table-1: 10 periods at 2%: gives us a factor of 10.950

$6,000 x 10.950 = $65,700 = future value

To find the interest:10 periods x $6,000 per = $60,000 = PrincipalFV – Principal = $65,700 - $60,000 = $5,700 = Interest

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Page 21: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

The difference between an ordinary annuity and an annuity due is whether you made the first payment immediately (annuity due) or at the end of the first period (ordinary annuity).

With the same numbers, the FV of an annuity due will always be greater than the FV of an ordinary annuity. This is because you gain interest immediately rather than waiting until the end of the first period.

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Page 22: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

1. Find the first end-of-month period principal: multiply the annuity payment by the sum of 1 and the period interest rate. Because you are paying the principal at the beginning of the month, you earn interest for that month.

2. For each remaining period in turn, find the next end-of-period principal: (previous end of period principal + annuity payment) * (1 + period interest rate)

3. Identify the last end-of-period principal as the future value.

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Page 23: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Find the FV of annuity due of $1,000 for three years at 4% annual interest. Find the total investment and total interest earned.

End-of-Y 1 value = $1,000 * (1 + 0.04) = $1,040. End-of-Y 2 value = ($1,000 + $1,040) * 1.04 =

$2,121.60 End-of-Y 3 value = $3,121.60 * 1.04 = $3,246.46 The future value of this annuity is

$3,246.46 The interest earned = $3,246.46 – $3,000 =

$246.46

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Page 24: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

1. Select the periods row corresponding to the number of interest periods.

2. Select the rate-per-period column corresponding to the period interest rate.

3. Locate the value in the cell where the periods row intersects the rate-per-period column.

4. Multiply the annuity payment by the table value from step 3. This is equivalent to an ordinary annuity.

5. Multiply the amount that is equivalent to an ordinary annuity by the sum of 1 and the period interest rate to adjust for the extra interest that is earned on an annuity due.

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Future value = annuity payment * table value * (1 + period interest rate)

Note: Same table as before but a different final calculation!

Page 25: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Using Table-1, find the FV of a quarterly annuity due of $2,800 for four years at 8% annual interest, compounded quarterly.

4 years x 4 periods per year = 16 periods 8% annual interest rate ÷ 4 periods per year =

2% Table-1 value for 16 periods at 2% = 18.639 FV = Annuity pmt * table value * (1 + period

interest rate) FV = $2,800 * 18.639 * 1.02 = $52,232.98

The future value of this annuity is $52,232.98

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Page 26: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

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(1 ) 1NRFV PMT

R

R is the period rate expressed as a decimal equivalent.

N is the number of periods.PMT is the amount of the annuity

payment.

Page 27: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

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(1 ) 1NRFV PMT

R

Find the future value of an ordinary annuity with annual payments of $5,000 at 2.9% annual interest after four years.

PMT = $5,000 R = 2.9% annual interest =

0.029N = 4 years

FV = $5000 *[(( [(1 + .029) ^ 4] - 1) ÷ 0.029 )]

FV = $5000 *[(( [(1.029) ^ 4] - 1) ÷ 0.029 )]

FV = $5000 *[(1.1211 – 1) ÷ 0.029]

FV = $5000 *[0.1211 ÷ 0.029]

FV = $5000 *(4.177) = $20,886.94

Page 28: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

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(1 ) 1NRFV PMT

R

* (1 + R)

R is the period rate expressed as a decimal equivalent.

N is the number of periods.PMT is the amount of the annuity

payment.

Page 29: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

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(1 ) 1NRFV PMT

R

Find the future value of an annuity due with annual payments of $5,000 at 2.9% annual interest after four years.

PMT = $5,000

R = 0.029N = 4 years

FV = $20,886.94 * (1 + 0.029)

FV = $20,886.94 * (1.029)

FV = $21,492.66

* (1 + R)

Page 30: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Find the sinking fund payment using a $1.00 sinking fund payment table.

Find the present value of an ordinary annuity using a $1.00 ordinary annuity present value table.

Find the sinking fund payment or the present value of an annuity using a formula.

Basically just asking how much do you need to invest each year to have a desired amount in the future.

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Page 31: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

1. Select the periods row corresponding to the number of interest periods.

2. Select the rate-per-period column corresponding to the period interest rate.

3. Locate the value in the cell where the periods row intersects the rate-per-period column.

4. Multiply the table value from step 3 by the desired future value

Sinking fund payment = FV * Table-2 value

The table value will be less than 1 because you are wondering what portion of the value you need today.

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Page 32: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Using Table-2, find the annual sinking fund payment (SFP) required to accumulate $140,000 in 12 years at 6% annual interest rate.

Table-2 indicates that a 12-period value at 6% is equal to 0.0593

SFP = $140,000 x 0.0593 = $8,302

A sinking fund payment of $8,302 is required at the end of each year for 12 years at 6% to yield the desired $140,000.

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Page 33: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Use Table-2 to find the annual sinking fund payment required to accumulate $100,000 in 10 years at 4% annual interest.

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Page 34: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Use Table-2 to find the annual sinking fund payment required to accumulate $100,000 in 10 years at 4% annual interest.

Number of periods: 10 Interest rate: 4% Find the table value where 10 periods and 4%

intersect: 0.0833 Multiply the desired FV by the table value SFP = $100,000 x 0.0833 = $8,330 The annual sinking fund payment required

to accumulate $100,000 in 10 years is $8,330

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Page 35: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Using Table-3 in your lecture notes, locate the given number of periods and the given rate per period.

Multiply the table value times the periodic annuity payment.

PV of annuity = periodic annuity payment * table value

Think of retirement or trusts. How much do you set aside now to receive payments each year?

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Page 36: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

Use Table-3 to find the present value of a semiannual ordinary annuity of $3,000 for seven years at 6% annual interest, compounded semiannually.

7 years * 2 periods per year = 14 periods 6% annual interest rate ÷ 2 periods per year = 3%

period interest rate Table-3: row 14 periods, column 3% is 11.30 PV annuity = $3,000 x 11.30 (table factor)= $33,900 By investing $33,900 now at 6% interest,

compounded semiannually, you can receive an annuity payment of $3,000 twice a year for seven years.

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Page 37: Unit 7 Seminar: Annuities Prof. Otis D. Jackson ojackson@kaplan.edu

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Reminder of what to complete for Unit 7 by Tuesday at Midnight: Discussion = initial

response to one question + 2 reply posts

MML assignment Instructor graded

assignment (download from doc sharing)

Seminar quiz if you did not attend, came late, or left early