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Calculating Bond Issuance Proceeds - YouTube
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Now, how do you figure out how much to charge?
How much cash should I charge you? How much
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cash should I charge you? How much cash should
I charge you? Basically we're going to try
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to figure out what the carrying value or the
amortized cost should be. In this case it锟絪
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a thousand net of a 100 is 900 which happens
to be the cash. Here it happens to be a thousand
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which is a thousand. Here it happens to be
a million one which is this plus this.
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Okay, there could be other factors that fall
into that but we've got to figure out, okay,
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how much should the present value of the bonds
be? When you锟絩e present valuing the bonds,
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there are two things we need to present value.
We need to present value the face and we need
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to present value the interest.
Now let's think about it. The million dollars
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is what? Some amount you're going to be getting
down the road. What we need to do is you know
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a $1,000,000 today is worth more than a $1,000,000
in five years. What we're going to do is we're
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going to have to figure out the $1,000,000
value, the present value in five years because
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that's what I'm going to give you plus the
present value of the 80, 80, 80, 80, 80 you're
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getting for five years.
That means we're present valuing two things.
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We're present valuing the face as a lump sum.
We're present valuing the 80, 80, 80, and
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80 when you have an equal amount to be received
or paid that's called an annuity. What we
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have to do is present value the annuity to
see what that value is. When you add those
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two up, that's how much we should charge you.
Let's think about it. When I'm looking at
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the $1,000,000. Here's the face, the present
value of the face or the par value and that
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would be the $1,000,000 times what was the
stated rate? The stated rate was 8% equals
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80,000 and that is the interest. We have to
present value two things, the face and the
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interest. The face will be a lump sum, the
interest will be what? The interest will be
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an annuity, an equal amount to be received
or paid. In this case 8% of a million.
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We use the stated rate to figure out the cash.
We're going to take the $1,000,000 times the
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present value of a lump sum in five years
at what percent? What percent do you want
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to earn? Let's assume it's the discount example
two. We want to earn 10%. Notice you use the
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effective rate to present value the lump sum.
In this case, let's say a million present
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value five years 10% is this, plus what? $80,000
annuity times the present value of an ordinary
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annuity and not in but for five years at whatever
rate you want to earn, 10%.
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Now notice the difference. It says present
value even ordinary annuity. We're going to
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learn about different types, you have an ordinary
annuity. Your ordinary annuity is your arrears
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at the end of the year. In other words if
I buy the bond today, have I earned any interest
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today? No, you haven't earned the interest
until what? Until the end of the year.
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That's called an ordinary annuity or annuity
in where's your end? At the rear, your arrears
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versus there's certain things where let's
say your mortgage, do they say oh yeah or
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your rent, you rent an apartment. Do they
say, "Pay me at the end of the month"? No,
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they want the money upfront. That would be,
excuse me, that would be annuity due in advance
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or an annuity due and they call annuity due
or annuity due now.
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Think of annuity due now or annuity in advance.
That's when you receive or make the payment
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at the beginning. For example a lease payment
you make it at the beginning. A bond interest
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you haven't earned until the end. In a bond,
we're going to use 80,000 times a present
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value of ordinary annuity for five years at
10%. That gives us this, this plus this equals
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how much we should basically charge you for
the bond. That's what we're looking for. That's
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what the cash proceed should be. That is present
valuing those two elements.
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If you look in your notes, it says, the next
consideration is how to handle to calculate
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the proceeds from the issuance of the bond.
It says here, to calculate the present value
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to amounts present value of the face of the
bonds, face times present value of a lump
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sum plus present value of the interest which
is annuity face time, state of time, times
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time of an ordinary annuity.
Now, a couple of things. The sum of these
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two amounts represents the present value of
the bonds. If it's semiannual, now what is
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semiannual mean? It means you get interest
not once a year but every six months or twice
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a year, semiannually. In that case let's say
it is a five year 8% or let's do present value,
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let's do 10%, five year 10%.
When you're doing a present value table, instead
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of doing five periods at 10% and looking for
the present value factor. You would do five
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times two is 10 periods divided by two at
5%. Now the difference between five years
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at 10% and 10 periods of 5% is what? The difference
is a compounding interest difference.
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In other words when you put money in the bank,
how often does it earn interest? Every day,
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compounds daily. That's why it says the interest
rate is 3% but the APY, the annual is not
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3% but 3.0146 because it earns interest on
interest. If I put a $1,000,000 in the bank
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today by the end of the day, I've earned a
million and one dollar. I have one dollar
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extra but tomorrow I'm going to start earning
interest on a million and one dollars and
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then a million and two plus interest, a million
four, six, 10, 12. That's called compounding
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interest of compounds daily.
Here, the difference, is not a huge difference
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but it's a compounding interest difference
because here you're just earning interest
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every year. Here you earn interest on interest
on interest and that's going to be the difference
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in that factor.
You'll see in your notes semiannual. Take
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the years times two, the interest divided
by two. Sometimes they'll just say in the
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exam that the bonds were issued at 101 or
98. What is 101 or 98 mean? 101 means 101%
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of face or 98% of face.
Generally not always but generally this would
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be a what? Premium because you got more money.
This would be a discount because you got less.
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It's not always the case because sometimes
there's other things included. Maybe it's
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a bond with detachable stock purchase warrants
which means that you have to give some value
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to that stock purchase warrant which we'll
cover later.
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I don't want you to say always premium, always
discount. Not necessarily the case, however,
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it tells you how much you got. I got 101%
of face or I got 98% of face. That's how much
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cash I got. Those are important concepts in
understanding the basics of how to calculate
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these amounts.
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