FIN 300 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5: Investment, Interest, Discounting

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10 Oct 2016
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Future value: refers to the amount of money to which an investment would grow over some length of time at some given interest rate. In general if you invest for one period at an interest rate of r, your investment grows to (1+r) per dollar invested. Compounding: the process of accumulating interest in an investment over time to earn more interest. Interest on interest: interest earned on the reinvestment of previous interest payments. Compound interest: interest earned on both the initial principal and the interest reinvested from prior periods. Simple interest: interest earned only on the original principal amount invested. Present value: the current value of future cash ows discounted at the appropriate discount rate. Discount: to calculate the present value of some future amount. The quantity in brackets goes by several different names. Since it"s used to discount a future cash ow, it is often called discount factor.

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