Time Value of Money Using BA II Plus with 10 Examples

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  • Опубликовано: 4 авг 2024
  • This video calculates time value of money problems using the TI BA II Plus financial calculator. This is the second video of the Time Value of Money series. The first video is Time Value of Money Using Excel with 10 Examples
    Time Value of Money - A dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the future. There are two reasons this is true:
    1. Inflation - prices rise and a dollar loses its value
    2. Interest - dollars can earn interest over time
    ► Future Value (FV) - a lump sum at the end of the problem
    ► Present Value (PV) - a lump sum at the beginning of the problem
    ► Payment (PMT) - a stream of equal payments over consistent periods, also called an annuity, the payments could be positive or negative
    ► Interest Rate (I/Y or RATE) - the annual interest rate
    ► Periods (N or NPER) - the number of periods, could be years, half-years, quarters, or months
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    📂 To download the Excel file, see Excel Basics Lesson 6: Time Value of Money
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    CHAPTERS
    00:00 Time Value of Money Explained
    01:12 Ways to Calculate TVM
    03:07 Setup the BA II Plus Calculator
    06:14 Time Value of Money Variables
    08:30 Solve for Future Value FV
    11:34 Solve for Present Value PV
    14:52 Solve for Payment PMT
    18:36 Solve for Interest Rate RATE or I/Y
    21:49 Solve for Period NPER or N
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Комментарии • 35

  • @MsAmanda91
    @MsAmanda91 3 месяца назад +1

    I went back to school after 8 years to pursue a certification for my job. TVM was making my head swirl but man did you help explain it with ease! I paused the video and worked each problem out with you to follow along and things are so much clearer now! THANK YOU!!!

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  3 месяца назад

      Congratulations! You can do it! I’m glad my videos are helpful to you. Thank for sharing.

  • @tinabergere1183
    @tinabergere1183 Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for the easy-to-follow and easy-to-understand teachings.

  • @user-xq4sn1ib1f
    @user-xq4sn1ib1f 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is the best video option I've seen for TVM examples - you do a wonderful job of explaining each scenario. So so helpful!!!

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you very much. I am glad it is helpful.

  • @kccaldwell3338
    @kccaldwell3338 2 года назад +2

    These are great examples and your demonstrations are easy to follow with minimal rewinds. Thank you for making these videos. You're helping a lot of people you'll never even meet or hear about. That's a life well lived. Congratulations on finding your purpose.

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the kind words KC! Glad these are helpful.

  • @ainsleywilson2321
    @ainsleywilson2321 9 месяцев назад +1

    You have cleared my dark path. Thank you and HP10b11+. Simply magic !

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  9 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful! Good luck!

  • @javiergonzalezreynoso7394
    @javiergonzalezreynoso7394 3 года назад +3

    This was extremely helpful. I can't emphasize that enough. Thank you!

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  3 года назад

      Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching. I appreciate your comment. Thank you!

  • @user-kp6dr2mi7g
    @user-kp6dr2mi7g 6 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video! Easy to follow and makes sense!

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  6 месяцев назад

      Thanks! I am glad it is helpful!

  • @laurasimms7031
    @laurasimms7031 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you! I love the examples and your clear explanations.

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  11 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching! Let me know what you would like to learn.

  • @jparsons1974
    @jparsons1974 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for the review and the various answers.

  • @tarekalsherif57
    @tarekalsherif57 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for the valuable explanation

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  2 года назад +1

      Glad this is helpful for you. Thanks for watching.

  • @serlasco
    @serlasco 3 года назад +1

    thank you for the help, owen wilson

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  3 года назад

      Thanks I am glad it was helpful for you. Jeff

  • @blueskys6639
    @blueskys6639 2 года назад +3

    Knowing when to enter a positive or negative value: Anytime you take money out of your pocket or write a check to payback a loan to a bank or mortgage company or you invest money to make more money, that amount is always going to be entered as a negative value, because it's money going away from you. Anytime a bank or mortgage company or a credit card company loan you money that's always going to be entered as a positive value, because it's money that you have on hand or available to you. If you're putting money in a savings account or any type of investment in order to earn interest on your money, that value goes in as a negative amount, beacuse it's money going away from you. Finally if you're being paid back on an investment by a bank or any other financial institution, that value is always going to be a positive value because it's money coming to you.

  • @wazalwaryashraj
    @wazalwaryashraj 2 года назад +1

    Please check whether the calculation showed for exercise no. 4 is correct. You said to calculate it in beginning mode but calculated in end mode. Answers are different accordingly.

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  2 года назад

      Yes, I took it off Beginning mode and put it on Ending mode. That is correct. I said Beginning mode but I misspoke. The calculation is correct. Bonds pay interest at the end of the period. Good question! I hope this helps.
      Thanks for watching!

  • @alexandertredik9135
    @alexandertredik9135 3 года назад +1

    Is this excel sheet for sale?

  • @urmaryaam_
    @urmaryaam_ Год назад +1

    can someone please explain to me when to set BGN or END mode I can't seem to figure out the difference. Thanks in advance

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  Год назад

      Use END mode for most problems. Only use BGN if the problem has payments at the beginning of the period.
      If annual payments, we assume the payments happen at the end of the year, so END. If the payments occur at the beginning of the year, use BGN.

  • @MrRajeshkpy
    @MrRajeshkpy 2 года назад +1

    Is there any way u can solve increasing PMT calcuations to compute FV?

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  2 года назад

      You would need to use a spreadsheet like Excel for increasing payments.

    • @MrRajeshkpy
      @MrRajeshkpy 2 года назад +1

      @@FinallyLearn thanks for the reply, its surprising that we end up using excel for even slight change in computation but still CFA and other institute requires us to use calculator, they should allow the use of excel during tests. excel is way more powerful than calc.

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  2 года назад

      @@MrRajeshkpy Yes, Excel is way more powerful but a calculator like the TI BA II Plus is a good and cheaper alternative. Solving a FV problem with different payments would be solved by using multiple FV problems for 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. periods.

  • @amadonervo2001
    @amadonervo2001 Год назад +1

    exercise 8) 7,21% is the final answer? is correct?
    Why you supposed, rate 8,5% is nominal and not monthly?

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  Год назад

      Yes 7.21% is the answer.
      You assume annual interest rate unless you are specifically told otherwise.

  • @rogerbruce2896
    @rogerbruce2896 Год назад

    wow good tip about AOL. Why would that not be the default? Makes no sense.

    • @FinallyLearn
      @FinallyLearn  Год назад

      Thank you! I think it would be confusing for users when they first start using the calculator that the AOS would give a different result than other calculators. It is a power user option for sure.