Loan amortization Jan sold her house on December 31 and took a $40,000 mortgage as part of the payment. The 10-year mortgage has a 12% nominal interest rate, but it calls for semiannual payments beginning next June 30. Next year Jan must report on Schedule B of her IRS Form 1040 the amount of interest that was included in the two payments she received during the year. a. What is the dollar amount of each payment Jan receives?

Loan amortization

Jan sold her house on December 31 and took a $40,000 mortgage as part of the payment. The 10-year mortgage has a 12% nominal interest rate, but it calls for semiannual payments beginning next June 30. Next year Jan must report on Schedule B of her IRS Form 1040 the amount of interest that was included in the two payments she received during the year.

a. What is the dollar amount of each payment Jan receives? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

How much interest was included in the first payment? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

How much repayment of principal was included? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

How do these values change for the second payment?

b. How much interest must Jan report on Schedule B for the first year? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

c. Will her interest income be the same next year?

Problem 5-1

Future valueIf you deposit $10,000 in a bank account that pays 12% interest annually, how much would be in your account after 5 years? Round your answer to the nearest cent.Problem 5-8 Loan amortization and EARYou want to buy a car, and a local bank will lend you $10,000. The loan will be fully amortized over 5 years (60 months), and the nominal interest rate will be 10% with interest paid monthly.a. What will be the monthly loan payment? Round your answer to the nearest cent.b. What will be the loan’s EAR? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 5-26

PV and loan eligibility

You have saved $5,000 for a down payment on a new car. The largest monthly payment you can afford is $450. The loan will have a 11% APR based on end-of-month payments.

a. What is the most expensive car you could afford if you finance it for 48 months? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

b. What is the most expensive car you could afford if you finance it for 60 months? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

Problem 5-2

Present value

What is the present value of a security that will pay $47,000 in 20 years if securities of equal risk pay 8% annually? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

Problem 6-9

Expected Interest Rate

The real risk-free rate is 3.3%. Inflation is expected to be 2.7% this year, 4% next year, and then 2.25% thereafter. The maturity risk premium is estimated to be 0.05(t – 1)%, where t = number of years to maturity. What is the yield on a 7-year Treasury note? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 5-1

Future value

If you deposit $10,000 in a bank account that pays 12% interest annually, how much would be in your account after 5 years? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

Problem 5-8

Loan amortization and EAR

You want to buy a car, and a local bank will lend you $10,000. The loan will be fully amortized over 5 years (60 months), and the nominal interest rate will be 10% with interest paid monthly.

a. What will be the monthly loan payment? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

b. What will be the loan’s EAR? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 5-4

Time for a lump sum to double

If you deposit money today in an account that pays 3.5% annual interest, how long will it take to double your money? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 5-9

Present and future values for different periods

Find the following values using the equations and then a financial calculator. Compounding/discounting occurs annually. Round your answers to the nearest cent.

a. An initial $200 compounded for 1 year at 4%.

b. An initial $200 compounded for 2 years at 4%

c. The present value of $200 due in 1 year at a discount rate of 4%.

d. The present value of $200 due in 2 years at a discount rate of 4%.

Problem 5-3

Finding the required interest rate

Your parents will retire in 24 years. They currently have $250,000, and they think they will need $2,400,000 at retirement. What annual interest rate must they earn to reach their goal, assuming they don’t save any additional funds? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 6-11

Default Risk Premium

A company’s 5-year bonds are yielding 9.9% per year. Treasury bonds with the same maturity are yielding 5.6% per year, and the real risk-free rate (r*) is 2.7%. The average inflation premium is 2.5%, and the maturity risk premium is estimated to be 0.1(t – 1)%, where t = number of years to maturity. If the liquidity premium is 1.1%, what is the default risk premium on the corporate bonds? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 6-1

Yield Curves

TERM

RATE

6 months

4.86%

1 year

5.36%

2 years

5.52%

3 years

5.72%

4 years

5.84%

5 years

6.04%

10 years

6.36%

20 years

6.65%

30 years

6.80%

a. Plot a yield curve based on these data.

b. What type of yield curve is shown?

c. What information does this graph tell you?

d. Based on this yield curve, if you needed to borrow money for longer than one year, would it make sense for you to borrow short term and renew the loan or borrow long term? Explain.

Problem 5-5

Time to reach a financial goal

You have $11,122.76 in a brokerage account, and you plan to deposit an additional $4,000 at the end of every future year until your account totals $210,000. You expect to earn 12% annually on the account. How many years will it take to reach your goal? Round your answer to two decimal places at the end of the calculations.

Problem 5-6

Future value: annuity versus annuity due

a. What’s the future value of a 11%, 5-year ordinary annuity that pays $200 each year? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

b. If this was an annuity due, what would its future value be? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

PROBLEM

b. What percentage of the payment represents interest and what percentage represents principal for each of the 3 years? Round all answers to two decimal places.

Amortization schedule

a. Set up an amortization schedule for a $37,000 loan to be repaid in equal installments at the end of each of the next 3 years. The interest rate is 11% compounded annually. Round all answers to the nearest cent.

b. What percentage of the payment represents interest and what percentage represents principal for each of the 3 years? Round all answers to two decimal places.

c. Why do these percentages change over time?

Problem 6-5

Maturity Risk Premium

The real risk-free rate is 3.5%, and inflation is expected to be 3% for the next 2 years. A 2-year Treasury security yields 8%. What is the maturity risk premium for the 2-year security? Round your answer to two decimal places.

Problem 5-7

Present and future values of a cash flow stream

An investment will pay $50 at the end of each of the next 3 years, $250 at the end of Year 4, $350 at the end of Year 5, and $550 at the end of Year 6.

a. If other investments of equal risk earn 8% annually, what is its present value? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

b. If other investments of equal risk earn 8% annually, what is its future value? Round your answer to the nearest cent.

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *