Article Directory :: Finance & Investment Articles

What Serious Investors Need to Know About Time Value of Money

By James Kobzeff

Subscribe to James Kobzeff's RSS feed using any feed reader!

Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 19Jul2009
Word count: 849
Viewed: 185 time(s)
Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager!
Get Free Content For Your Site

Real estate investors purchase investment real estate for the financial benefits of owning the property: they want to make money, which mostly takes the form of future annual cash flows along with a nifty profit once the income property is sold.

The wisest investors, however, understand that the timing of those money receipts might be more important than the amount received. That's why time value of money is crucial to real estate investment analysis, and explains why we try so desperately to measure and solve for those changes. Internal rate of return, net present value, and financial management rate of return for example are all used to measure an investor's rate of return with a consideration for the time value money.

It is beyond the scope of this article to discuss more then the rudimentary elements of TVM, but if you are new to real estate investing, with little to no experience, then this article on the subject will prove helpful.

Time value of money is the concept of measuring the value of money over time and is needful because money never remains static and over time changes value.

Stashing $10,000 under a mattress until next year, for instance, will be dramatically affected by time value and you might not like it. Due to inflation alone, chances are you will not enjoy the same purchasing power with that fistful of dollars next year as you would today.

There are two components to time value, present value and future value, plus one procedure intrinsic to each, discounting and compounding.

Present Value

Present value defines what a dollar is worth today. If you are able to purchase a duplex today for $400,000 it can be said that $400,000 has the present value (or power to purchase) one duplex. Today, that sum of money has the "purchasing power" equal to one duplex.

Future Value

Future value defines the worth of a dollar at some future time. Say we stash our money for one year and find that a duplex now costs $440,000. What do we discover about our $400,000 nest egg? It no longer has the purchasing power to buy a duplex. In effect, time has devalued our money.

This relationship between present and future value is why some very bright people concluded that the mathematical procedures known as discounting and compounding were necessary to consider money from a time value standpoint.

Discounting

Discounting is the mathematical procedure for determining present value. If given the choice to collect $400,000 today or wait a year and collect $430,000, for example, we would need to discount the future value ($430,000) by some rate (known as the discount rate) for the period of one year to compute its present value.

In other words, since we must decide between getting one amount today or waiting for another amount one year from today, our dilemma is to decide which is worth more to us today. We know that the amount we could collect today is worth $400,000, so what we need to know is what next year's amount of $430,000 is worth today and then make a comparison.

To do that (i.e., compute its present value) we must discount the future value of $430,000 by a discount rate. This rate is arbitrary to the analyst and can be any yield that the analyst selects. It can be an inflation rate, rate that might be collected in a CD account, or a rate deemed necessary solely for having to wait for the money or taking the risk.

Okay, suppose we decide on a discount rate of 10% (remember that this rate can be any rate we feel would justify the one-year wait). Therefore, we would discount the $430,000 at 10% for one year to compute its present value. The result would be $390,909.09.

In other words, after discounting at 10%, we discover that waiting one year to collect $430,000 would result in less of today's dollars and hence provide us less purchasing power than the option of taking $400,000 today.

Compounding

Compounding is the mathematical procedure for determining future value and is virtually the reverse of discounting. In this case, we want to determine the future value of our money, and we do this by compounding.

Say we are given the opportunity to invest $400,000 for one year with the promise that we would get a yield of 8.75% and we want to determine how much we will collect next year. Here we would solve for future value by compounding the present value ($400,000) at 8.75% for one year and the result is $435,000.

How to Make the Calculation

Time value of money calculations is not practical without the use of a financial calculator, spreadsheet software, or a real estate investment software solution that includes time value of money calculations. It is, however, crucial to prudent real estate investing and therefore justifies any effort you make to understand it and any investment you make to solve for it.

Truly, your ability to measure time value of money can be the difference between your making a good or bad investment decision. Mathematical solutions for time value of money would not exist and in turn used by successful real estate investors otherwise.

James Kobzeff is the developer of ProAPOD - leading real estate investment software since 2000. Discover how to create rental property cash flow, rate of return, and profitability analysis presentations in minutes. Time value calculations made automatically! Go to => http://www.proapod.com

Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager! Subscribe to James Kobzeff's RSS feed using any feed reader!

EasyPublish™ this article - publishers click here

More articles by James Kobzeff

Free Report!
Ten Essential Secrets Of Article Marketing ... Grab Your Free
Copy
Now:




We respect your privacy.


Need Content?
Regular Top Quality Content for your Blog, Ezine or Website ...
Delivered Direct,
For Free!

Click For Details



Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Business - General
Computers & Technology
Finance & Investment
Food & Drink
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Internet Marketing/Online Business
Legal
Pets & Animals
Politics & Government
Reference & Education
Religion & Faith
Self-Improvement/Motivation
Social
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Leisure
Writing & Speaking

More finance articles:

  • What a Multifamily Property's Class Can Tell You (Lance Edwards)
    When you are dealing with multifamily apartment properties, it is very important to understand the different classes of properties. The class that a property is assigned can tell you a lot about the property and if it is worth your time and money to invest in. There are four different property classes: A, B, C, and D.

  • 5-Step Process to Financial Freedom Through Real Estate Investing (Lance Edwards)
    You have learned how to create a real estate business. But at the same time, you want to create your net worth. The steps to getting this done are a 5-step process. Not only can you apply this process to your business, but you can apply it to your personal life.

  • Is Buy and Hold Dead? (Jack Funderburk)
    According to Jim Bianco (9/14/2009) (BiancoResearch.com), the Dow has closed above the 10,000 level 1,859 times since 1999. If one had put their money in a short-term Treasury bill the first time the Dow pushed above 10,000 and simply rolled over the proceeds of the bill at each maturity (and the interest), one would have a better return on their investment today, without any market risk.

  • How to Find a Lucrative Home Business (Stacy O'Quinn)
    A lot of people are running very lucrative home-based businesses these days. Thanks to the proliferation of technology and the widespread use of the Internet, there are an amazing number of niches to be found, none of which require much investment or staffing. The criteria for evaluating opportunities could be the same regardless of what kind of business you have in mind.

  • Home Budgets Can Be Thrown Off by Both the Expected and the Unexpected (Ozeme J Bonnette)
    If there is one thing that can cause tremendous damage to our finances, it would have to be irregular expenses. These are expenses that do not happen every pay period or every month, but often come up at some point during the year. We will review a couple of the more popular irregular expenses.

  • Guaranteed Online Personal Loan Types (Mark Inglis)
    A description of the type of lans avaliable withing the UK.

We Automatically Distribute Articles
To Thousands Of Publishers And Web Sites:

Submit Article
All content is viewed and used by you at your own risk and we do not warrant the accuracy or reliability of any of the information. The views expressed are those of the individual contributing authors and not necessarily those of this web site, or its owner, Takanomi Limited.
 
Copyright © 2009 Takanomi Ltd. Company no. 5629683. All rights reserved. | Privacy | Legal | Contact Information