What is an opportunity cost rate? How is this rate used in discounted cash flow analysis, and where is it shown on a time line? Is the opportunity rate a single number that is used to evaluate all potential investments?

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Pages: 3
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Financial task

 

Questions

(4-1)

Define each of the following terms:

 

PV; I; INT; FVN; PVAN; FVAN; PMT; M; INOM

 

Opportunity cost rate

 

Annuity; lump-sum payment; cash flow; uneven cash flow stream

 

Ordinary (or deferred) annuity; annuity due

 

Perpetuity; consol

 

Outflow; inflow; time line; terminal value

 

Compounding; discounting

 

Annual, semiannual, quarterly, monthly, and daily compounding

 

Effective annual rate (EAR or EFF%); nominal (quoted) interest rate; APR; periodic rate

 

Amortization schedule; principal versus interest component of a payment; amortized loan

 

(4-2)

What is an opportunity cost rate? How is this rate used in discounted cash flow analysis, and where is it shown on a time line? Is the opportunity rate a single number that is used to evaluate all potential investments?

 

(4-3)

An annuity is defined as a series of payments of a fixed amount for a specific number of periods. Thus, $100 a year for 10 years is an annuity, but $100 in Year 1, $200 in Year 2, and $400 in Years 3 through 10 does not constitute an annuity. However, the entire series does contain an annuity. Is this statement true or false?

 

(4-4)

If a firm’s earnings per share grew from $1 to $2 over a 10-year period, the total growth would be 100%, but the annual growth rate would be less than 10%. True or false? Explain.

 

(4-5)

Would you rather have a savings account that pays 5% interest compounded semiannually or one that pays 5% interest compounded daily? Explain.

 

 

 

(5-1)

Define each of the following terms:

 

Bond; Treasury bond; corporate bond; municipal bond; foreign bond

 

Par value; maturity date; coupon payment; coupon interest rate

 

Floating-rate bond; zero coupon bond; original issue discount bond (OID)

 

Call provision; redeemable bond; sinking fund

 

Convertible bond; warrant; income bond; indexed bond (also called a purchasing power bond)

 

Premium bond; discount bond

 

Current yield (on a bond); yield to maturity (YTM); yield to call (YTC)

 

Indentures; mortgage bond; debenture; subordinated debenture

 

Development bond; municipal bond insurance; junk bond; investment-grade bond

 

Real risk-free rate of interest, r*; nominal risk-free rate of interest, rRF

 

Inflation premium (IP); default risk premium (DRP); liquidity; liquidity premium (LP)

 

Interest rate risk; maturity risk premium (MRP); reinvestment rate risk

 

Term structure of interest rates; yield curve

 

“Normal” yield curve; inverted (“abnormal”) yield curve

 

(5-2)

“Short-term interest rates are more volatile than long-term interest rates, so short-term bond prices are more sensitive to interest rate changes than are long-term bond prices.” Is this statement true or false? Explain.

 

(5-3)

The rate of return on a bond held to its maturity date is called the bond’s yield to maturity. If interest rates in the economy rise after a bond has been issued, what will happen to the bond’s price and to its YTM? Does the length of time to maturity affect the extent to which a given change in interest rates will affect the bond’s price? Why or why not?

 

(5-4)

If you buy a callable bond and interest rates decline, will the value of your bond rise by as much as it would have risen if the bond had not been callable? Explain.

 

(5-5)

A sinking fund can be set up in one of two ways. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each procedure from the viewpoint of both the firm and its bondholders.