Calculating interest rate


Question 1. Present Values. Compute the present value of a $100 cash flow for the following combinations of discount rates and times:

a. r = 8 percent, t = 10 years.
b. r = 8 percent, t = 20 years.
c. r = 4 percent, t = 10 years.
d. r = 4 percent, t = 20 years.

Question 2. Future Values. Compute the future value of a $100 cash flow for the same combinations of rates and times as in problem 1.

Question 3: Calculating Interest Rate. Find the interest rate implied by the following combinations of present and future values:

Present Value   Years     Future Value
$400                  11            $684
$183                   4             $249
$300                   7             $300

Question 4: Loan Payments. If you take out an $8,000 car loan that calls for 48 monthly payments at an APR of 10 percent, what is your monthly payment? What is the effective annual interest rate on the loan?

Question 5: Amortizing Loan. You take out a 30-year $100,000 mortgage loan with an APR of 6 percent and monthly payments. In 12 years you decide to sell your house and pay off the mortgage. What is the principal balance on the loan?

Question 6: Amortizing Loan. Consider a 4-year amortizing loan. You borrow $1,000 initially, and repay it in four equal annual year-end payments.

a. If the interest rate is 8 percent, show that the annual payment is $301.92.

b. Fill in the following table, which shows how much of each payment is interest versus principal repayment (that is, amortization), and the outstanding balance on the loan at each date.

              Loan        Year-End Interest      Year-End     Amortization
Time     Balance       Due on Balance       Payment         of Loan
0         $1,000                 $80                $301.92         $221.92
1         ––––––              ––––––               301.92           ––––––
2          ––––––             ––––––               301.92           ––––––
3          ––––––             ––––––               301.92           ––––––
4              0                      0                       —                   —

c. Show that the loan balance after 1 year is equal to the year-end payment of $301.92 times the 3-year annuity factor.

Question 7: Bond Yields. A bond with face value $1,000 has a current yield of 7 percent and a coupon rate of 8 percent. What is the bond’s price?

Question 8: Bond Pricing. A 6-year Circular File bond pays interest of $80 annually and sells for $950. What are its coupon rate, current yield, and yield to maturity?

Question 9: Bond Prices and Yields.

a. Several years ago, Castles in the Sand, Inc., issued bonds at face value at a yield to maturity of 7 percent. Now, with 8 years left until the maturity of the bonds, the company has run into hard times and the yield to maturity on the bonds has increased to 15 percent. What has happened to the price of the bond?

b. Suppose that investors believe that Castles can make good on the promised coupon payments, but that the company will go bankrupt when the bond matures and the principal comes due. The expectation is that investors will receive only 80 percent of face value at maturity. If they buy the bond today, what yield to maturity do they expect to receive?

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Finance Basics: Calculating interest rate
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