TransWikia.com

Compute the (Net) Present Value

Quantitative Finance Asked by clubkli on December 5, 2020

Let’s have a project where we invest 1000 at the beginning of year 1 and 1000 at the beginning of year 2. At the end of year 2 the income is 2200 and the project is closed.

Person A discounted with 5%.

Person B discounted with 10%.

Now I want to calculate the present value and net present value for both of them.

Person A: $PV = frac{2200}{1.05^2} = 1995.46$

Person A: $NPV =$ Present value of the income – investments $= 1995,46 – (1000 + 1000) = -4.54$

Person B: $PV = frac{2200}{1.10^2} = 1818.18$

Person B: $NPV = 1818.18 – (1000 + 1000) = -181.82$

Is this correct?

This is a part of a multiple choice question where is no option that the (N)PV of both is positive or negative at the same time. So I guess something is wrong.

3 Answers

No, it's not correct. The 1000 you invest at the beginning of the second year should also be discounted, That 1000 also has a present value. This gives:

$$NPV = frac{2200}{(1+R)^2} - frac{1000}{(1+R)} - 1000$$

with $R$ the annual rate.

Remember, you cannot simply add incoming or outgoing cash flows that occur at different times.

Correct answer by Olaf on December 5, 2020

The NPV calculation is the following: enter image description here

enter image description here

Answered by GeaR on December 5, 2020

As Olaf said you are not correct. The correct answers for NPV problem are:

Person A: $NPV = frac{2200}{(1+0,05)^2} - frac{1000}{(1+0,05)} - 1000 = 43,08$

Person B: $NPV = frac{2200}{(1+0,1)^2} - frac{1000}{(1+0,1)} - 1000 = - 90,91$

Person A should carry on with investment, but person B should not as the investment yields negative present value and wont be reasonable.

Answered by Kas on December 5, 2020

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP